Earlier this year she started "Metfasal Leek" -
Arabic for "Tailored for you" - a clothing line that she says is
the first of its kind in Egypt.
Al-Abhar, 43, said after working with various companies on ways
to cater for people with disabilities, she had noticed that they
were not being served by clothing manufacturers.
"People with short stature would struggle to find their sizes in
the market," she said.
She is using volunteers to test the clothes, giving them free
samples, ahead of a planned commercial launch.
One volunteer, Ziad Hamdy, struggles with a disability that
prevents him from using his hands and fingers easily.
"I couldn't button up my shirt, buckle my trousers," he said.
Hamdy now has hook-and-loop fasteners instead of buttons, which
he says save him a lot of time and effort.
Al-Abhar hopes the initiative will help change views about
people with disabilities and persuade the public "to stop
associating them with charity".
"It makes us feel we are like everyone else," said volunteer
Hanan Fouad.
(Reporting by Mohamed Zaki; Writing by Nadeen Ebrahim; Editing
by Janet Lawrence)
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