Evermade x Liv Lee - Mangrove WWF Greetings Card

Evermade x Liv Lee - Mangrove WWF Greetings Card

Sale price£3.25

From our New Collaboration with Liv Lee and Evermade

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Part of a special collection by Liv Lee in collaboration with Evermade, this series celebrates three ecologically important regions: the Amazon rainforest, UK native wildlife and the world’s oceans.

This design is part of the Amazon rainforest series, celebrating the vibrant wildlife and the ecosystems WWF helps protect. Liv captures its richness through bold fruits and dense plant forms, inspired by the idea that even the smallest seed can sustain something mighty.

This series also includes matching greetings cards and art prints available from Evermade, designed to work beautifully as a set.

Shop Liv Lee x Evermade Collection

PROTECTING OUR GREEN SPACES & RAINFORESTS

When you shop with WWF, you’re helping to protect green spaces and rainforests like the Amazon. You’re defending nature and wildlife habitats. And because the Amazon plays a critical role in our global climate system, you’re joining the fight for Earth’s future.

THERE'S STILL HOPE

The Amazon, and our planet, faces an irreversible ‘tipping point’. If we lost just 5% more, the rainforest may no longer be able to sustain itself and we could lose the Amazon as we know it. But there’s still hope. WWF is working alongside local communities, Indigenous people and governments to stop deforestation and make sure the habitats of animals like sloths, jaguars and river dolphins are safe. Together we can help protect the Amazon, not just for the countless wildlife that lives there, but for our benefit too.

CREATING PROTECTED HABITATS

Jaguars may be one of the world’s most elusive big cats, but sadly their stealth doesn’t always help them escape poachers. WWF is helping create protected areas of thick jungle and lush wetlands in the Brazilian Amazon where vulnerable jaguars can hunt, breed and thrive.

SHOPPING TODAY CAN HELP

Stop deforestation in the Amazon

because every 30 seconds an area of rainforest bigger than a football pitch is destroyed.