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#wasteless
davidwfloydart · 2 years
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Lynx Cat – Made of plastic waste by BORDALO II in Lisboa, Portugal 🇵🇹 #portugal🇵🇹 #portugueseartist #sculptureart #artistshoutout #repurposing #plasticwastesolutions #recycling #wasteless #artworkoftheday (at Catalina Foothills, Arizona) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cf9pkNOPPq9bym-XnNMo7a3sn7HjNhh7H_CTm40/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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miyasanchez7 · 5 months
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Join the movement for a Greener Tomorrow and enter a world of eco-conscious living! Explore 'Reduce, Reuse, Recycle' – your go-to guide for sustainable living – by delving into our most recent blog post. Learn how to have a good impact on the environment in little yet effective ways. Our collective future lies ahead of us, so let's go green together!
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chipperfood · 8 months
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Food Waste Reduction: A Tasty Path to Sustainability
Discover the delectable path to #FoodWasteReduction! Learn practical tips for a sustainable lifestyle. Let's savor every meal while making a positive impact on the planet. Join the movement today! 🌱🍽️💚 #Sustainability #ZeroWaste #GreenLiving
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ironnerddonkeyfreak · 2 years
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“Cutting food waste is a delicious way of saving money, helping to feed the world and protect the planet.” #lowimpactliving #zerowastelifestyle #zerofoodwaste #stopfoodwaste #greenfuture #reducefoodwaste #wasteless #wastefreeliving #sustainablefood #reducewaste#nowaste #knam #foodwaste #antispreco #recipes #peches #matcha #teverdematcha #pastry #noicuciniamoacasa (at Institute_of_shaping_ambition) https://www.instagram.com/p/CjEyaDtJXvv/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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lancastervisualart · 2 years
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Carrots coming into harvest season; basil too! Round 2 of pesto making!! Saving some of that GREEENN goodness for the cold months #wasteless #local food #greens #harvest #fall #putupforwinter https://www.instagram.com/p/CiVNfAzOXB1/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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wastelesswanderess · 2 years
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BYO cup to gigs and festivals! There is a huge amount of waste at festivals, but this is an easy swap to avoid just a little bit of it. 🍺 Most festivals don't allow glass, but we conveniently had a couple of metal mugs that did the job perfectly! They are also indestructible 💪 I didn't have a single issue at @sea_sessions with my #reusablecup - and it was also great for drinking water at the water stations 💧 Next time I hope to see something like the returnable pint cups that other festivals have started introducing too! #BYOcup #zerowaste #reducereuserecycle #lowwasteliving #LessWaste #wasteless #sustainableliving #festivalseason #seasessions #seasessions22 #zerowasteireland #zerowasteirl (at Main Beach Bundoran) https://www.instagram.com/p/CfGifMAsHQx/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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ashieshg · 2 years
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#reduceplasticwaste #changemylife #changerdevie #pollutionfreeworld #foodwaste #changecolor #stressmanagementcoach #zerowastejourney #delhipollution #wasteremoval #stressnomore #stressout #changethegame #reducewaste #wasteoffilm #pollutionvisuelle #wastenot #wasteless #wasteofspace #change #stresshelp #airpollution #waronwaste #pollutionawareness #stressbuster #wastenotwantnot #pollutionart #stressmanagementtips #stressbewältigung (at Meerut Cantonment) https://www.instagram.com/p/CegaA2ovWL2/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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wastelesscrafts · 2 years
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I read somewhere that embroidered clothes need to be washed differently. Is this true? I read that right after getting a bunch of embroidery floss to visibly mend some clothes
Washing embroidered clothes
Yup! Check out my post on securing embroidery thread, which includes laundry instructions. My embroidery tag's also a good resource.
Handmade embroidery tends to be fragile, so it's important to properly secure your thread and take good care of the embroidered item. If you don't, you risk for your threads to come loose.
If you're not careful when washing embroidered items, your embroidery threads could get snagged on things like buttons or zippers in the washer.
Try to either wash them by hand (safest), or use your machine's delicate cycle combined with a laundry bag. Always let the item air-dry.
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calendulacraft · 9 months
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Fast Fashion to Slow Fashion :: a DIY guide to up-cycling and mending clothing on a budget.
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For those of us living on a small income, buying from sustainable fashion brands is often out of reach. I would like to point out that *buying new but ecological garments isn't the only way to cultivate a slow fashion wardrobe*. Here are a few options for transforming *upcycling* your clothing, thus making fast fashion into slow fashion:
Mend and repair :: patch hand-me-down sweaters, fix holes in leggins from target and other department stores. By giving items a longer life, and preventing unnecessary garbage, fast fashion items become slow fashion! Here are two tutorials I have written on how to mend a torn belt loop on jeans and patch leggings.
Up-cycle clothing that doesn't suit your style :: when preparing for a trip back home and wondering how to acquire some nicer clothing for the trip a friend of mine gifted me a big bag of clothes. Almost all of them were items that we could call "fast fashion" and nearly all also had stains or rips that needed mending. By fixing and adapting these items and then going on to wear them for several years longer, I am keeping them out of the cycle of buy then trash.
Tailor items that don't fit you :: Taking in clothing is quite simple and there are lots of tutorials on how to hem pants and skirts or take in a size or two. I recently made a tutorial on how to take out a skirt, or make a skirt bigger by adding panels.
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At some point, we must face the fact that a t-shirt is totally worn out and cannot be used for clothing any longer. In such cases here are a couple of crafts to utilize the fabric and other items from the scrap pile:
Create a Quilt :: if you find yourself with a pile of beautiful & memory-filled scraps -- transform them into a quilt as I have done in this post.
Make Twine :: Longer scraps of fabric, especially those from stretch materials like leggings or jersey cotton t-shirts can be made into a thing rope also known as fabric twine. I wrote a tutorial on how to make twine out of fabric scraps.
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<<Best of luck in all your crafting endeavors!>>
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miosage · 1 year
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I bought this lovely woolen blanket at the bargain section of Ikea a while ago – it had been there because it had a hole. I thought it could be an opportunity to learn/practice darning. Unfortunately, I then had to realise that it must've been slashed while opening a package, so it really has more like five to ten holes. I got really discouraged and left it lying on a mending pile for ages.
Since I've been sick all week, I've been puttering at home a lot and sorting things and I came upon my mending pile and the blanket. I decided to finally tackle it and some other projects and looked up darning methods and was ultimate led back to tumblr.
Thanks especially to @wastelesscrafts I got the motivation and instruction I needed to start doing some visible mending and boy, do I love it. Thank you!!
I've been happily hyperfocussing on darning away (and watching sense8 while doing it) all day and here are the first results:
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They're a little wonky (also the coarsely woven fabric is quite hard to work with) but I'm super happy with them anyway. I did them with sock yarn because I felt like that went with the texture of the blanket.
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ecopunkbeginner · 1 year
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I really want to learn how to sew, but I'm very overwhelmed. I'm afraid of practicing on most things for fear of messing them up and wasting them. I'm really the kind of person who needs someone teaching me and available to answer my questions, but I don't have anyone for that and there's several reasons I'm apprehensive about finding a class (the most rational of which are my lack of income and COVID, but social anxiety is also a factor).
I know there's guides and videos online, but I always get so overwhelmed and usually don't know where to start because all my ideas are abstract, abstract to me specifically (because I don't know how fabric construction works), or difficult and/or risky enough to scare and/or confuse me out of wanting to do it.
Does anyone have tips for teaching yourself to sew? How do I practice without being wasteful?
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ninamation · 8 months
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Embroidered a free hat with a prickly pear
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Not a big embroiderer, but this was a fun little project.
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quiltingwitch · 1 year
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A scrappy birb quilt made with 100% recycled and reclaimed materials for a bird lover I love! The fabric, batting, buttons, and even the thread were all sourced from my own clothing, thrift bins, or FabScrap BK.
Bird block pattern is Pretty Bird by Heather Valentine of The Sewing Loft
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envirogoth · 2 years
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  I already own fast fashion/I can only afford to buy fast fashion, now what?
>Sustain what you buy-sewing, washing, and an attitude that cares about the garment
>Fast fashion can break or wear out easily, you can upcycle the fabric
cut out prints for other projects
use fabric for patches
use fabric to repair other clothes
cut off sleeves/collars/make into crop top
t-shirt bags (an option- but inconvenient to use from personal experience)
other non-clothing crafts
>If you won’t use the clothing item and want to give it away, ask people you know before donating to a thrift store. Thrift stores are already overrun with fast fashion as it is, try not to give them more. But if the only other option is throwing it away, it’s fine to donate it.
>Don't buy excess to what you need. yes you can keep up with trends and accessories but hauls or multiple of an item with the same purpose isn't necessary (ex. more t-shirts than what you can cycle regularly)
>Reduce future fast fashion purchases
If possible consider alternatives such as thrifting, rummage sale shopping, and diy. 
Thrift stores and rummage sales support local economics! Your money is going to your neighbors instead of a company.
Rummage sales are preferable to places such as depop, becasue it involves local neighbors who want to get rid of clothes (that will possibly be thrown out otherwise) They can be much cheaper for much higher quality.
>There’s a difference between not being able to afford any other clothes, and buying hauls of fast fashion to wear for a short period of time only to donate immediately or throw away. Influencers who make hundreds of dollars worth of hauls aren’t the type of people who can say “i can’t afford anything else”. hauls aren’t sustainable. 
>Don’t feel guilty if you truly can’t afford anything else, but please consider your options and sustain what you already own before buying more.
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cottonkhaleesi · 6 months
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It’s a visible mending day.
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ernmark · 11 months
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So I bought a couple belts that turned out to be just a couple of inches too tight-- they kept my pants up, but they were uncomfortable.
I got them at a thrift shop, so there wasn't a lot of choice regarding the size-- but also they were like a dollar each, so I figured I could play around with upsizing and if they didn't survive I wouldn't be too put out about it.
Since they were the same size and nearly the exact same style (I'm betting they were both from the same person), they make for a good before/after set.
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I cut it into pieces, sewed the ends, added grommets, and laced them back together with paracord.
You can see the extra length the laces gave me, and it's a lot more comfortable to wear. The knots are a bit lumpy, though-- I'll need to experiment with ways to secure the laces that will lay flat.
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I also had some extra grommets left in the kit I bought (it came to all of $3 with a coupon), I went ahead and repaired another belt, too.
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