Bengaluru-based sustainable lifestyle brand Eha today launched its most expansive planters catalogue yet, completing a portfolio that ranges from compact indoor options for homes and mindful gifting to robust, large-scale solutions for landscaping, commercial projects, and public spaces.
This milestone builds on a decade of biomaterials innovation, including a year of targeted R&D to create outdoor-ready planters that endure harsh conditions, satisfy architectural demands, and uphold circular design—all while scaling to over 300 SKUs. Eha now boasts one of India's most versatile sustainable planter lineups.
“We set out to reimagine everyday products' materials and lifespan. This catalogue brings that vision full circle: from petite home planters to enduring landscape solutions that quietly amplify impact over years by outlasting plastics and concrete,” said Mahadev Chikkanna, Co-Founder, Eha.
Proving its durability, Eha's 2019 biocomposite planters—crafted from bamboo and agricultural waste—still perform outdoors today, embodying the brand's long-term sustainability ethos.
Eha's journey spans from its debut planter (30% bamboo fibers, slashing emissions by 50%) to today's fully carbon-negative products using 100% recycled feedstock. The brand champions systematic shifts that balance environmental gains with socio-economic realities.
“Sustainability demands accountability across the value chain. Every Eha planter embodies years of R&D, transparent carbon tracking, and partnerships with farmers and rural communities. Scaling to 300+ SKUs without sacrificing circularity or equity shows purposeful design can power real-world demand—beautiful spaces without burdening the planet,” said Shruthi Ujjani Ramesh, Co-Founder, Eha.
The new catalogue cements Eha's forefront role in climate-positive materials. Many planters use 100% circular inputs, verified by ISO Life Cycle Assessments, with several certified carbon-negative for net carbon removal. This positions Eha as a global rarity—and likely the sole in its category—with product-level negative emissions.
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