heart-to-heart

thanks to the etsy favorites feature, i have hearts, you have hearts, we all have hearts! here, we’ll hop from heart-to-heart each week, progressively adding to our heart trail as we follow the favorites from one seller to the next.

Last week, we left off with…
laura george {‘power off’ print}, who hearts…
amira jewelry {macramé rings}, who hearts…
hier apparel {sheer cotton & lace mini slip dress}, who hearts…
tortoise loves donkey {3-mo air plant subscription}, who hearts…
twoems {patterned peacock print}, who hearts…
sweet harvey {letterpress art print}.

I’m afraid this is where the happy trail ends for our heart hops, friends. Thank you for following along each week; I hope you’ve found scores of new favorites along the way as I did!!

2010 represented a significant turning point in my business, Daisy Janie, bringing about exciting growth & success that I’ve worked beyond tirelessly for. 2011 promises to pile on more of the same, and I must now focus all of my efforts on nurturing & stoking what I’ve created … much like Tara writes in her immeasurably wise posts about following our passion, empowering ourselves, thinking big and making things happen!

Thank you, Tara, for the opporunity to continue being a part of Scoutie Girl – I really love what  you’ve done with the place ;) !! Keep up the great work – you’re moving mountains and I couldn’t be happier that our paths crossed along the way!

how to wear fleece & not look like a snow bunny

Ever since having kids, my winter wardrobe has turned into a machine-wash-only abyss of monotonous fleece pullovers and cotton/acrylic sweaters. For real.

It’s as much of a bummer as it sounds.

But please… handwash only? All those tags in my old clothes might as well read “please store me someplace safe until your children are old enough not to ruin me.”

And of course the good thing about fleece is that it’s often made from recycled plastic bottles. So I feel good about that.  And yeah, it’s warm. So there’s that. I can turn the thermostat down a notch or two. The more fleece I wear, the eco-friendlier I get, right? But then there’s that ripped-from-the-track-or-the-ski-slope sporty-spice generic-quarter-zip-fleece thing, too. And that sort bums me out.

So I’ll admit that this post is as self-serving as it is interested in finding that intersection between eco and design. I hope you enjoy. And if you’re in the southern hemisphere? Well then enjoy a little chuckle at all us cold people in the Northern hemisphere. And bookmark this post for July.

fleece fashion from etsy

1 – ohmygod! laser-cut fleece scarves from brand new shop Gestaltgoods (herringbone pictured, but seriously: you must go check out the whole shop)

2 – high-collar chartreuse fleece jacket from ReConsumed

3 – avienne ruffle scarf from dear avienne (also a new shop! no sales yet!)

4 – coal miner’s daughter sweater from Sew Moe

5 – cardi tuxedo (fleece cardigan) from Hackwith Design House

6 – fox in the snow fingerless gloves from Vixen Stitch

7 – ruffly gray fleece hoodie from ReConsumed

I’ll take one of each, please.

{editor’s note: Me too, please. I’m freezing.}

heart-to-heart

thanks to the etsy favorites feature, i have hearts, you have hearts, we all have hearts! here, we’ll hop from heart-to-heart each week, progressively adding to our heart trail as we follow the favorites from one seller to the next.

Last week, we left off with…
sandmaiden {felted merino wool wrap top}, who hearts…
sucree jewelry {waterlily pearl bib necklace}, who hearts…
… jriede {alpine fuchsia blossom knitting pattern}, who hearts…
aunty cookie {Braille flocked fabric panel}, who hearts…
lemonade handmade {recycled silver oval necklace}, who hearts…
… deka animal {pebble shaped flowers print}, who hearts…
… tune in next week to find out!

heart-to-heart

thanks to the etsy favorites feature, i have hearts, you have hearts, we all have hearts! here, we’ll hop from heart-to-heart each week, progressively adding to our heart trail as we follow the favorites from one seller to the next.

Last week, we left off with…
kris blues {‘the fox and the marshmallows’ print}, who hearts…
kainkain {fortune cookie throw pillow}, who hearts…
… cicada studio {2011 tea towel calendar}, who hearts…
pesky cat designs {corduroy clutch with applique}, who hearts…
bravo & bravo {set of 4 tiny Turkish tumblers}, who hearts…
… sandmaiden {felted merino wool wrap top}, who hearts…
… tune in next week to find out!

michael phelps, a little black dress, and ecodesign

LZR LBD

This little column of mine here, “Reduce, Reuse, Reimagine,” is a column about the ways in which creativity and ecological concerns intersect. I’m interested in the ways in which designers, artists, and makers impose constraints on themselves when they choose to be eco-friendly, and I’m interested in the ways in which these constraints promote real innovation and creativity.

And I feel like I probably should be quite pleased with the tidbit I’m bringing you this week, except I’m sorta not.

If you will, think back to 2008 when Michael Phelps destroyed world records in his fancy-schmancy Speedo LZR swimsuit. Oh, you know. The one that kind of made him look like a wet seal, or maybe Aquaman?

Well, those suits? They’re no longer allowed. The world governing body of swimming, FINA, said no go. And there sat poor Speedo with a pile of amazingly fast swimsuits and no pool to put them in.

Rather than simply toss them into the waste bin, Speedo teamed up with British design collective From Somewhere, a fashion label known for its use of textile waste in its own production process. The result? A sleek little black cocktail dress that debuted at London’s Estethica Fashion Week this fall.

And the thing is? I actually kind of love the dress. There’s something extremely appropriate about it – using swimsuits to create a cocktail dress. There’s also a bit of irony — making the almost-universally flattering LBD out of the equally almost-universally unflattering swim suit. And I do like that Speedo and From Somewhere are going to actually manufacture and sell the dresses in order to use up the excess LZR suits – I mean, if you’re going to come up with a concept like this, you better actually follow through.

But what I’m stuck on is this: it’s kind of driving me nuts that Speedo commissioned a cocktail dress for a big-time fashion show when there were probably much more useful ways to deal with all that excess. It seems much more like a publicity stunt than a real attempt at, well, anything. It doesn’t change anything about Speedo’s own manufacturing practices. It doesn’t encourage responsible reuse of their waste products. It doesn’t use the excess suits to create anything that might solve a problem or fill a need.

Am I crazy for being so critical? Am I just being cynical?