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Posts Tagged ‘style’

In this election from Treehugger, Green Always Wins! Cast your votes today!

Most of us in the green community love sharing our opinions, ideas and thoughts about environmentally charged issues, so what better way to get the word out there than to vote for your favorite green businesses, services, sites and people in Treehugger’s 2010 Best of Green Readers Choice Awards!

We’ve already casted our votes and were happy to see one of our favorite super sexy upcyclers, Uniform Project, nominated on there for best Style Twitter Feed, and if you know anything about the twittering of Uniform Project, you know that they deserve it for taking the same dress and making it into 321 different outfits and counting! Brilliant!

Besides co-founder, Sheena Matheiken, doing this all to help children in India through the Akankasha Foundation, wearing the same dress over and over and over again and consistently making it look good through her creative use of accessories and donated apparel is truly inspiring. Going back to what fashion icon, Vivienne Westwood, said a few weeks ago, “Stop buying clothes” now seems totally feasible.

I have too many favorite looks from The Uniform Project to name, but here’s a rundown of our faves over here at Sexy Upcycling HQ-

Style created from the same piece of clothing has helped raise over $56k for children in India!


The Uniform Project has been Sexy Upcycling for 321 days to help children in India, VOTE for them in Treehugger's Best of Green!

You can also check out this great video about the whole cause and effort, which translates to 7 minutes of feel good Vimeo-ing! The Uniform Project is very inspiring and definitely has our Sexy Upcycling Stamp of Approval!

The Uniform Project Trailer from The Uniform Project on Vimeo.

So please be sure to vote for them before April 12th and lets get the ball rolling on this movement!

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If living in the city of Philadelphia has taught me anything, it’s that our streets hate bicycles.

Whether it’s a SEPTA bus trying to run you over, the bike lane just magically disappearing in the middle of a road or busting your brand new tube within hours of replacement even if you have memorized the shattered glass/pothole/trash clad regions of Washington Ave and have taken every precaution to carefully avoid them, the streets of Philadelphia are not so kind to our 2-wheeled friends.

Now, we’ve seen our fair share of bicycle tube upcycling here at SU, but if 2010 proves to be the year that designers start thinking outside of the box, or outside of the tube for that matter, then Portland designer, Julien Jaborska should be noted as one of the designers not only ahead of the trend, but ahead of the tread.

Julien's Bicycle Tire Belt is taking broken tires places they've never been before (and keeping them out of the landfill)!

Meet Julien’s Bicycle Tire Belt, upcycled from broken bicycle tires and sold on both etsy and cosaverde (built to last and for a wonderfully fair price compared to leather belts!). A former bike mechanic and east coast native, Jaborska told Sexy Upcycling that he couldn’t stand to see great looking bicycle parts such as tires, gears and chains get tossed in the trash just because they were broken. After he made his first bicycle tire belt, he knew he had a good thing going, and we knew it was Sexy Upcycling at first site!

Former landfill bound busted bicycle tires get a well deserved upcycle upgrade from Julien Jarborska, designer behind Rebicyclist

“My wife and friends thought the workmanship was pretty good and convinced me to sell them on Etsy which I’ve been doing since. At first it was a nice little side income, but now that I’ve moved cross country I’m trying to make it a full time thing”, Julien told us.

Who needs trends when you have treads! Rebicyclist's Bicycle Tire Belt fuse functionality with fashion and tops it off with being eco-friendly

Jaborska has plans to build his brand, Rebyclist,with his super cool bike belts and cog coasters and by also expanding with some new products to come in the near future and tells us he has some interesting ideas for clocks. Another wonderful tale of going from an upcycler to a business owner, I can’t get enough!

If you or anyone you know has started a business out of the love of trash, please feel free to send us a message over here! We’d love to hear your story!

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Treehugger just posted a slide show of about a dozen cool objects upcycled from plastic bags and it really got me thinking alot about upcycling and marketing and the absolute disconnect between the two.

I learned how to properly fuse bags when I was working at TerraCycle as a designer and it requires nothing more than just a bit of teflon, an iron, a flat surface and patience, but there always seems to be something factored out that most of us in the upcycling business just don’t seem to care about, and that, my friends, is STYLE. Designers wear many hats in the green field, but I feel like the way something looks, fashionably, is often overlooked. Why is this?

Why do the majority of upcycled goods that we see on the market still resemble the trash that they once were?

As the designer behind the Upcycled Umbrella Product Company, Recycling Zychal, I credit alot of my success in this industry to the fact that my work might be made from trash, but you wouldn’t know that unless I specifically mentioned it prior to your initial viewing. Broken umbrellas might be a better resource to work with since it’s generally not filled with branding and obnoxious barcodes, but trust me, it still has it’s kinks. Nonetheless, the fact that my products are made from broken umbrellas is always a secondary thought. ‘Form follows function’ comes first, but lets face it, no one’s going to buy something doesn’t look good and that’s important!

Consumers, whether they are Earth-loving vegans or Meat-loving plastic-bag-thrower-awayers react upon the way something looks, the problem isn’t getting these already “green” consumers to buy the product, its getting the people who wouldn’t normally buy the green product to buy it (the green people already have it, or have figured out how to make it). The “green” part of it is only going to take the product so far, and even if someone does want to buy it, it will have to be marked down for them to consider it valuable which makes just about 0% sense in the head of a designer who understands the complexity of having to almost reverse engineer the upcycled material, deal with its preexisting shape and size and figure out how to make their object work. I talk to fellow designers about this all of the time. In an industry bloated with people fighting to get in the front door, where are the style makers and why aren’t they upcycling!?

Here are a few photos I picked out from the slideshow to illustrate what Sexy Plastic Bag Upcycling and Better Off Not Upcycled looks like to me, and please send me any more examples, I’ll be sure to post them!

Camila Labra's Dacca Boots made from upcycled bags, so awesome!

Camila Labra = my upcycling hero

I bet these boots are water resistant too.. <3

Camila Labra is a Chilean Industrial Designer who fashioned these boots out of upcycled plastic bags. Not only are these probably the Sexiest Upcycled shoes I have EVER seen, but they are only $45. I’m not sure how you order a pair, but I am pretty sure I want one in every color!

Ryan Frank's Inkuku Chair has plastic bags written all over it, comfy? I bet!

While this Inkuku Chair by Ryan Frank uses the plastic bags as more of a decoration than a functional part of the object, I can still see the purpose and the sexiness. Plastic bags are sometimes soft and squishy and using them around, what I can only assume is, a chrome frame is much better than sitting on plain old chrome! I love the modulation of the bags in this chair that make it look so modern. Ryan Frank, you totally get my stamp of Sexy Upcycling Approval!

Kate Wards crocheted plastic bag bags... maybe I just don't like the look of crocheted

So here are Kate Ward’s plastic bag bags. I must say, the colors are awesome, (where can I get ahold of some brightly colored plastic bags like this?!) but I don’t know, something about this screams beach party… and maybe that’s just exactly what they are made for, but for my everyday purse purposes..I don’t think so. I will admit, I hate the look of crochet, it reminds me of Easter baskets, but I have to give credit where credit is due to Kate because if she is really saving these plastic bags from a life in the landfill then she is truly an upcycling heroine!

Cathy Kasdan's thesis project at Kent State University Textile Department..makes me itchy looking at it

Cathy Kasdan‘s thesis project at Kent State University Textile Department is quite the upcycled outfit, but Sexy Upcycling, I don’t think so. I love the effort involved with this, but would I wear it? No. Would anyone wear this? I have a feeling that this might not have ever been intended to wear and I also have a feeling that this would make a “wish-wish” sound while walking with it. I’m noteven sure if I like the 50′s style going on here. I do like that all of the bags used to make this were either donated or from actual grocery trips. Far too often I see things that are basically greenwashed saying that they are made from recycled such and such, when you can blatantly tell by the perfection of the modulation that there was an outside source providing the material.

This may be my last post for the year as I am going on vacation for a week after Christmas…and by going on vacation, I mean painting my apartment. :) I hope everyone has a safe, healthy, sexy new year and I can’t wait to report on more Sexy Upcycling in 2010!

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Yesterday, Recycling Zychal was proud to announce that they have launched Sexy Upcycling, a group, blog and resource center for designers and consumers who are sick of upcycling being known for it’s over-branded, under-styled look. Sexy Upcycling raises the bar by highlighting designs that make a vertical move (UPcycle) towards repurposing trash by making it into something that doesn’t look like trash, and satisfies functional, style and design needs.
No More Record Bowls for! Sexy Upcycling is a place for upcycled design that is both stylish and functional, trash that doesn't look like trash!
Sexy Upcycling wants to reinvent the hobo/advertisement stigma associated with Upcycling. We are not the cereal box prom dresses, the plastic bag bracelets or the scratched record nacho bowls of the world; we design for both function AND style, it just so happens that our medium is trash, and most times, that comes as a surprise.

If you are a designer or member of http://www.coroflot.com, please join our group and together we can redefine the look of reuse!

Take our poll, Do you think Upcycling is in desperate need of a makeover?

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