Posts Tagged ‘jewelry’

Industry to Fashion: Repurposed and Fabulous!

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

What’s greener than recycled? What eco-friendlier than bio-degradable? That’s right — REPURPOSED! Resources already dug, mined, extracted, combined, processed and delivered. Can’t un-do those. But when the product/material has outlived its desirability, don’t sent it to resource-sucking recycling and not, of course, to the landfill. Create a new purpose for it and continue using it!

Now Jewelry and fashion accessories may be small things in the grand scope of human consumption. But we love them. We wear them, front and center. We make statments of all kinds with them. Make a statement with repurposed fashion — especially artisan fashion — that art can repurpose and that life should imitate art!

That’s why we at Elegant Roots love bringing cutting-edge eco-fashion to the public eye, because it merges our favorite concepts: art with activism, creativity with conservation, design with doing good. Socially conscious designers are among the most imaginative and forward-thinking artists we know.

Among our most admired designers are those who can create something beautiful from items left over from industry. Whether it’s computer parts, spare tires or remnants from t-shirts — with the right set of skills, creativity, and ability to think differently, items once destined for landfills become uniquely fabulous works of wearable art!

One company that’s stood out in the industry-to-fashion spotlight has been [wired] and its lead designer, Melissa Kolbusz. Melissa says she doesn’t have to go far to find the materials for her cool jewelry: they’re all castoffs found within a mile of her Chicago neighborhood. Crafted from industry waste — including copper and steel wire, vodka bottles, rubber washers,  resistors and more — Kolbusz’s jewelry is at once tough and feminine, cutting-edge and whimsical. You’ll never look at computer parts the same way again!

English Retreads designer Heather English uses recycled inner tubes to create her awesome repurposed-rubber handbags and accessories. In fact, each tire has about 60,000 miles on it before it becomes an English Retread masterpiece! These eco-chic, cool and durable items for men, women and pets are slick and stylish with a distinctive road-warrior feel. Naturally, they’re completely cruelty-free, vegan, and pose a low environmental impact.

Discarded t-shirt materials provide the colorful cotton nuggets used to make this flirty and fabulous “Miele” handbag by Be Sweet. Designed by South African fashion designer Adri Schulz, Be Sweet’s signature bags are handcrafted by the Xhosa women’s artisan collective in his native country. Hand-hooked from vibrant t-shirt castoffs and made with minimal machinery, these honeycomb handbags are as gorgeous as they are eco-friendly. As if that weren’t enough, the women’s collective Be Sweet supports is an extraordinary organization that creates jobs and strengthens families and communities in South Africa.

Make a statement that Life can Imitate Fashion Art!

Social Biz Meets Social Media

Friday, July 30th, 2010

This is a BIG DAY for Elegant Roots. Maybe even a profound day.

Milyoni, Inc., (said like “million eye”), the leader in Social Commerce, announces a new social merchandising tool within its popular Conversational Commerce™ solution. Its new Instant Showcase allows users to conveniently purchase select products right on the Facebook wall.

Elegant Roots is about connections. Connections between an artisan and a customer. Connections between cultures. Connections between a customer’s green values and a customer’s purchases.

And Facebook is maybe the biggest way to connect, person-to-person, that has come along since the telephone. Facebook enables communities. Though they exist only on line, they are communities with interactions no less personal than the telephone. And remember the Six Degrees of Separation?

Well, a study by Microsoft based on 30 billion instant messages among 180 million people worldwide in one month concluded that “it takes just under seven steps to link every one in the world…on average, any two people are linked by fewer than seven acquaintances” (actually 6.6). Redorbit.com.

Facebook is a vehicle for unlimited connections and community creation.

Why is this so big for ElegantRoots.com? Because that’s where we connect.

Elegant Roots exists only online — in a dotcom store and in a facebook iFan shop. And ElegRoo exists only because of the “long tail” of the internet — that enough people browse to make it practical to offer products that only a slim percentage of people might want.

A little background is in order.

Elegant Roots, as an online boutique, exists to:

  • Bring hot, design-forward items that use artisan, traditional techniques on designs that appeal to the American market;
  • SurGen-2 TN

  • Promote eco-consciousness and social justice by carrying only “green” products (eco-friendly and fair trade/fair labor);
  • Promote traditional arts and preserve traditional lifestyles by creating a market for jewelry, accessories and home decor;
  • Foster connections — making Personal through Story a direct connection between artisan and consumer, throughout the world, eliminating “middlemen” whenever possible; and
  • Promote transparency, so consumers will increasingly ask Who made this, Where it was made; of What it is made and under what conditions; and Why, beyond its beauty and function it aligns with the consumer’s values.
  • Converge-1 Relapse 155x138 copy cleaned

    ElegRoo currently has somewhere over 4000 Facebook fans (or “likes”) from all around the world, (though we can presently ship only within the US). That’s 4000 people who connect with us nearly every day. And the growth is astonishing.

    Now, through Milyoni’s Instant Showcase, we can highlight to our facebook community a few of our wonderful, meaningful, artisan-made products. Our fans need not leave the Wall to buy. Connection remains intact.

    First up on ElegRoo’s Showcase are a few pieces of jewelry from [wired] designer Melissa Kolbusz – Hot earrings from repurposed Effen Vodka labels, Cool cuffs of repurposed rubber washers, and Design-Forward earrings of repurposed neoprene. Neodrop1 iFan 500x662

    Check out our Facebook community. “Like” us. You’re invited. Bring a friend.

    Socially Responsible Business Supports Indigenous Mexican Jewelry Art

    Monday, September 14th, 2009

    Difficult and unreliable roads faced noted landscape and lifestyle photographer Richard Speedy travelling in northern Mexico’s Sierra Madre. He labored his way, fueled by storied-beauty to the rocky, pine-wooded heights around Copper Canyon to explore and capture the stunning scenery. In the remote village of Norogachi, Chihuahua, he found his own heart captured by the indigenous Tarahumara Indians and Mestizo farming families living there. Richard was drawn to their culture, seemingly little touched by modern life, but quickly realized that without sustainable economic viability the Norogachi way of life was threatened by a desperate and alienating exodus to urban centers. Instead of simply photographing yet another traditional culture’s demise, then turning his back, Richard committed to do something positive.jp-team-9333

    Back home in New Jersey, Richard partnered with his wife Mara Speedy, Rob Thacker and designer Jody Olcott to find a way to help the Noragachi villagers maintain their culture and way of life. Building on the traditional talents of the Norogachi artisans, Richard and his team formed a jewelry-art group they called Julio Pagliani—an affectionate moniker he had been given during his Copper Canyon travels. Soon the Julio Pagliani team and their Norogachi partners were making some of the most exquisite, museum-quality jewelery you’ll find anywhere in the world.

    The Julio Pagliani story and its extraordinary jewelry graphically demonstrate the power of a socially responsible enterprise. The team began with a desire to make a positive difference in an economically challenged part of the world, then worked tirelessly to make their vision a reality.

    elcorazon_b-72-4x4The Julio Pagliani team started with Jody’s stunning jewelry designs of crocheted, beaded rope, inspired by local imagery of wildlife, crops, mountains and water. When traveling in Moscow, Jody purchased a beaded rope necklace. That Russian art inspired her designs. The team traveled to Norogachi with the Russian necklace and Jody’s designs. They spent hours with the village elders, deconstructing the Russian necklace and working on ways the centuries-old Norogachi beading traditions could be adapted to Jody’s designs. When a method was discovered and consensus reached, the next step was to train the villagers.jp2womenbeading

    To date, the Julio Pagliani team has provided work to more than 60 villagers who now have a much more stable economic environment. The impact of the Julio Pagliani partnership so moved Norogachi’s former mayor that she wrote the following: “The (first) day I got the materials, two of the women were walking by my street. I went out to call on them and when I told them there was work, they actually started jumping with joy. Anita, my daughter-in-law said, ‘How big their need must be that they even jumped!’” Joy and talent can create great beauty. julioset_amber_72-4x4

    A standing ovation to Richard, the Julio Pagliani team and their Norogachi partners! Together this special group has brought “beauty into the world in a way that honors indigenous cultures and pays the artisans fairly for their hard work.” And they have done it against many commercial odds! Just imagine 21st century business in Norogachi: no mail service, no UPS, no FedEx and the rugged roads into the village are often simply impassible.

    Promote social justice and eco-consciousness by owning a genuine piece of Julio Pagliani jewelry-art. The spirit, generosity and joy with which this unparalleled jewelry is designed and handcrafted adds perceptibly to its breathtakingly simple beauty. Your support, too, adds to the spirit. Buy less, but BUY BETTER! Elegant Roots