Posts Tagged ‘repurposed’

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!

Ten Tips from Elegant Roots When Choosing Recycled

Monday, April 26th, 2010

10 Tips from Elegant Roots When Choosing “Recycled”

1. Choose truly “recycled” ~ Truly “recycled” (like for silver) means: extracted from some component and melted down to something new. That can use a lot of energy, but it’s clearly better than mining new silver. Some great jewelry designers work exclusively in recycled precious metals. Check out the Avenue Green Colection from C5 company. 0105_1 flower bracelet 385x272

2. Choose reclaimed ~ Other practices get tossed under the word “recycling.” Laura Bergman of Bottled Up Designs forages for broken antique glass pieces from the woodlands of Pennsylvania’s Amish Country, cuts them and mounts them into astounding jewelry pieces. That’s reclaimed or repurposed. It uses only a bit of energy, and it also cleans up the woodlands. By contrast, true recycling of glass would entail melting it to start anew. That’s energy intensive but prevents waste.
pinkpetiteneck and earrings 380x274 copy

3. Choose precycled ~ Melissa Kolbusz of [wired] designs salvages obsolete but unused industrial material to create her edgy jewelry. That’s precycled, and it uses no additional energy.
SurGen-2 385x296

4. Don’t choose collectible ~ Antique subway tokens, for example, are collectible; they are not going to the landfill – they’re valuable.

5. Don’t choose phony “recycled” ~ African weavers made baskets from reclaimed telephone wire. It was so popular they ran out of reclaimed wire. They began buying new wire. Everybody’s got to make a living, but those baskets are not “recycled.”

6. Choose recyclable ~ When you’re finished with it, can it be reused, repurposed or recycled?

7. Don’t buy junk ~ Don’t buy something that’s throw-away junk, even if it’s made from recycled materials. Encourage producers to design products that stand the test of time.

8. Know the social impact ~ Would you buy a recycled product if you knew the workers were sweat-shop exploited?

9. Buy less but buy better ~ Sometimes quality recycled products cost a bit more. Get used to buying fewer things, while buying things that are meaningful in their environmental and social impact.

10. Demand information ~ ElegantRoots.com supports the transparency movement. We want you to have the info that allows you to make an informed choice – to align your purchases with your values. That why we provide “our four Ws”: Who made it, Where, of What, and Why, beyond its beauty and function, it would be a worthy choice.

Eco-couture at GreenShows

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Check out the runway models wearing eco-friendly couture designed by London-based Gary Harvey at the Valentine’s Eve GreenShows in NYC.

The dresses are made from re-used, or repurposed, materials and they’re pretty stunning in that certain runway sort of way.

Check out the one that looks like the model sat down on a park bench somewhere and emerged with a mass of crinkled newspapers. Not the best look — but funny and eye-catching and it makes a point about reusing materials — I’m just not sure what point exactly.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g5z1PYFPdM0

Alternative Consumer has a good article on this: http://bit.ly/9r4MHL

Kudos to Mr. Harvey and GreenShows.