live trash bag monster..recycle peeps!
This girl’s got style!
When Marisa Lynch lost her job last year, she went looking for a project and found it: 365 days. 365 pieces of clothing. $365. She started her blog, New Dress A Day, and began transforming frightening thrift-store finds into envy-worthy fashions for just a dollar a day.
For the entire year Lynch didn’t do any traditional clothes shopping, which means none of her items contributed to the loss of energy or raw materials required to produce new garments. Although her 365-day project is over, Lynch is still giving second life to old muumuus and prom dresses, and this year she’s accepting donations from her readers and making over their worse fashion finds.
RE-PURPOSED BAGS (MADE IN THE PHILIPPINES)
Pilipino in a Bag showcases repurposed bags and other carrying items that are infused with Filipino artistry and talent. All items are unique because our bags are not mass manufactured but are finished 1 at a time. The Pilipino in a Bag puts every aspect of the Filipino character into each item produced – resourcefulness, persistence, resilience and most of all love of fun and frills. From the bag creator to the bag user, the Pilipino in a Bag aims to travel the world, and show to the world the Pilipino identity and culture. Each Pilipino in a Bag helps to create livelihood for the urban poor sewers.
Pilipino in a Bag Facebook Page : http://www.facebook.com/pages/PiB-Pilipino-in-a-Bag/211947545489676
Sofa made from old doors… Bloomin’ Amazing!
Well done, John!
1. CHANGE YOUR LIGHT
If every household in the United State replaced one regular lightbulb with one of those new compact fluorescent bulbs, the pollution reduction would be equivalent to removing one million cars from the road.Don’t like the color of light? Use these bulbs for closets, laundry rooms and other places where it won’t irk you as much.
2. GO VEGETARIAN ONCE A WEEK
One less meat-based meal a week helps the planet and your diet. For example: It requires 2,500 gallons of water to produce one pound of beef. You will also save some trees. For each hamburger that originated from animals raised on rainforest land, approximately 55 square feet of forest have been destroyed.
3. SECOND-HAND DOESN’T MEAN SECOND-BEST
Consider buying items from a second-hand store. Toys, bicycles, roller blades, and other age and size-specific items are quickly outgrown. Second hand stores often sell these items in excellent condition since they are used for such a short period of time, and will generally buy them back when you no longer need them.
4. CHOOSE MATCHES OVER LIGHTERS
Most lighters are made out of plastic and filled with butane fuel, both petroleum products. Since most lighters are considered “disposable,” over 1.5 billion end up in landfills each year. When choosing matches, pick cardboard over wood. Wood matches come from trees, whereas most cardboard matches are made from recycled paper.
5. CUT DOWN ON JUNK MAIL
Feel like you need to lose a few pounds? It might be your junk mail that’s weighing you down. The average American receives 40 pounds of junk mail each year, destroying 100 millions trees. There are many services that can help reduce the clutter in your mailbox, saving trees and the precious space on your countertops.
6. GIVE IT AWAY
Before you throw something away, think about if someone else might need it. Either donate to a charitable organization or post it on a web site designed to connect people and things, such as Freecycle.org.
7. PAY BILLS ONLINE
By some estimates, if all households in the U.S. paid their bills online and received electronic statements instead of paper, we’d save 18.5 million trees every year, 2.2 billion tons of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, and 1.7 billion pounds of solid waste.
8. WASH IN COLD OR WARM
If all the households in the U.S. switched from hot-hot cycle to warm-cold, we could save the energy comparable to 100,000 barrels of oil a day.Only launder when you have a full load.
9. Unplug unused chargers and appliances
It’s an easy way to cut down on energy and it will also save a few bucks on your electric bill. 40% of all electricity is used to power home appliances while they’re turned off.
10. Buy an inexpensive reusable water bottle
Stop buying plastic disposable bottles. Out of the 50 billion bottles of water being bought each year, 80% end up in a landfill - that’s 40 billion unrecycled water bottles. Also, it’s just a lot more cost and energy effective to use a reusable water bottle.
*Did we miss something? Got any new ideas? Let us know here
Tips and pictures courtesy of : 50 Ways To Help, SimpleMom and Good Life Bottles.