Archive for the ‘reduce/reuse/recycle’ Category

What to do with all that wrapping paper.

Friday, December 25th, 2009

With all the wrapping paper left behind after holiday gifts have been opened, now is the perfect time to practice the three Rs of producing less waste – reduce, reuse and recycle. Instead of shoving it all into garbage bags and dumping it, here are some creative ways to reuse and recycle it and reduce your eco-footprint at the same time.

NOTE: To remove wrinkles, carefully iron the paper on the “wrong” side using LOW heat – spritz with a little water, if necessary. Remember to first remove any tape and smooth the paper out on a flat surface using your hands. Cut off any torn edges so you’re left with a square or rectangular piece.

  • Crumple it up and stuff it in hats or purses to help them keep their shape.
  • Wrap it around a bouquet of flowers you’re taking to someone special.
  • Shred it to use as ‘fluff’ or pretty packing material in gift bags/boxes for future gifts.
  • Shred and use it in place of bubble wrap or styrofoam packing peanuts.
  • Cover a corkboard with it and hang it up for a festive, decorative place to leave messages and to-do lists.
  • Go online and learn how to make origami shapes and animals with it!
  • Cut a piece to size and slide it in the clear, front sleeve of a three-ring binder to create a decorative look.
  • Cut it into small pieces and leave them by the telephone. Use the white side to write down messages.
  • Measure your drawers, cabinets and closets. Cut the paper to fit and insert for simple, pretty shelf paper and draw liners.
  • If it isn’t torn or too wrinkled, keep it to wrap future presents. Reuse paper taken from large gifts to wrap smaller gifts.
  • Use it to decoupage pieces of furniture or flower pots or cardboard or wooden shapes to make decorations or ornaments for next year.
  • Cover your kids’ textbooks – if you haven’t already – or recover if the old ones look like they’ve seen better days.
  • Use it to make gift tags.
  • Place a favorite piece underneath a sheet of glass on your desk, nightstand or coffee table to add color/pattern to the room.
  • Mat photographs with it.
  • Glue it onto a sturdy box for reusable gift packaging.
  • Use small scraps to line greeting card envelopes. Trace the outside flap shape onto the paper and cut out. Leave it just short enough to clear the glue seal on the envelope flap.
  • Use it for kids art projects, i.e. make paper dolls and dolls’ clothes.
  • Make decorative snowflakes to hang up or to attach to blank cards to create this year’s thank you notes and next year’s holiday greetings.
  • Make a collage out of various pieces and create new, unique wrapping paper.
  • Frame your favorite pieces, hang them up and enjoy!
  • Use it to wrap and protect your holiday decorations when storing them away for next year.
  • Cover paper magazine or pencil holders with it.
  • Use it for scrapbooking backgrounds.
  • Use large pieces of it to cover shoeboxes and create pretty storage containers for Christmas ornaments and other items.
  • Use it in paper mache projects.
  • Cover small gift boxes with it.
  • Make bookmarks out of it.
  • Use it to make sewing patterns. Just draw the pattern pieces on the blank side and cut out.
  • Add pattern and color to your office by covering a few select books on your bookshelves with it.
  • Use it to line your cat’s litter box. It’s better than tossing it out!

We LOVE Brooklyn-based Movers, Not Shakers!, an environmentally friendly moving company.

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

What I love about Movers, Not Shakers!, a moving company that serves New York City and the entire east coast, is that they’re green movers. Their trucks are fueled by biodiesel from Tri-State Biodiesel, Inc. and they’ll rent you reusable plastic moving bins they call GothamBoxes™ (got them boxes? – get it!) for you to pack your belongings in. They drop the bins off in advance of your move and pick them up after you or they or somebody like me, a Professional Organizer, packs them for the move and unpacks them once you get to your new home. There’s no cardboard, no assembly, no tape, NO WASTE. After they’re picked up, the boxes are cleaned, stored and delivered again to other customers. It’s an easy way to move and, at the same time, reduce the materials used in your move and the impact on the environment created by your relocation.

For years, Fortune 500 companies, pharmacies and supermarkets have rented reusable plastic bins to move from one office to another or ship merchandise. Now the residential moving market has picked up on this idea due to consumer desire for options that are convenient, environmentally friendly and because of the cost of cardboard boxes. Prices for short-term plastic bin rental are comparable to purchase prices for cardboard boxes. A large bin of about 4 cubic feet rents for $3 a week from Movers, Not Shakers!. U-Haul charges $3 for a 4.5-cubic-foot cardboard box.

From the Movers, Not Shakers! website:

Paper or Plastic? Plastic!

“Isn’t paper the better choice for the environment? Not always. Before we disregard oil and its byproducts altogether, let’s remember that certain products made from plastic are actually good for the environment – if they’re reused. Our line of GothamBoxes™ is made from recycled plastic. Over their life span each one will replace hundreds of corrugated cardboard boxes. And since they have interlocking lids, no packing tape is required to put them together or seal them once they are full. That not only produces less waste it is also a big timesaver.

GothamBoxes™ come in two sizes, small and large. They are strong too! They do not crush like cardboard will, keeping your belongings safe and sound. The small bins are 2.3 cu ft. and are great for books, CD’s/DVD’s, small plates and dishes, glasses, wine glasses, toiletries, jewelry cases, and other fragile items. The large bins are 4.1 cu ft. and are used for clothing, linens, towels, larger kitchenware, pots, pans… and anything else that won’t fit in the small one. Even though moving can be an incredibly complicated task, with all of the planning, packing, utility switching, real estate closing, address changing, board approval, school switching, whatever your situation might be, these bins are meant to simplify the whole process.”

Other benefits of using these plastic bins are:

  • Environmentalists generally agree that it’s better to reuse a product rather than manufacture a new one.
  • They have wheels, which make them easier to move and maneuver through the tight spaces of many NYC apartments.
  • You don’t have to deal with disposing of dozens of cardboard boxes, a task that in New York City usually requires collapsing and bundling them.
Also, from a getting organized perspective, another other HUGE benefit, is that there’s no procrastinating about unpacking and items don’t get left in boxes for months – or years! – since the bins need to be returned within a certain period of time. Thank you, Movers, Not Shakers!; that’s definitely music to this organizer’s ears!

Freecycle: A network promoting waste reduction and helping to save the landscape from being taken over by landfills.

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

You just gotta love this group. Here’s what their mission statement says:

“Our mission is to build a worldwide gifting movement that reduces waste, saves precious resources & eases the burden on our landfills while enabling our members to benefit from the strength of a larger community.”

The Freecycle Network™ is made up of 4,830 groups with 6,573,000 members (and growing) across the globe. It’s a grassroots and entirely nonprofit movement of people who are giving (& getting) stuff for free in their own towns. It’s all about reuse and keeping good stuff out of landfills. Each local group is moderated by a local volunteer. Membership is free. To sign up, go to Freecycle.

Another reason to love Costco

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Costco has teamed up with Gazelle to offer its members a Trade-In & Recycle Program. Members receive a cash card for their trade-ins good for anything at Costco warehouses or online. Laptops, cell phones, LCD monitors, external hard drives, digital cameras, camcorders, MP3 players, movies, camera lenses, streaming media, projectors, Blue-Ray players, home audio, calculators, PDAs, GPS devices, gaming consoles, satellite radios and video games are all welcome. Trade in your old computer through 10/15/09 and get a 10% bonus. Every item gets an offer and personal data will be wiped from all items. There’s no limit on the number of items you can sell; the more you sell, the more cash you make. Gazelle even offers free shipping and packaging, within the continental U. S., on all qualifying items. They’ll send you a prepaid shipping box or label and insure packages up to the value they offered you for their contents. Cash card payments normally arrive within 10 business days after an item has been received, inspected and approved.

Gazelle has also built a network of local recyclers to help you with some items that are not currently accepted online: televisions, CRT monitors, printers and fax machines. You can search by zipcode to find the drop off location nearest to you.

If you’re a Costco member, it couldn’t be any easier to declutter and get rid of unwanted or unused electronic items so act now!

Do you suffer from “excessive office inventory” syndrome?

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

 

 

Working with three different clients last week, I was reminded once again how many pen, pencil, 3-ring binder, copy paper, file folder, rubber band, paper clip, envelope, scotch tape, staple remover, lined pad, post-it-note, etc. hoarders there are out there! If your stash of office supplies could give Staples a run for its money, but you can’t find what you need when you need it, it’s time to get organized so you know exactly what you have and where it’s located.
Unnecessary expenditures related to disorganization – like buying duplicates of misplaced items or items you already own! – can cost as much as 15% to 20% of your annual budget. In these tight economic times, that can really pinch. So, get your office supplies organized and check your stock levels before you hit the stores! You’ll have more money in your pocket and less clutter in your office if you do.