Archive for Sustainable Style

Herzenart by Sandra Monat: Vikings, Aliens, Elephants, Oh My!

Herzensart

Handmade in Germany by artist Sandra Monat, these cuddly fabric toys are patched together from new, vintage, and organic-cotton fabrics, including designs from Harmony Art.

I can’t get enough of the Vikings. Those horns! That nose! When Harmony and Dave Susalla showed them to me at the Green Products Expo last month, I was tempted to stuff a Viking under my shirt and bolt for the exit. Dave is about 10 times bigger than I am, though, so I changed my mind.

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Snowflake 66 Cuts and Pastes

Snowflake 66

Snowflake 66’s tops, available online at Cut+Paste, have me all a-swoon. Patched together from recycled fabrics in unexpected color and pattern combos, each shirt is exquisitely one-of-a-kind. I adore the puff sleeves and the contrast bib on this pretty little tangerine number, which some lucky, lucky girl has already snagged. She’d better pray she doesn’t encounter me in a dark alley s’all I’m saying.

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Indie Sustainability Finds

Eclectic Eccentricity Tryst locket Golcarhouse recycled T-shirt MP3 pouch
Cards by Bo Mandinka Sidney handbag
Transaction Simple Wood recycled leather cuff Dolan Geiman Sunflower painting

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» This red vintage coat is so effing HAWT! (1) #

Recycled Linens by Cakehouse

Cakehouse

Photo by Cakehouse

Just look at that face! These four double-layer cloth napkins by Cakehouse were refashioned from preloved pillowcases and then hand-printed with water-based inks. Odysseus, a cat belonging to the designer’s sister-in-law, served as the model in exchange for a few months’ lodging—fair-enough, don’t you think?

Because Cakehouse works with recycled fabrics—the Brooklyn-based designer gravitates towards secondhand sheets, bedspreads, curtains, and the occasional house dress—every item is limited edition. I was tickled by the disclaimer she puts at the bottom of each page to indicate why you’ll find slight variations in each napkin: “I am a woman, not a womachine.” I might have to start using that as my e-mail signature. ($40 for four, Etsy)

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Treehugger Fortnight in Review

Photo by piper@Flickr

Photo by piper, under a Creative Commons license

Take Action, Start a Petition
The Care2 Petition Site makes it a snap to start your own petition. First, identify the target of your protest, then draft out a call-to-action message and decide on your goal number of signatures

Quote of the Day: Carlo Petrini on Taking It Slow
“The quest for slowness, which begins as a simple rebellion against the impoverishment of taste in our lives, makes it possible to rediscover taste.”

Event of the Day: Farm Aid 2007
Are you going to Farm Aid?

Farm Aid 2007: The Press Conference
While we’re recovering from yesterday’s completely awesome Farm Aid 2007, here are a few clips from the press conference, courtesy of the official Farm Aid blog.

Quote of the Day: Marion Nestle on Advertising to Children
“Adults may be fair game for marketers, but children are not. Children cannot distinguish sales pitches from information unless taught to do so.”

Click here for more »

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Indie Sustainability Finds

Greenbelts leather cuff Vintage brass-tag earrings
Vintage plaid bathing suit Boy Girl Party recycled song memo
Night Owl Paper Goods wooden postcard Lavender kingbird slip

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Matt Cipov’s Zombies

A man after my own braaaiiins, Matt Cipov. You can find his zombie prints (and more), printed on paper with recycled or partly recycled content, at his store.

Art by Matt Cipov

Art by Matt Cipov

Art by Matt Cipov

Art by Matt Cipov

Art by Matt Cipov

Art by Matt Cipov

Art by Matt Cipov

Art by Matt Cipov

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Treehugger Week in Review

Photo by Wired

Photo by Wired

A Very Special Interspecial Reunion
A lion that was raised by humans, but was released into the wilds of Africa, reunites with his former handlers a year later. What else can Treehugger say but “OMGKITTIES!!!11!!!”

Wired’s Artifacts from the Future: Fusion Food
Possibly coming to a produce store near you: Monsanto’s Cinna-Del, the only GM apple that expresses both cinnamon and sugar, only $26.99 per kilo!

Penguins March into New Patagonian Marine Park

Squawk if you’ve heard this one: The government of Argentina is creating a new marine park along the isolated Patagonia coast to officially safeguard more than half a million penguins and other rare seabirds, according to the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society.

Peace, Love, Earth: Yeah, Baby
Designer Anna Mkhitarian reinvents that tired hippie standard—the ol’ peace sign—into physical, wearable mantras that, though unsubtle, remind us what our groovy voyage on Spaceship Earth is all about.

Global Warming Wants to Eat Your Flesh
We’d have used a picture of flesh-eating bacteria diligently at work, but all our options made us want to disgorge the contents of our stomachs, so here’s a nonthreatening—dare we say even cuddly?—microscopic look at the insidious beasties themselves.

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Interview with Ann Hirschfeld of Secret Leaves Paperworks

Secret Leaves Paperworks

Photo by Secret Leaves

Ann Hirschfeld and Sharon Derry are the co-conspirators of Secret Leaves, a charming St. Louis, Missouri-based company that breathes new life into discarded books and vintage papers by transforming them into scrap journals, photo albums, and note cards. I spoke with Ann about her love of old paper, and the growing role the environment plays in running their business, right down to the smallest detail.

1. How did Secret Leaves come about?

Sharon [Derry] had a card/paper arts company called Papeterie, and I worked part-time for her here and there helping to assemble the journals. A little over a year ago, we were talking on the phone and she spoke of her desire to start a web-based paper arts business. She wanted to pursue it full-time but was not interested in doing it alone. She wanted a partner. I immediately said, “Pick me!” We met a few times to discuss her goals for the business and she did—pick me. This was April of ‘06 and we’ve been working together ever since. It seems like we’ve come a long way already.

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Free People Vanity Stool

Free People Vanity Stool

Photo by Free People

Free People, the neo-bohemian sister company of Anthropologie, has such a delightfully spirited, eclectic eye. (Who would think to sew pom-poms around the border of a clutch? But it works!) How stupendous, for instance, is this vanity stool? Homespun yarns are whipped around its legs, while its seat is cushioned and covered with fabric cut from a vintage quilt.

This would make a lovely weekend project for a thrifted find if you have deep reserves of patience to draw upon. And if you don’t have a felonious cat who shreds your furniture and sneaks off balls of yarn when your back is turned. Otherwise, it’s $128, which isn’t altogether absurd considering how much work was involved.

Free People Vanity Stool

Photo by Free People

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Seraph Letterpress Postcards

Seraph Letterpress Postcards

Photo by Greer Chicago

Sexier than your iPhone. Designs screenprinted in blue on recycled kraft stock; back is letterpressed in deep brown. You get three each of the four designs. ($8 for a pack of 12, Greer Chicago)

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Dolman Geiman’s Rescued Clothing

Dolman Geiman

Photo by Dolman Geiman

If you like reconstructing your duds, Chicago artist Dolman Geiman’s Rescued Clothing line is a fount of inspiration. From his Web site:

The term Rescued defines the philosophy behind the process, encouraging patrons to revitalize a garment instead of discarding it or buying something new. Dolan’s goal is not to add to an overwhelming array of designers and manufactures, but to provide a consumer-savvy alternative for those with stocked closets. Rescued Clothing gives those garments you love to wear a second chance, and gives the fashionably chic a new adventure.

And if you haven’t already spotted his wonderful constructions from salvaged wood and other found materials at Design Sponge, here’s his Flickr set.

Dolman Geiman

Photo by Dolman Geiman

Dolman Geiman

Photo by Dolman Geiman

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Indie Sustainability Finds

Field Day scissors girl patch Mykonos vintage round locket necklace
Comfortable Shoe recycled matchbook notebooks Crazycakes baby blanket
Ornamental Things Aqua Flowers earrings Makool Loves You Tortoise and Cat shirt

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Interview with Nicole Lecht of freshlyblended

freshlyblended

Photo by freshlyblended

Nestled in upstate New York with her husband and a mini-menagerie, Nicole Lecht runs freshlyblended, a one-woman studio that churns out elegant, nature-inspired journals and notebooks deftly assembled from found materials and post-consumer recycled paper. The talented and effervescent Nicole and I chatted about sustainability in crafting, how she became a “green” designer completely by accident, and where cork paper comes from.

1. How did freshlyblended come about?

Well, I actually went to college for Illustration (that’s what my degree concentration was) and graphic design, but in my last year of school, I took a bookbinding class on a whim and totally fell in love with the structural aspect of it. After graduating, I got a job as a book-cover designer for a publishing house, which opened the door even wider for me, so I ran with it and started to do some research about materials and business.

The word “freshlyblended” came about when I was in a local coffee shop sketching and reading the back of my coffee cup. It said, “… from a fresh blend of eclectic ingredients …” I didn’t hesitate with that name because, at the time, I was struggling over how to hone in on my multiple abilities and eclectic influences. freshlyblended represents just that.

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Play House

Mobile Home @Sparkability.com

Photo from Sparkability

If you don’t want your chilluns getting their sticky fingers on your antique Victorian dollhouse, the Dutch-designed MobileHome is made from 100 percent recycled cardboard. Has 8 rooms, stair openings, and spyholes, plus an attic for storage. Another 10 smackers gets you a kid-size playhouse they can paint and decorate. ($35, Sparkability)

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» Treehugger.com WW@TH: District Cotton Takes On Organic Cotton, Mosquito Netting. I actually got to borrow the bags for a day and they’re remarkably well-made—probably not beefed-up enough to handle anything but the thinnest and lightest of laptops, but durable day packs, regardless. Was thisclose to buying the Mosquito bag for my orange-loving husband, but the man needs a wagon to haul his work files around. (0) #

Indie Sustainability Finds

Mood Swing vintage button ring Tiny black branch earrings
Chocolate-blue urban fairy hoodie Horrible Adorables Ophelia
Hand-dyed woven newspaper placevmats Vine Ripened handspun organic cotton tencel yarn

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Knitty Spring ‘07 Surprise: Everlasting Bagstopper

Everlasting Bagstopper@Knitty.com

Photo by Amy R. Singer

Greensleeves One of the surprises from Knitty.com’s Spring 2007 issue: The Everlasting Bagstopper, designed by the chief knitwit herself, Amy Singer. Using only two skeins of Hemp for Knitting’s allhemp6, the bag includes a drawstring closure for extra security, which is a nifty touch.

Related article:
1. Yarn Review: Hemp for Knitting allhemp3

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To Market, To Market

Photo by Viva Terra

Photo by Viva Terra

At the Union Square farmers’ market on Saturday, I saw a couple breeze through the crowd while carrying a basket much like the one by Viva Terra pictured above—incredibly stylish; far chicer than the medley of plastic bags the hordes of produce hunters were clutching. I found some really fetching fair-trade African baskets here, as well as a large assortment of styles handwoven by a woman in Vermont.

Tip: When buying bread from your farmers’ market, take with you a used bread bag (from your previous supermarket loaf) so you can save some extra plastic.

Related posts:
1. Big Brown Bags
2. Neither Paper Nor Plastic: An Ecological Intervention
3. Plastic Bag Ban: Friend or Faux Pas?

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» DIY project What a genius idea: Salvage a discarded windowpane, tack vintage fabrics behind the cutouts, then attach pegs along the bottom for holding hats, bags, and other assorted paraphernalia. (Semi-demi-related: I love the arrangement on top of this vintage bureau.) (0) #

Reduce, Reuse, Remake

Photo by Remake@Etsy.com

Photo by Remake at Etsy.com

I’m going weak at the knees just looking at Remake’s recycled paper goods, made from mostly salvaged materials, and screenprinted and assembled by hand. Business envelopes are turned inside out, exposing their patterned interiors; discarded folders, alphabetic dividers, and ruled paper are bound into notebooks; everything old is made new again. (From $5, Etsy.com)

Photo by Remake@Etsy.com

Photo by Remake at Etsy.com

Photo by Remake@Etsy.com

Photo by Remake at Etsy.com

Photo by Remake@Etsy.com

Photo by Remake at Etsy.com

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