'Inclusion benefits everyone': B.C. company sparking meaningful conversations about Down syndrome by selling soap

  • 📰 CTVNews
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 26 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 14%
  • Publisher: 99%

ایران اخبار اخبار

ایران آخرین اخبار,ایران سرفصلها

From MelanieNagyCTV: Simon Vanderloo and his older sister, Caroline Short, have turned their soap-making hobby into a business that's pushing boundaries and breaking down stereotypes.

A hodgepodge of buckets and bottles sit on a white table in Simon Vanderloo's small kitchen. While he heats a large container of coconut oil in a microwave, his older sister Caroline Short, carefully measures a mixture of freshly scented essential oils.

Vanderloo is 28 years old and lives with Down syndrome, which naturally occurs when an individual has a full or partial extra copy of chromosome 21. The idea behind the name is that the business is a platform Vanderloo can use to highlight and share all of his abilities. Launching a start-up wasn't easy, but the brother-sister duo was determined to make it work. Not only did they start producing large batches of soap, they also designed their own packaging and secured a website for e-commerce.

این خبر را خلاصه کرده ایم تا بتوانید سریع آن را بخوانید. اگر به خبر علاقه مند هستید، می توانید متن کامل را اینجا بخوانید. ادامه مطلب:

 /  🏆 1. in İR
 

از نظر شما متشکرم. نظر شما پس از بررسی منتشر خواهد شد.

ایران آخرین اخبار, ایران سرفصلها