'Selling items made by prisoners helps their rehabilitation'

Alex Pope/BBC Nichola Joynes, standing in a prison workshop, wearing a black T-shirt, with writing on. She has on glasses and a lanyard round her neck. She has short dark hair. A bird box is to the right and wooden items behind her. Alex Pope/BBC
Nichola Joynes said for some prisoners in the carpentry department it was not a "career choice" but "something they can take up when they actually leave"

A tour of a prison by managers of a large shopping complex in December has led to the creation of a pop-up stall to sell items made by inmates.

Male prisoners at HMP Five Wells, Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, said they had learned new skills to create products such as wooden toy houses, garden items and hats, which since April have regularly been sold at a market stall at Rushden Lakes shopping centre.

All proceeds of the sales are reinvested in the prison and the initiative has been praised by prison staff and inmates, with some of the men saying it has given them a sense of "pride" and also valuable skills that have led to job offers outside of prison.

So what difference has creating and selling bird boxes, toys and ceramics made to those serving time in prison?

HMP Five Wells A selections of items, for sale, on a stall, with a black cloth on a table. There are metal railings to the right, a wooden structure in the distance and another building to the right. HMP Five Wells
A pop-up stall selling items made by the inamtes has been held at Rushden Lakes for several months

Dave - the BBC has agreed to change the names of prisoners - works in the textiles department at HMP Five Wells, a £253m Category C prison for adult males which opened in 2022.

The site is privately run by G4S and currently houses about 1,750 men across seven accommodation blocks.

The textiles department makes bags from recycled jeans, repairs clothes for staff and prisoners and makes toys, hats and key-rings, which are then sold from a fortnightly stall at the shopping complex, Rushden Lakes.

"I come to the job two years ago, no experience, I've worked my way up. I've had to interview for each position, so we're also learning the interviewing skills.

"There's a lot of different skills they're learning," Dave says.

He feels the products that the department makes shows "we actually still can do good".

Alex Pope/BBC An elephant made from cloth, on a table with denim items on it. The elephant has a trunk, that is raised. Alex Pope/BBC
Items sold at the Rushden Lakes stall by the textiles workshop team include soft toys

"A lot of the lads, they've come in because they haven't had chances in life, but then they've been given this chance of a great opportunity of learning a skill that you wouldn't necessarily think about.

"Some have managed to go on to a job on the outside and that's totally changed their life, so hopefully they won't reoffend," Dave says.

He adds that he understands people may question the inmates working while serving their sentences.

"There's a lot of stigma around the benefits we do get [in prison], but you only get benefits by working hard and working within the rules. [If] you break the rules you lose and everything.

"Everyone's done whatever they've done to get in here, forget about that try and start again.

"It's the only way that you're actually going to change," he says.

Alex Pope/BBC Three cloth made teddy bears on a table, with a hat next to them. Denim items are also on the table. The table is large and cream in colour, with writing in the middle. Alex Pope/BBC
The stall also sells hats and teddy bears made by inmates at HMP Five Wells

Dave adds: "If you're just stuck in a cell and you're not actually working on anything, you're just that same person, you're going around in that same circle, whereas here, they're giving you the opportunity to expand your horizons."

He added there are opportunities for inmates in prison, if they are willing to take them.

"If you're not, you're going to be that same person stuck in the same cycle.

"It's people that want to change, want to do well that we're going to promote," he adds.

Alex Pope/BBC A sign and design room, in a prison with two computer screens, one is on. The walls are painted white. Alex Pope/BBC
HMP Five Wells has a sign and design shop that sells goods to the community

Wayne, another inmate at the HMP Five Wells, works for a sign shop at the prison's entrance, which prints clothes and signage and creates embroidery products to be sold to the public.

He says he now has a job on release due to the experience he has gained from working for the shop.

"It's a good place if you want to learn skills. You feel a sense of rehabilitation and purpose, even though you're within the prison," he says.

He said people need to have open minds about how people can grow in prison.

"If you're going to keep everyone on a negative then there ain't going to be room for rehabilitation.

"I've learned the skill, I've got a job, and I'm sure that's better than going out to absolutely nothing and living a bad life.

"I believe without a job like this I would just be withering away and really struggling," Wayne says.

Alex Pope/BBC A number of wooden bird boxes on a shelf, in a room. They have prices on them. Alex Pope/BBC
Items made inside the prison are then sold to customers at Rushden Lakes or at a shop at the prison's entrance

HMP Five Wells' carpentry workshop is used by about 23 inmates, including Karl, who manages the space.

The workshop produces "high-spec" wooden goods, such as bird boxes, dolls houses and garden items.

Karl says the shop was "fantastic" and had improved the confidence and mental health of some of the inmates.

Knowing items are being sold to the public "gives you a proper ego boost", he says.

"The reaction from people is absolutely phenomenal. I want to go out and pursue this as a career when I get out," he adds.

Alex Pope/BBC A large wooden toy house, with a door, windows and roof. Shelves are to the right and a doorway to the left. Alex Pope/BBC
Prisoners have been working on building a toy house

Nichola Joynes, the prison's carpentry workshop instructor, said: "[Selling the products] has been an opportunity for us to showcase the work we do here, not just in terms of the products that we produce, but also the rehabilitation aspect of the work and getting people ready to be released."

She said the prisoners see it as a "positive" and the feedback she gets from shoppers is "very positive, it's almost like a bit of a novelty thing".

"They particularly like the ceramics when they've got stamps underneath saying they're from Five Wells.

"A lot of people are encouraged that [prisoners] are working, they're making use of their time and learning skills, so they're very supportive," she adds.

HMP Five Wells Peter Small, looking straight at the camera. He has a bald head, wearing a blue shirt and blue tie. He is standing in front of a wall. He is not smiling. HMP Five Wells
Peter Small took over the role as the prisons director in 2024

Peter Small, the director of HMP Five Wells, said selling the products was "a great initiative" with all funds from sales going back into the prison workshops.

"Prisoners have a range of skills that are often unseen and I think it adds an extra sense of purpose for prisoners to know that a lot of what they make, which is of really good quality, is worthy of being displayed and in some cases purchased by members of the general public," he says.

Following an inspection in January 2024, a HM Inspectorate of Prisons report said drugs remained a problem at HMP Five Wells and the "quality of education, skills and work was not good enough".

In a December 2024 the prison said its new director was providing clear direction and more "prisoners were now engaged in purposeful activity".

Small adds: "I'm very proud of the fact that we have still quite a new staffing group who have overcome a series of challenges and created what I think to be an excellent establishment with extremely good relationships with our prisoners."

Alex Pope/BBC A prison workshop, with lots of equipment in it, showing a large sign, tables, chairs and desks. Alex Pope/BBC
The sign and print shop can engrave trophies, print large boards, books and documents

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