| T O P I C R E V I E W |
| ashcordes |
Posted - Jan 10 2007 : 12:45:23 PM I have an overwhelming need to simplify everything right now...get rid of the clutter around our house, donate clothes that I don't wear often and simplify my closet, etc.
Anyone have any suggestions? Where to start, how best to organize things, closets especially? |
| 25 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
| ByHzGrace |
Posted - Feb 18 2007 : 2:55:44 PM Did any of you see the article in the NY times on lil homes? http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2007/02/15/realestate/greathomes/16tiny_graphic_ready.html this first link has more www. addys and phone numbers of affordable housing
this is the article that goes with those photos http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/16/realestate/greathomes/16tiny.html?_r=1&oref=slogin could you live in a 120sqft home?
Ricki thanks for the links, the turtle with the plastic bag is gut wrenching... we see 6pack plastic caught on gulls and manatees too many time. I like the hempwear. Hemp boots looked good.
o and here is another link on freetrees http://freetreesandplants.com/
have any of you talked to garden centers off of bigbox stores about where there old planting materials go? Free or discounted source to just haul it away are available if you have a truck.
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| simpler1773 |
Posted - Feb 04 2007 : 05:54:03 AM Such amazing posts! The links, oh the links! I'm going to be looking at those all day, lol.
As for simplification ~ take everything out of your closet...everything! And only put back in what you absolutely love or can't live without. Put the rest in a bag or box, and if you haven't needed to dig in the bag for a certain time period, get rid of it without looking in it!
I just got done making bags with fabric I already had using the pattern at http://www.morsbags.com/
Now I plan to replace things as they wear out around the house with stuff from this website http://www.rawganique.com/index.htm I'm hoping that stuff will last a long long time and will be better for the environment. It's more expensive up front but then so is how many trips to sprawl mart?
Anyway ~ Loved reading this thread. You are all such an inspiration to me.
~Ricki~ You can't pour anything out of an empty vessel, take care of yourself! |
| Nance in France |
Posted - Feb 04 2007 : 03:06:15 AM Ellen, that is one commercial that I love to hate! Imagine sending the message out that you SCREW THINGS UP by using "real" money..... and I loved your message to all of us about being more community oriented. I don't do half of what I could. But I did teach my little Sunday School girls a good lesson two winters ago when we knit scarves that I later donated to a battered women's shelter along with a few clothing items I put in the sack. With coupons the yarn was not terribly expensive for me, and it was good for them to labor over something that would be enjoyed by someone other than themselves. Remember that eggroll and fortune cookie message I got....."including others in your life will bring you great happiness".....it gave me the incentive to go across the street and knock on my neighbors door (who had also gone through a painful divorce) to invite her to dinner, and three and a half years later, here I sit in France, happily married to her father! I love that proverb "hands to work, hearts to God", and you have inspired me to get busier! Love to all, Nance |
| doglady |
Posted - Feb 03 2007 : 1:00:57 PM Ellen, I loved the commercial and how true. I actually had my trash service this week start charging a $2 fee if you write an old fashion check and mail it. They prefer that you make your payment online!! I refuse to put sensitive information online and I don't even own an ATM card.
I have been cleaning out the clutter one room at a time and It's still a work in progress. I am getting there but since I'm organizing at the same time - it's slow. As I go through each room, I sort things into Toss Out, Give Away, or Keep. As soon as I decide to give it away, it goes into my van for the next trip into town. That way the clutter is out of the house. It works for me. I also redid the budget and I find that I'm saying NO to a lot of things I don't really need to buy. I still have several books that I bought and haven't had the time to read so why buy more! It's amazing how many things you end of buying twice just because you can't find the first item. Such a good topic.
Tina
The dogs own the house but the people pay the mortgage! www.kennelcreations.com |
| ByHzGrace |
Posted - Feb 03 2007 : 12:13:49 PM this is a good topic, thanks for spending time adding your thoughts.
If one of our missions is creating a sustainable community ...what steps are you involved in to foster development in your area?
If we are peeking over this virtual fence and catching Nancy and Rosemary with their kittens in their apron pockets how much time do you spend peeking in on your neighbors? volunteering? baking and extra loaf? knitting a scarf?
Is your neighbor hood like ours, the front porch community is now the backyard community?
How many of you plant to share abundance with your neighbors? Do we have victory gardens to make our community be winners? (I planted 6 watermelon and 6 muskmelons today, way more then I can eat with the intention of sharing/canning.)
On the consumerism front have you seen the Visa commercial money shouldnt slow you down of the lunch room line? 1 minute
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FDTDgVgQ9ic
here the whole world is running smoothly, while everyone swipes their card, then here I come wanting to use cash and everything crashes as the line comes to a halt? What kind of sublimal=propaganda messages does this send out to our children when we use plastic?  |
| catscharm74 |
Posted - Jan 29 2007 : 11:12:33 AM I have to say that is one reason I am getting off the daily grind bus. Money is important but not so important to me. It never has been. I have always gotten by and living a simple life has helped that. I don't watch much tv or read too many newspapers or magazines (to much doom and glood for me) I keep one foot firmly planted in reality while the other is off having fun. Balance is key!!! |
| Rosemary |
Posted - Jan 29 2007 : 10:39:20 AM <plucking the kittens out of my apron pockets as I speak>
Dreams are the stuff that we are made on, to twist the words of the bard. Don't get me wrong! Having an idyll or two up our sleeves is fabulous, and the simpler, the more pastoral, the better! It's the phoney-baloney ideals foisted on us by advertisers (and yep, credit card companies, too) that we need about as much as we need weevils in our bolls. |
| Nance in France |
Posted - Jan 29 2007 : 10:28:03 AM Oh, gee, Rosemary....been spying on me while I hung the laundry??? (guffaw)!!! The good thing about having idealism and dreams are that we NEED them to continue to improve ourselves and our lives. As we inch closer we become happier and more confident that we are on the right track. And yep, people feel (me included) like credit cards are somehow "magic" money.....doesn't hurt at the point of purchase because we ain't yanking greenbacks outta the old wallet. We go home (poorer) but with our wad o' cash intact! THEN the day of reckoning cometh, once monthly, ha! Remember the old Patsy Cline song "Who's sorry now?".......cha ching! I was in that credit card mentality for along time. Banks LOVE people like that. When you don't pay the balance of each month that "really good deal" might end up costing more than the original sales price!!
And not wanting to end this on a note of doom and gloom, but what BETTER time to make the disciplined lifestyle become normal than when we don't HAVE to..... people during and after WWII had veggie gardens because they'd starve to death otherwise. People killed themselves in 1929 over the prospect of financial ruin. They rationed because they had to. If a black cloud lingers over America again (self inflicted or from an outside source), how much better prepared will we be able to get through it and even help those around us, if we aren't in some shell shocked frame of mind reeling at the reality of lost jobs, piled up debt, foreclosures.... you get the ugly picture I am sure. I love you guys tremendously, and learn so much from ya'll, gain confidence to try things, etc. With people like you spread all over the globe, we can get through anything!! Hope everybody is having a day of peace and contentment!! Nance |
| Rosemary |
Posted - Jan 29 2007 : 10:10:08 AM No apologies needed, Nancy! Everything you said is so true. I think sometimes we farmgirls like to imagine a more idyllic existence than we really have. Oh sure, some of us are cheerfully up at dawn baking bread, and outside by noon hanging glimmering white sheets on a clothesline, surrounded by fragrant roses, with kittens in our apron pockets and all that, but let's get real! Sometimes, life's a grind, and we do fall prey to the lure of commercial excess. I think the powers that be try to make us more receptive to sales pitches by forcing us to believe the only control we have over our lives is to fill them with Things. Their Things. Or Their Political Party's Things.
I'm reading a book now that I didn't want to mention on the thread under Reading Room because everyone else was mentioning such charming and uplifting books. What's got my old grosgrain ribbon bookmark in it right now is "The Culture of Fear: Why Americans Are Afraid of the Wrong Things." The author (Barry Glassner) goes into the reality of a lot of things the media pass off as fact, and finds that these are exaggerations or outright lies. At the back of this campaign of shock and awe, he believes, is that the more frightened people are of the big scary world around them (or right down the street), the more vulnerable they will be to the messages of the advertisers and corporate supporters on which the media thrive.
<cringe, gulp> |
| Persephone |
Posted - Jan 29 2007 : 10:05:16 AM I'm doing my spring cleaning right now. (That way, when it's actually spring, I can be out in the garden! :)) I'm working my way from one end of the apt to the other. I started in our bedroom closet- we have all our stuff in boxes, and I went through each box one at a time, and sorted into keep, give away, and toss piles. Then I put the keep things back in the box, and moved on to the next one. Just keep doing that- it helps to break it into little bits- one box, drawer, shelf at a time, til you've made it through one room. Then do the next one. I LOVE decluttering- I do it twice a year, in spring and fall, and it really helps keep unneeded things out of the home- I have a mental inventory of everything we own, and I know approximately where to go to find it- once you've decluttered, the next times are much easier, because instead of years of buildup, you've only got about 6 months of buildup. |
| blueroses |
Posted - Jan 29 2007 : 09:51:24 AM Nance,
You are so right about self discipline, and love what you have to say. Last week, I asked my bank to reissue debit cards to my dh & me because a major retailer had their billing records hacked and I knew I had used my card at their store in November. So, I took some cash out of my account for our needs/wants for the week (I used a check @ the grocery). Wow - my dh was right. One is sure a lot less apt to spend when doling out cash!!! It really makes you think before you hand over the green stuff! I think we may have to begin doing this - sort of the way that Dave Ramsey advises. It was quite an eye opener.
"You cannot find peace...by avoiding life." Virginia Woolfe |
| Nance in France |
Posted - Jan 29 2007 : 03:34:17 AM Morning, ladies. Glad to see this interesting thread is still active. And Ellen, so happy you like the ornament, too! I agree with your hunch that our consumptive gotta have it/I deserve it mindset absolutely coincides with the longer workweek, less time spent with loved ones on a holiday and the frustration that brings on, which the AD GURUS take full advantage of. They get us at our weakest point; feeling out of control, guilty at neglecting family, tired, longing for and unable to achieve that Ozzie and Harriet life, but with cash and credit cards at the ready!! The irrefutable law that Money (and things) cannot buy happiness is what we continually try to disprove! An exaggerated (?) scenario: you come home exhausted at the end of the day, slap together a meal less enthusiastically and probably less healthy than you might like, and that is assuming you actually DO eat together, only to collapse later on the couch and stare into space (TV), and by Friday night you are really worn out by the routine. You're too tired to create that happy organized home so you choose the instant gratification route and buy yourself something to (temporarily) cheer you up. When that stuff begins to accumulate, your life is even more cluttered and one day you feel like that painting by Edvard Munch, "The Scream"!! Surrounded by beautiful things, and drowning in them! Now, gals, I love sarcasm and have painted a more drastic picture than most people live, certainly. But the message is the same. We are the richest nation in the world yet antidepressant drug use is at an all time high, not to mention teen suicide and personal bankrupcty. What is wrong with this picture?
Nothing will bring us more happiness and contentment than being in a cheerful home with our loved ones: the less we buy, the less debt, less to clean and keep on top of, which means we appreciate what we have more, more time to relax and de-stress, more time really "being" with friends and family, and more energy to be creative and reflective with our lives. Alot of your lives are already like that, and the rest of us are making our way, slowly but surely. I can say from experience that you cannot make a complete and instant turnaround like this. When I took early retirement and came to live with my husband here, his response to my requests to acquire something would often be "We don't really need this......." and sometimes I felt/still feel huffy afterwards, but gradually I began to realize the value in denying myself something that happened to catch my eye. It makes it much more rewarding now when I DO splurge on something. Discipline in prison must be horrible, but when we have the FREEDOM to discipline ourselves, that feels more like success in working toward a goal. Oooohh, long post ladies. My apologies!! Nance
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| ByHzGrace |
Posted - Jan 28 2007 : 12:55:08 PM ok sooo much to say, and my limited time today to answer=(another part of my intentional living= is clocking my time spent in front of a one dimensional screen away from my 3dloved ones)... in sunday school today, we discussed a handout with stats: 65% of us spend more time with our puter then our spouse? ouch and on top of that American avg tv viewing= 28hours a week = solid 2months a year=9 years out of 65 ouch ouch
Nancy very thought provoking responses, i do love your compassionate outlook and your ornament . Do you think the gotta get it consumption level in the states has anything to do with matching our longer work hours/less holiday time? Reducing consumption does take planning, ya know we talked in Sunday School how now we are replacing time I spent shopping with organizing/remastering. I have been trying to catalog in a way all my incoming stuff to keep track of my re-useable things, especially from packing products... and the amount is overwhelming but inspiring too... my creative appetite has been whetted ... i had forgotten I took a scout leader class at a powwow on using scraps for crafts. I toted a half a car load to our nursery school at church, drop off crates to a elementary school, and called a scout pack to get their need list, so I'm down one recycle bin already.
Buying from local farmers/co-op bulk does minimize (I take my own crate,glass jar, basket for eggs and milk + my cannister goes w/ me to my friends coffee shop to load my fair trade beans)
Have any of your communities talked about a bag tax or demanding merchants use biodegradables? Have y'all heard about weaving with bags? http://www.bagbed.com/
http://www.johndahlsen.com/thumbs/plastic_bags.html
Or the Missouri gals seen the above public art from bags?
My splurges have always been for guitars. I gifted my electric to one of my sons band friends yesterday...still debating on my amp. Rosemary on the disaster scale... our stuff got whacked by the big guy 2004, when we had 3 hurricanes. House without a roof doesnt protect much stuff priorities realigned for me. 1. first lesson evacuation travel is sloooooooooow be first out (...To go a 100 miles to Tampa took us 8 hours to evacuate).
2.what is important ...liquid gold=water. we know we'll be on our own 3days before our government trucks roll.
speaking of h20 do any of you divert your graywater? drink bottled water? http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2007/01/21/BUGE7NL8RA1.DTL
Brenda,I do lead an org to distribute surplus clothing/shoes to our local women and childrens havens,tho when you see the amount I have to alter to wear coming out of my own closet... yikeys I have enough to open my own size 12-14 warehouse.I'm contemplating how fun it would be to cut up my sun dresses to make my own beach Tent. A true tent dress! Complete the ensemble with maybe matching picnic tablecloths and napkins.  Weaving has brought me= fiber lust. With your yarn shop example,you could knit to clothe the naked , the yarn owners stay in business because they operate to meet our preference.Say our preference is to knit with cashmere, somebody has to be the supplier to meet the cashmere demand. Aren't vehicle mfg with the introduction of anti steel bodies keeping my car from rusting as fast(making a used car last longer)? So are they meeting longer use preferences too? Have you seen those cargo bikes?http://bakfietscargo.blogspot.com/ this for me is one of those do we spend to conserve and feel safer healthier?
some idea links:
http://www.make-stuff.com/recycling/
http://www.eco-artware.com/newsletter/index.shtml#Scrapile
http://www.kid-at-art.com/
http://www.resourcerevival.com/
Elizabeth how is your cleaning going? Jayne how far are you moving? |
| Nance in France |
Posted - Jan 24 2007 : 02:44:22 AM Brenda, it took me being a transplant (even if only for a few months stretch at a time) to see the difference in lifestyle and quality of life between the US and the "other" country I happened to land in, France. People here generally have less stuff and seem no less happy than the next person. How does the Bible put it...."with food and raiment (clothes) be content". Certainly other religious tomes espouse the same sentiment, and it really is a good mantra to live by. Maybe it is because France is comprised of mainly small villages instead of big cities (nowhere to run, nowhere to hide), but I can tell you, the local news for this region we live in virtually never has a report of violent crime or robbery, as opposed to the city I live in back home, where the news often leads off with something like that! And I am by no means bashing the US because I love my home and life there, but we could sometimes take a cue from other nations in how we govern ourselves. Everybody in France is guaranteed health care regardless of ability to pay. Rosemary, you are right; now THAT is one good indication of a civilized country. Everyone is important enough to get taken care of. Instead of only two political parties, like we have, there are about 16 here, hubby says, including one labeled the Environmental Party! I think in America (and everywhere) it will take lots of little efforts, one person at a time, setting a better example, growing in numbers until they are too large to be ignored. Maybe we can start the Organic Party someday! To all my wonderful farmgal friends, sow one seed of a good deed today, and go to bed happy! Nance |
| daffodil dreamer |
Posted - Jan 23 2007 : 8:49:43 PM I too have been cleaning/sorting out recently, as hopefully we are moving soon! So it is sorting with a mission - it is helping me be more ruthless that it costs a lot to move stuff from one side of the country to the other! Just finished doing my son's playroom, so am allowing myself a treat to chat for 20 minutes until tackling something else! My question is how many toys can a 2 year old accumulate?! The answer is, apparently, thousands!! Best wishes and happy sorting, Jayne |
| candismom |
Posted - Jan 23 2007 : 5:49:51 PM Hello, This is what I have been working on for 2 weeks. I have the seasonal closets to do next week and I am done. Today it was nice to work around the house and not have stuff everywhere. I bought canvas bags from LL Bean I take food shopping. When I check out I have them put everything back in my cart and I move off to the side and sack my own stuff. They don't have a clue how to sack it. Here is a great blog that will help you. http://orgjunkie.blogspot.com/ Hugs, Elizabeth |
| brightmeadow |
Posted - Jan 23 2007 : 12:04:58 PM Nance - it was living in Europe (Spain) for a year that really made me see the way we live here with "new eyes" - before that, I had taken our way of life for granted. Now I struggle with it, seeing the parardoxes all the time.
Ellen - you work in the fashion industry? You could "clothe the naked" by giving away all your clothes every year and getting new ones -- just not so many???
I have a similar problem, I work for an automobile manufacturer. My personal values sometimes feel like they are in conflict with the goals of the corporation -- even though I can rationalize it (hey, we make ambulances too! and people who live in rural areas have better lives because of cars! and the local economy is dependent on manufacturing!) so I can sleep at night...
They would like for us to buy a new car every year or two.... Yeah, right! That is where I draw the line. But on the other hand even the car manufacturers are trying to make their cars last longer (warranties are now for 100,000 miles) and to be able to recycle more of the car when it eventually can't be repaired, and the hydrogen fuel cell looks promising to cut down emissions and dependence on oil. So even the corporations really are trying to be more sustainable.
You shall eat the fruit of the labor of your hands - You shall be happy and it shall be well with you. -Psalm 128.2 Visit my blog at http://brightmeadowfarms.blogspot.com ,web site store at http://www.watkinsonline.com/fish or my homepage at http://home.earthlink.net/~brightmeadow |
| Rosemary |
Posted - Jan 23 2007 : 11:40:31 AM Nancy, France is the most civilized nation on earth, in so many ways.
Why not make those plastic grocery bags a thing of the past in the U.S., I mean legally? (And the paper ones, too, while we're at it -- they're only good for harboring roaches anyway. If you insist on using them, DON'T bring them inside!) What if grocery stores gave out reusable HEMP bags, so many to a customer once only -- you'd have to purchase replacements)? Wouldn't they save money in the long run? Of course, the hemp would have to come from some non-U.S. source, since this fabulous cash crop is illegal here due to a few misguided zealots, but since most U.S. grocery stores are owned by corporations based in the Netherlands and elsewhere anyway, so what? It's more a global economy every day.
Wow. I'm writing to the Powers That Be tonight. Go thou and do likewise. |
| Nance in France |
Posted - Jan 23 2007 : 11:18:30 AM Brenda, you have said a mouthful which will cause us to think a brainful!! And I for one would prefer not hearing that you have broken a limb to save gasoline. I like your yarn theory; too cute! My "stash" rarely consists of more than about 15 skeins or balls of yarn so I definitely live with stash envy. Maybe there is a support group; one that hopefully meets near a yarn shop. And maybe when you are in a position to trade cars, you could find one that is more fuel efficient. I wish the powers that be in America would get the idea that producing and using those really tough reusable grocery sacks is mandatory. It is that way in France; they are so durable and should one finally bite the dust a replacement bag is a mere 1 Euro. In fact only a few grocery stores do keep a supply of the cheap one-use bags (the norm for us in the US) and they CHARGE the customer for using them, it is only a few cents but it sends a message. It really boils down to that old "wear it out use it up or do without" or however it really goes. If we thought before we bought, we might be surprised to see how many times we decide against the purchase. I think alot of us are closer to living the dream of a more simple life than we realize, but it is like going on a diet. You (we) must take that first step and keep at it until you see results: it is not easy when marketing folks keep pushing stuff at us with the "you deserve this" hidden motivation. Ok, I've said enough; I think I'll go clean out a drawer. Nance
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| brightmeadow |
Posted - Jan 23 2007 : 09:13:53 AM I almost just bought another book on sustainable living.... and then I decided to look for it in the library instead.
Ellen, you really put your finger on the paradox that I continually find as I try to live in a more sustainable way. It is too hard to know the total cost/impact of our purchasing decisions.
For example, when I missed the Saturday delivery of my CSA, I had to drive 15 miles in the other direction to pick up my organically, locally grown food package. Is it worth it? My car, sadly, only gets 18 mpg. so I used almost a whole gallon of gasoline to pick up a few vegetables. If all her customers are like me, making individual trips to pick up their vegetables, then our organically-grown, sustainable vegetables are certainly contributing more than their fair share of greenhouse gas emissions - more damage to the planet than a centrally located organic market near our workplaces would be....
I wonder why I even need a car at all - I SHOULD be riding my bicycle! (except it's 15 degrees outside today, might the additional health care costs due to breaking my arm riding on icy roads balance out the reduced health care costs due to the healthier lifestyle?)
I should knit yarn from my stash instead of buying new yarn... but if I don't buy yarn, the local yarn stores will go out of business! And how will the store owners make their living? I don't really need new clothes so why should I knit at all? The sweater I knit 5 years ago is still warm and almost all in one piece....
Yesterday I took my own bags to the grocery store. It was funny to watch the clerk - I only took 5 bags and she thought she needed more - she put the jug of orange juice with a handle in a plastic bag! She only put a few items in each bag. When I got to my car I repacked everything and left the extra plastic bags (5 of them) in the cart. I so seldom remember to take these bags in, I really must do it more often.
You shall eat the fruit of the labor of your hands - You shall be happy and it shall be well with you. -Psalm 128.2 Visit my blog at http://brightmeadowfarms.blogspot.com ,web site store at http://www.watkinsonline.com/fish or my homepage at http://home.earthlink.net/~brightmeadow |
| Rosemary |
Posted - Jan 23 2007 : 08:30:21 AM How about priming yourself with thoughts of the advent-of-disaster plan: If you had 2 hours to gather up whatever belongings you could transport 100 miles to safety by hand and on foot (the way most of the world's refugees have to) in the advent of some stuff-destroying disaster, what would you save, not counting the food and water we'll pretend will fall out of the sky as needed?
Everything else you can safely give away or sell. |
| Nance in France |
Posted - Jan 22 2007 : 10:39:23 AM Ellen, I think you've stumbled across something that we're all sort of saying/trying to say....to live intentionally, or to live thoughtfully. Thinking a purchase through instead of impulse buying or buying because it was such a good deal, etc. Haven't we all had a blouse hanging in the closet that had never been worn, tags still on, but it was SUCH a bargain??? I think you take action one step at a time, like training wheels on a bike; and I think that a packrat could take stock of the stock, so to speak, and sell or donate hardly used/no longer needed items to charity. And absolutely you must keep your musical instruments ready to make a joyful noise at a moment's notice, because that makes the heart glad. And God loves a cheerful giver, not only of material possessions, but of ourselves, our time, etc. We all need splurges now and then, but when we begin to rethink and redefine what is truly necessary, then we are on the track to simply successful living: you're halfway there, girlfriend! Nance |
| ByHzGrace |
Posted - Jan 21 2007 : 2:55:18 PM Well working in the fashion industry... it has been said brown is the new black. I have been conflicted with working in this industry and with a pledge I made recently. Our Sunday school class pledged to try to live more intentionally. Part of these intentions, have to do with my call and response as being a steward to God's creation:our planet, to help my neighbors:clothe the naked, feed the poor, aid the sick, visit the imprisoned, and to redirect my efforts to what I believe my faith really is an "abundant life". How do you take action? How does the pack rat take this call forward? Is all consumption negative? Is purchasing a product that may produce conservation wrong?
Like I have been challenged with some of my needs or maybe it is wants... especially trying to be on a small island to search for free cycle items... does the required separate trips to different places and loss of fuel/energy, subsequent pollution footprints make up for the savings a new rope, additional clothespins, I could get with one trip to my local hardware store to make for my broken dryer? To repeat the sounding JOY What about strings for my guitar and reeds for a clarinet? I have changed dress sizes so I have been busy sewing. My weakness, I confess, I'm a swimsuitaholic... I've never (editing in some missing words that my mind must want my fingers to conserve )HAD one to last a year like the dress. I haven't found too MANY lyrca scraps at the thrift store.
I would like to hear any tips on how can I do this?
I love how we can use scraps if we just take the time to redesign/reinvent ourselves/think. Did you see the scrap house on natl geographic? http://www.scraphouse.org/Materials
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| Nance in France |
Posted - Jan 21 2007 : 10:06:43 AM Brenda, my one dress would definitely have to be the basic black dress! I always joke I should have married an undertaker... Nance |
| brightmeadow |
Posted - Jan 21 2007 : 09:47:55 AM Yeah, I was thinking about the brown dress last night while I was knitting away. If I was going to wear the same dress for a year I don't think it would be brown! I was trying to decide what color it would have to be. Black maybe (what if you had to go to a funeral during the year?) or maybe gray - maybe that is what the Pilgrims were doing with their gray dresses. My other choice would maybe be a denim jumper. Then add/subtract blouses/sweaters and accessories to dress up or down. But looking at my closet I guess I have maybe already done most of that.
I have simplified my "business casual" work wardrobe - I have 5 pairs of navy-blue docker-style, 5 white button down oxford shirts with the company logo embroidered on. I wear a green denim jacket over this every day.
And then for after work I have about 4 pairs of blue jeans, 2 denim jumpers, 2 denim skirts, and 4 denim shirts...... hmmm. seeing a trend here. Of course I have several dresses in my closet that don't get out much and a lot of blue suits from an earlier, more corporate headquarters assignment a decade ago. Maybe I should clean those out!
You shall eat the fruit of the labor of your hands - You shall be happy and it shall be well with you. -Psalm 128.2 Visit my blog at http://brightmeadowfarms.blogspot.com ,web site store at http://www.watkinsonline.com/fish or my homepage at http://home.earthlink.net/~brightmeadow |
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