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Monday, October 3, 2011

Eco & Budget-friendly halloween costumes

Halloween can mean many things... sexy get-ups, scary faces, once worn costumes and some serious fun. Obviously like many parties there is a real potential for budget busting and waste afterwards. Well no need to cancel the spooktacular plans! Inspired by fellow backpackers on Utila island, Honduras (read no wal-marts or costumes retailers ANYWHERE) here are 10 eco & budget-friendly costumes ideas!!

1.An Electrocution victim

Supplies:
Old t-shirt (your ok with ripping)
electrical cords (please use common sense here!)


2. Mario & Luigi

Supplies:
Jean coveralls or jeans w/ suspenders (duct tape if nothing else!)
Green & Red Tee-shirts

If available:
Big Yellow buttons
Green & Red Conductor hat
White Gloves
Brown shoes


3. A Giant Baby

Supplies:
Diaper (or white cloth secured w/ pins)
Soother or sucker
Baby Bottle


4. Greek God/ Goddess

Supplies:
White (or other colored) sheet (secured w/ pins)
Leaf, foliage
Gold ribbon (I used unraveled x-mas bows)
Additional ideas:
Cardboard (cut into lighting bolt shape)
Aluminum foil (cover cardboard)


5. Hunter S. Thompson

Supplies:
Bucket Hat or Visor
Sunglasses
Wacky button up T-shirt
Shorts


6. Tom Cruise from Risky Business

Supplies:
White button-down long-sleeve shirt
Tighty Whities



7. Zombie Hunter

Supplies:
Belt w/ gun holder (easy d.i.y)
Toy gun
Pretty flexible.. tight t-shirt/ tank top dark color
tights, jeans etc.


8. Beggar

Supplies:
Scruffy shirt & pants
cardboard sign & felt 
booze in a brown paper bag



9. Bottle of Rum

Supplies:
Large rectangular cardboard box
Felt markers


10. Mermaid

Supplies:
Long, peasant skirt
matching top bikini, tube etc..
shells, flowers to clip in hair

if available:
shimmer to underwater look


A special thanks to everyone featured & all of the great people @ Cross Creeks Halloween 2009!

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Saturday, September 17, 2011

10 ways to make your home - and the planet - a more beautiful place to live.

While browsing through the very useful Style at Home website, I discovered this eco-chic list of 10 ways to make your home -  and the planet - a more beautiful place to live.


1 Colour your world "green"
Freshen up your walls with eco-friendly paint. The volatile organic compounds (VOCs) found in conventional paints are bad for your health and contribute to global warming, so opt for low-VOC  or VOC-free lines instead. Other options: milk and biodegradable paints, which are nontoxic, and recycled paints, which reduce landfill waste.

2 Go au naturel
If privacy isn't an issue, leave your windows unadorned. The airy look lets in light, which can warm a cold room, and also means you have one less item to dispose of when a drapery style becomes passé. If direct sun makes the room too hot or you're feeling shy about naked panes, select window treatments that are made of natural textured materials, like linen, bamboo or seagrass.
3 Say no to PVC
Instead of buying a vinyl shower curtain, choose a cloth one. The polyvinyl chloride (PVC) in most plastic varieties emits carcinogens (bad for your health) and is non-biodegradable (bad for the earth). If you're about to embark on a bathroom reno, consider designing a shower area with a glass door or partition, so you don't need a curtain at all.

4 Watch what you toss
Take eco-friendly waste disposal beyond the recycling bin and compost heap: keep your renovation garbage and old furniture out of landfill. First, consider reusing items: Do you need new cabinets or just doors? How about reupholstering that chair instead of discarding it? If you can't use an item, donate it to a charity or used-building-materials supplier like Habitat for Humanity's ReStores. For unwanted refuse, it's surprising what's recyclable these days: most metals and plastics, yes, but did you know asphalt shingles, concrete and sometimes even drywall can find new life? Contact your local sanitation department to find out more.

5 Grow your decor
Not only does a little greenery make a room look more homey and lived-in, but plants also filter out harmful airborne chemicals. Add palms, ferns or potted gerbera daisies, which all have high ratings for their ability to remove chemical vapours, throughout your home and you'll find you'll breathe easier.

6 Tread softly
Chemical dyes, stain-resistant treatments and heavy-duty adhesives in some carpets off-gas harmful toxins. Instead of noxious pile, roll out alternatives like sisal, seagrass or coir (made from coconuts), or rugs with recycled content. Carpet tiles are a smart choice, too: you can replace only the worn or stained sections, reducing the amount that goes to landfill.

7 Sleep soundly
Ever wake up feeling a little stuffy? Your bed could be the culprit. To alleviate the problem, choose bedding made of organic cottons or linens; they're harvested responsibly and expose you to fewer allergy-inducing chemicals than ordinary cotton or wrinkle-free sheets. When it's time to replace your mattress, purchase an all-wool or natural latex model.

8 Furnish with care
More retailers are taking up the cause, making it easier to find earth-friendly furniture. Look for pieces containing reclaimed wood or wood certified by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), and organic fabric and upholstery fill. Avoid particleboard, plywood and other wood composites, which often contain harmful chemicals like formaldehyde. Also consider buying vintage or antique furniture; you may even find a gorgeous piece in a now-endangered wood, like African afrormosia, that you wouldn't dream of buying new!

9 Lay down friendly floors
There are plenty of options underfoot; for instance, salvaged wood has a beautiful patina, and fast-growing bamboo comes in a variety of looks to suit different tastes. For new wood flooring, look for FSC-certified products. Other options: sustainably harvested cork, polished concrete, stone, recycled-glass tiles or old-fashioned linoleum.

10 Be label conscious
For each new product you buy, look for certification from these reputable programs: Energy Star (energy-efficient appliances), FSC (wood from well-managed forestry operations), Green Label Plus (low-emitting carpets and rugs), Green Seal (paints), Greenguard (low-emitting interior products), Rediscovered Wood (forest operations that use reclaimed or recycled wood materials) and Scientific Certification Systems (recycled content and biodegradability). Eco-smart design has come a long way from rustic hippy chic -- these days you can outfit your home in the latest fashions while showing the earth some TLC. 

Pictures sourced from:

Modern Home Decor Windows windowdecoration design

home-interior-design-pictures.blogspot.com

indoor plant settings Home interior tropicalplants and palms
eastofedenplants.co.uk

Vintage Furniture http://vintage-furniture-guides.blogspot.com/2011/04/vintage-furniture.html

http://penanbamboo.en.made-in-china.com/product/CeVxdakGXIhP/China-Bamboo-Flooring-Tiger-Strand-Woven-http://penanbamboo.en.made-in-china.com/product/CeVxdakGXIhP/China-Bamboo-Flooring-Tiger-Strand-Woven-Bamboo-.html

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Water Wars?

A very wise professor I had at the University of Lethbridge once remarked that "future wars will be fought not over gold or oil but over water". While you may have not been there, I think you can get a pretty good idea what he means in this great documentary that I recently had the pleasure of watching....
 Blue Gold: World Water Wars (2008) 

The movie brings home the necessity of fresh H2O in our survival and how this often taken for granted essential resource is being extracted, polluted and depleted in front of our own eyes. 


See the IMBD review here
Summary: If your interested in our Earth's future and/ or water conservation, add this to your "To watch" list.



.... and I couldn't do a feature about water conservation without sneaking my favorite Sesame Street cartoon. (Also seen in Top 10 Eco-Friendly Kids Cartoons)



One proposed and currently researched method of attaining fresh water is through the process of desalination. See more details in the blurb or follow the link for the full National Geographic article. 
"This story is part of a special National Geographic News series on global water issues.
With 1.8 billion people predicted to live in areas of extreme water scarcity by 2025, desalination—the removal of salt from water—is increasingly being proposed as a solution.
But before desalination can make a real difference solving in the looming water crisis, officials and experts need to commit to overcoming obstacles that make the process expensive and inefficient, a new paper argues.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2011/08/110804-fresh-water-crisis-desalination-environment-science/


Peace,
FB