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Photo of a woman in a paddock holding a walking stick.

"I was pretty good friends with all of them, and I just decided I didn't want to put them on a transport truck anymore,"
Ms Bray said.
Photo of a flock of sheep.

"It's just expected when a sheep gets to a certain age, it's going to get shipped off and made into sausages or mince,"
he said.

Photo of a man shearing a sheep.

"It allows me to farm the way I want to farm. I set the price. I sell my wool by the 100 grams. You definitely want to be selling by the 100 grams, not by the kilogram."

Black and white image of an older woman and younger woman walking in a field of grass.

"We don't use any fibre that requires the killing or harm of an animal in our collection,"
Ms Barboni Hallik said.

Photo of strands of coloured wool yarn.

"I really look at Nan as kind of the gold standard, and I think her philosophy is really inspiring a whole generation."

Photo of boxes of wool stacked high.

"Her wool's like angel dust. It's beautiful stuff, some of the finest wool about here,"
he said.

Photo of an older woman staring in the distance at sheep.

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