Posts tagged Reuse

Tip #10 Repairing

Green Living: a series in which we provide tips to help you implement practices, habits, and products into your life which respect and work towards the redemption of God’s creation.

 

I don’t know about you, but I try to be really careful with my possessions, especially technology. Sometimes it seems, though, that no matter how hard you try we have a knack of damaging or breaking our things.

You know what I’m talking about. You buy that protective cover for your cell phone or MP3 player and are always careful with it. But then one day, one lapse in judgment on the one time the cover is off, you stand up to get out of the car and it falls to the ground.

Or you drop your laptop?

Or you kick over a lamp?

Or you drop something in the toilet?

Or some beverage spills all over a piece of furniture?

 

Admit it. We’ve all been there.

Now, we live in a society that tends to throw these broken or damaged items away without a second thought. At the first sign of trouble we open the trash. The problem with this is not only that many of these items come at a high monetary cost but that they come at a high environmental cost as well. Each of these items takes valuable resources which must be collected, manufactured, packaged, shipped, and (later) disposed of.

But there are alternatives. First, there are repairmen. Coming in different varieties, they are experienced in fixing everything from your washing machine, to your TV, to your couch, to your home. But, unfortunately they are a dying breed. Even the manufacturers often choose to replace your broken item with a new one as it is more cost effective for them to do that than fix it. That said, it is still possible to get things repaired.

Second, you can fix things yourself. That’s right. No, you don’t have to be an engineer or a rocket scientist to do this. Oftentimes you just have to be able to follow instructions and be bold enough to give it a shot.

How do you do this? Well, there are numerous websites (list below) out there to help you find what you need. Visit one of these sites or just google “how to fix [your problem]” for other resources that might come up. Then, follow their step-by-step instructions guiding your to a newly working product.

The following is a list of a few of the many sites out there that can help you with repairing your broken items:

Instructables

iFixit

eHow

wikiHow

HowToDoThings

 

 

Just recently my wife accidently dropped her cell phone. Afterwards it would randomly decide to turn itself off on a whim. Turns out the battery was no longer fit as tightly and would briefly lose the connection, shutting off the phone. A little ingenuity has allowed the phone to work like new. What did I do? Just folded up part of a piece of scrap paper and squeezed it in tight to hold the battery in place. Simple as that. Whereas we might have gone in to get her a new phone or something, a quick and free solution allows us to better care for God’s creation.

 

Next time one of you possessions breaks, I encourage you to think twice before disposing of it. Perhaps it too can be saved.

 

*Image from

Also consider:

Green Living: #2 Reuse your booty

Beauty of Creation: Lily pads

Green Adventures: Green Business Cards

Green Adventures: a series in which we invite you into the adventures from our journey.

Green Business Cards

When we started Creation Hope I knew it wasn’t going to be easy.  When your mission calling others to live lives the care for God’s creation, business as usual is often not an option for you.  Whereas another business or ministry has standard ways of doing things and resources, we have to go out of our way to do things in more creation-friendly ways. 

Eco-friendly dry-erase markers When most organizations need dry erase markers, they simply go to their business supply resource and pick them up.  In contrast, we felt the need to find eco-friendly markers which meant doing a lot of research to track down a better option.

Peace lilyWhen most organizations need to purify the office air, they buy an air purifier and plug those electric smelly thingies into the outlet.  In contrast, we felt the need to find natural cleansers which ultimately meant tracking down indoor plants that clean toxins from the air in our office.

When most organizations need business cards, they buy them from their normal local or online printer with relative ease and quickness.  In contrast, when we needed business cards we embarked on a huge adventure.

 

Months ago I began looking into the most creation-friendly way to create our business cards.  What you would think would be a simple, straight-forward task, has resulted in countless hours of research.  I figured that I would simply need to track down what others before me had down and follow in their footsteps.  Unfortunately that was not the case as there weren’t many footsteps to follow.  As it turns out, there are very few options for truly green business cards.

Sure quite a few printers claim to have green business cards, but a more in-depth look reveals that it is mostly greenwashing (making things look greener than they really are).  For example, some printers call their products green when the only eco-friendly thing about it is that it contains 10% recycled materials in the paper.  Others use paper with higher recycled content but still use chemicals to brighten the paper.  Most use ink that is petroleum based and emits VOCs (volatile organic compounds – basically things you don’t want to be breathing in and are bad for the planet).

There are a few exceptions however.  I finally tracked down the companies that I thought offered the best available options.  In fact, I really liked what Greenerprinter had to offer.  They offer 100% recycled paper processed without chlorine, use soy and vegetable inks with no or low VOC’s that are processed chemical free, minimize their waste,  AND they even offset their carbon emissions (a purchased offset results in the reduction of carbon emissions elsewhere; i.e. planting trees).  I have been thoroughly impressed by this company.  I fully expect to purchase some future printing project from them.

Regarding our business cards, several times I priced them out, uploaded my own design, and nearly purchased them.  However, I did not go ahead for a few reasons:

  1. Our organization has extremely limited resources.  While the cost was not excessive (as little as $30 for 250 cards, though more expensive as you customize certain items; I think my order was priced out at like $60 for 500), every little bit counts for us.  While not much more than regular business cards, there is definitely a premium that you pay.
  2. While great, recycled is not the first option.  Many of you will be familiar with the adage “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle.”  There is a hierarchy here.  First we reduce our consumption, then we reuse things vigorously, finally we recycle items.  [Note: putting things is the trash should be a last ditch effort.]  So, I just felt a little bad participating in this same system when there might be other alternatives.
  3. I can be a little bit insane at times (my wife certainly agrees).  I have a tendency to be a perfectionist and take things to the extreme on occasion.  Purchasing them from Greenerprinter was an excellent option, the best I had found yet something in me pushed me to take it a step further.

 

This decision not to move forward with a professional printer left us in uncharted waters.  It was back to the drawing board.  More research.  More scouring the internet for any ideas.  More brainstorming and thinking outside of the box.  If recycled wasn’t the route we wanted to take, where did that leave us?

I was left holding the following competing goals in tension:

  1. It had to be done in a way that was respectful of God’s creation.
  2. It had to be reasonably priced.  Given our limited resources here, high priced options are not available to us.
  3. It had to be professional.  I was willing to give up a degree of professionalism if it was for the sake of gaining creation-friendability (hmmm I kind of like this new word) and uniqueness however.
  4. It had to be feasible.  This is perhaps the one I was most willing to give in on.  Odd but true.

I’m sure you are noting two things right now:  First, these are all relative.  Second, the Greenerprinter option pretty much satisfies these.  I know.  I know.  Let me refer you again to my insanity plea in reason #3 above.

 

Along the way I have considered many options.  The following are some of the more interesting ones:

  • Handwritten on scraps of (already used) paperHandwritten business card Just carry around a pen (preferably an eco-friendly one), find any scrap of paper, and write it out.  Easy enough.  While this achieved goals 1, 2, 4, it did not achieve #3.  It was neither professional nor terribly unique.  Of course, it looks even worse when your handwriting is as bad as mine (above writing is about as good as it gets).  So I had to pass. 
  • Printed on leaves.  This certainly achieved goals 1 & 2.  While it Business card printed on a leafdidn’t exactly accomplish #3 I was willing to give in here because it would be so stinking cool.  However, feasibility was a big problem.  First, it would be very difficult to get the ink on the leaves cleanly (note the failure to do so in the image above).  Second, it would also be difficult to get the ink to dry well and stay on the leaf.  Thirdly, it’s not exactly realistic to carry a stack of leaf business cards around in your wallet.  Not very durable or portable.  Tempting, but it would have to wait.  Perhaps for a conference sometime.
  • Portable custom stamp inked onto any available objectCustom stampThis sounded so cool.  Have a custom, self-inking stamp made that you would take everywhere and stamp it on whatever was handy.  Possible targets would include:  notebooks, hands, newspapers, books, trash, clothing, etc.  The possibilities are endless and so much fun to think about.  This would achieve goal #1.  Again, I was willing to give in on #3 because of the uniqueness.  Unfortunately, because of the size of business cards and the fact that the stamp would be custom the cost was quite high (if you could even find them that big 2 x 3 1/2).  Also, it is not too practical to carry a big old stamp around everywhere.  Sadly, this too would not work.

 

I went on for weeks and weeks, comparing different options to see if they met my criteria.  Some came close.  Most didn’t.  In the end I have developed a two-pronged strategy.

 

Strategy 1:  Digital business cards

The first part of my strategy opts out of the traditional business card approach.  I have created both a vCard and a jpeg image of my business card.  Both are now stored on my phone.  When needing to share contact info, I can quickly text or email one of my digital business cards.  No paper.  No printing.  No shipping.  No wasted inventory.  No bulky items to carry around.  No waste from data being entered into Outlook and then having the card tossed into the trash.

Digital Business Card

It seems that this option achieves all four of my goals.  While not the most professional route, I think it works.  For the most part it is a practical solution that gets the job done.  At the same time it does not allow the recipient the opportunity to quickly grab a card and disappear.  Nor can you write a note on the back (though this could be included in the email).  But in the end, I think this is a great option.

 

Strategy 2:  DIY business cards on trash with vegetable ink

The second part of my strategy puts a major twist on the traditional approach.  I have opted to reuse instead of recycle (or use new paper).  I am collecting would-be trash or recycling and cutting it into 2 1/4 x 3 1/2 business cards.   Business card backs The packaging from that Tinker Bell underwear we bought my potty-training daughter, from that Prius brochure, from that cereal box, from a friend’s Cheez-It’s box, from the Drumsticks that our youth group consumed, and other items are now re-purposed as Creation Hope business cards.  We have eliminated the collection, shipping, cleaning, recycling, and other related efforts and emissions.  Not only is this a good way to conserve resources, but it is unique and eye-catching.

 

The rest  has not been easy.  Figuring out how to get the information onto these cards has been quite the challenge. After much research I purchased a custom rubber stamp mounted on wood from RubberStamps.net for a mere $20.  [Note the stamp was well made and arrived just 4 days after I ordered it; that’s with the cheapest, slowest shipping.]  The end result is certainly not as clean looking as something printed from a professional printer but I have been willing to sacrifice for the bigger goal here.

Now, by far the hardest part has been the inking process.  I have searched and searched trying to find soy or vegetable ink stamp pads to no avail.  This has been so frustrating.  You would think there would be an eco-friendly stamp pad option.  But it seems they don’t exist (if you know otherwise please let me know). 

Here is where my wife really thinks that I have lost it.  Instead of settling for regular stamp pads at this point, I (foolishly?) chose to attempt to make my own vegetable based ink as opposed to using a petroleum-based, VOC emitting stamp pad.  Again, I had an impossible time finding instructions on how to do this.  You would think that among the countless how-to websites that help you do everything from fixing a computer to building a chicken coop to constructing a hydroponic garden in your window you could find instructions on how to do this.  In all of my looking, I only found 1 set of instructions.

So, I gathered up my ingredients: vegetable oil, granular soy lecithin, Kool Aid, and water.  I mixed them up, put them in a container with a paper towel as my stamp pad, and began stamping away.  Now, here is the part I wish I didn’t have to write.  I am two ink batches in but have not yet produced an ink that works well.  It seems to be a little too watery still and thus does not stamp crisply and cleanly onto the business card as you can see below.

Ink making process

Business cards from vegetable ink

I will have to continue researching and refining the ink.  In the meantime I have borrowed a regular stamp pad and done a few tests to see how it looks (see below).  If I want to justify this aspect, the ink pad is refillable (though the 2 ounce bottles come with waste of their own). But perhaps that is a stretch.

Business cards from stamp pad

This strategy also achieves the various goals, though to differing degrees.  It most certainly achieves goals 1 & 2.  It is fairly professional, though it definitely lacks the quality a professionally printed card would have.  But, what it lacks there, it gains in terms of uniqueness.  The place this is most wanting is in terms of feasibility.  The problem is neither the card nor the stamps, it is in the ink itself.  When it’s all said and done, I am very pleased with our results.  They are created in a way that cares for creation, they are very affordable, they are fairly professional and totally unique, and they are mostly feasible.

 

I will continue refining my business cards, but for now I am quite satisfied and excited about how this strategy helps us to care for creation and achieve our mission.

What do you think?  Do you like this approach?  Did we succeed in our goals?  Am I totally insane?  Finally, do you have any suggestions to help us improve?  I would love to hear your ideas.

 

Also consider:

Green Adventures: Baking Bread

Meatless Monday

 

*Custom stamp image from

http://orders.rubberstamps.net/FixedSize.aspx?ProductID=4927&qty=1

Tip #2 Reuse your booty

Green Living: a series in which we provide tips to help you implement practices, habits, and products into your life which respect and work towards the redemption of God’s creation.

 

There’s something nice about getting new things, isn’t there?  That sense of excitement as we open up the box or packaging to find our newest prize.  Or when we get the latest this or that.  That sense of pride of being the master of a new TV, phone, piece of furniture, kitchen thingy, article of clothing, book, toy for our child, and on and on.  Like a pirate amassing great treasure, there is this great feeling of (at least momentary) contentment that our stockpile of stuff has grown.  Not only have we added to our booty, but we have the distinct pleasure of knowing that we are the only one who has ever owned it.

Now with every piece of treasure comes with an additional price than that which we pay at the store.  Every item we pay has an environmental cost.  A great deal of resources went into gathering the materials, forming them into whatever it is you purchased, shipping them, storing them, and transporting them home.  On top of that every new item has the cost of packaging (like all those plastic packages that are impossible to open without nearly cutting off a finger) which usually makes its way to a landfill.

There are alternatives however.  First, we can consume less (more on this coming soon).  Second, we can find ways to reuse what we already have.  So often we simply grow out of our stuff (especially the case with kids’ stuff), they go out of fashion, we no longer use them, they break, or we just grow tired of them.  In these cases our first instinct is often to just throw them in the trash.  This comes at a great price however.  Our landfills grow bigger and that environmental cost we paid is wasted.  Imagine though the costs that can be saved by giving items new life, by reusing them.  The same materials do not need to be dug up again, the energy and labor that went into producing them is saved, the major transportation is not repeated, and no one else has to deal with the packaging (what a blessing that is!).  Our tip for the day then is to find ways reuse or give new life to your booty.

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So, how can we do this?  Glad you asked.  Below I have listed several ways that we can give items new life through either giving or getting.

1. MacGyver them. Ahh, MacGyver.  Didn’t you just love this show where the guy could make a bomb out of a stick of gum, toothpaste, and a paperclip?  Before you throw items out consider fixing them first.  We have become such a throwaway society that we often don’t even consider fixing things.  Harness your inner inventor and see if you can fix something before throwing it in the trash.  Not broken?  Consider giving it new life as something else.  For example: reuse that ugly bowl you got as a wedding gift that you are too ashamed to put out in front of people into a water bowl for your dog.

2. Share (loan or give) with family and friends. This is perhaps the most obvious and way that many of us are used to living.  Someone has an extra piece of furniture, an old tool, or kitchen item they no longer need and offer it up to family and friends.  We’ve all done it.  Perhaps you can be more intentional about it, especially when some of us hoard things in our garages or closets just because we like to look at the bounty of junk that we have.  Having kids, my wife (and I, though she deserves the credit) have found this to be especially helpful with clothes and toys for our daughter.  Many have given or loaned us their kids things that they have grown out of.  At the same time we have found ways to pass things back and forth with my sister (my nephew is 6 months younger than my daughter).  It is unbelievable how much money this saves and what a blessing it can be in your life.

3. Give to (or get from) people in your community. If you don’t need things back and if your family and friends didn’t take them off your hands, consider all the ways you can give your possessions new life in your community.  If you are wanting to do this for free then there are many alternatives to putting something on the sidewalk with a “Free, take me” sign.  My personal favorite is Freecycle.  After joining your local group you can offer (or find) items to people in your community.  They email you, arrange a time, pick it up.  Done.  You don’t even have to be there when they pick it up; just leave whatever on the porch.  Also, consider the free portion on Craigslist.

If you need extra cash (or have extra cash), Craigslist is still a good option.  Also, consider good old garage sales.  Many (like my grandma) have made this into an art form.  They are local and cheap.

We have many options available to us.  Next time you are taking something to the trash, reconsider if you or someone else might be able to give it new life.

PS. You might be asking why the frequent use of the word booty when we are a long ways away from the next Talk Like a Pirate Day.  First, it is a good analogy for how we often look at possessions.  Second (and more importantly), it is just a fun word to say and gives me a sense of adventure.  Aaarrr.

Also consider:

Green living: #1 – Turn off those lights

Green adventures: The strange things we do

Image from