30 reusable items vs. 30 disposable items
January 4, 2009 by Jennifer
You have hundreds of choices when it comes to reusable products vs. disposable products. Here are 30 ideas. Even if you just choose 5 or 10, and use them all year, it’ll make a huge difference for the planet.
Snack baggies from Plum Creek Mercantile
Cloth snack bags over plastic baggies.
Cloth shopping bags over paper or plastic.
Cloth handkerchiefs over tissues.
Reusable coffee filters over paper.
Cloth shower curtains over plastic.
Reusable lunch sack over paper.
Real dishes over disposable.
This Year Give Reusable Bags for the Holidays!
December 16, 2008 by Jennifer
Reusable bags make awesome holiday gifts. You can stuff them with candy treats or cookies, and this is a gift that can be, and actually will be used for years and years. You can help your friends and family stay green or go green with a great bag.
I found some really nice reusable bag options – pretty ones that would make great gifts this year…
Wild Flowers Organic Cotton Eco Lunch Bag from Art And Philanthropy
Reusable Bag Feature Round Up
June 30, 2008 by Jennifer
Our month-long June theme was the hefty topic of reusable shopping bags. We blogged and blogged bags, and yet there’s so much more we could have blogged. Bags are a big deal. We’ll likely revisit this feature at some point. If you missed any bag goodness, here’s a round-up of all things reusable bags…
The BYOB challenge:
The challenge kicks off
First BYOB challenge update
BYOB Challenge Update!!!
CHANGE: A Summer Surprise Contest
Reusable Bag Challenge Update – How Did Your Entire Month Go?
Reusable bag basics and overcoming issues:
How Many Reusable Bags Do You Need?
Overcoming Reusable Bag Shyness
Pros and Cons of String Market Bags
Reusable …read more
Reusable Bag Challenge Update – How Did Your Entire Month Go?
June 30, 2008 by Jennifer
This month we’ve all been working hard on the reusable bag challenge. Now is your chance to tell us how you did.
Myself: I did pretty good. I only ended up with the one lame video store bag. Thankfully, I averted some clerks during the month, who were trying little sneaks, like re bagging my fruit into plastic. One bag is not so bad. I worked really hard to take my bags with me everywhere. I basically always kept them in the car, which worked well for pet store trips, and other quick stops.
Now, how did you do? Also, look for …read more
Olive Smart Reusable Grocery Bags
June 29, 2008 by Jennifer
Bag month has been a little hectic. Too bad, because there’s just oh so many bags to see. In any case, I’m going to try and fit in a few more bags before we kick off out cool July theme.
I saw these bags originally at Eco Friendly Driver, and fell in love, because Hil had posted the light olive green darling carry bag – I’m a sucker for light olive green bags. I wanted to post it here, forgot, and then one of the store owners emailed me with some info.
Stephanie, co-business owner of Olive Smart notes the following about …read more
Inexpensive Reusable Grocery Bags
June 27, 2008 by Jennifer
Inexpensive is relative; one person’s inexpensive is another person’s not so much. However, for the sake of this post, I’m naming right around $10 and under as a decent inexpensive bag. Yeah you can get store brand non-washable bags for 99 cents, but I’m more on the fence of folks buying a decent washable set. One, you can wash them. Two, they hold up better (in my experience). Three; and I’ve noted this before, but research shows that not everyone recycles those store brand bags.
So some inexpensive choices:
[Biome Lifestyle’s reusable bag – £6.00 – only downside is that this one …read more
Dream Bag Line Up
June 25, 2008 by Jennifer
Today we’re going to look at three types of bags – Dream bags, mid-level cost bags, and less expensive (or best deal) bags. I’m not showing expensive bags unless they’re dreamy, because non-dreamy expensive bags aren’t fun, just lame.
BUT it is fun to see some crazy cool bags once in a while; so let’s start there. Next up look for mid-cost bag options.
Dream bag uses: Dream bags are not typical all-purpose grocery bags. In my opinion, you should have a normal collection of basic well-priced reusable grocery bags, and then one or two nice dreamy bags for everything else. The …read more
Make Your Own Oilcloth Bags
June 25, 2008 by Jennifer
Check out these adorable reusable lunch sacks – just one more option for cutting your bag use. I’m thinking you could even make these bigger and work out some sort of handle. A crafty sewer (read not me) could do that. The only downside is that you can’t machine wash these, but wiping down is perfectly ok.
Snag the directions right here.
Click here to learn about all the current contests, themes, and green challenges going on at Tree Hugging Family in June 2008[images via Martha Stewart]
Fun Angry Girl Reusable Bags
June 24, 2008 by Jennifer
Wow, bag month is so running out of time, and there’s still quite a few bag issues to post on, and a load of bookmarked bags to share. Yikes. Today, let’s start with a fun bag option. These bags are from about attitude, and in my opinion run on the more expensive, yet not outrageously expensive side. I’m thinking that this is a nice reusable bag intro gift for a certain type of girl. Hopefully no one is offended, but I think these are totally cute.
Angry Little Girls reusable shopping bag: ($15.00) – this is sometimes how I feel, but …read more
And the big fat anti tree hugging award of the week goes to…
June 19, 2008 by Jennifer
This bag!
In wildly expensive bag news (Julie will love this one) I present you with this adorable, but WAY too expensive bag option…
The “Think Green” Organic Cotton Kermit Tote:
Pros:
Totally adorable
Organic
Comes with buttons – if you’re into that sort of thing.
It saves plastic bags
Con:
Um, almost $40 PLUS $8 shipping, for anything, even a hand spun by the queen, organic bag, is frankly, INSANE. I’m sorry, but here’s the deal; if people really want to make a difference and create change, they’re going to need to make nice organic items accessible to all of us, not just rock stars and others with …read more


