Apr 26
Elizabeth, Baltimore City

I’ve always been a bit of a minimalist. I never really took the time to coordinate accessories and I would rarely wear jewelry. The one thing that this diet has really taught me is the power of a good accessory. I have one cream colored cardigan to wear and ordinarily I would have run out and purchased several new cardigans to fill the void so that I wouldn’t be forced to wear the same vanilla sweater over and over again this Spring. That, however, would be a diet no-no. So…I purchased some really adorable accessories. I purchased several cute pins hand-made by Etsy Artisans to freshen up my wardrobe. A few even pull double duty as sweater pin or hair accessory depending on how I choose to wear it. I picked up a fun, casual pin, some bold and bright flowers, and a few more low-key, natural pins to give my sweater a little flair. I’ve also taken to wearing more of my jewelry that had been lazing about in my drawer, unloved and unappreciated. I’ve started wearing my hair in different ways so that I don’t feel as if I look like the same boring old me each day. In short, I haven’t added to my wardrobe by purchasing new clothes, but I have certainly introduced some new, fun and funky looks by working with a variety of accessories in different sizes, colors and textures…and it’s been fun.

Here are links to a few of the cute new pins that I’ve purchased and made myself that I’ve added to my collection of vintage, heirloom and gifted jewelry. I’ve included a few new headbands that I’ve purchsed as well because they really help me feel new and fresh.

Recycled Headband/Necklace

Recycled Necklace/Scarf

Petal Pin for Sweater/Hair

Owl Brooch

Lightweight Natural Pin

Colorful Hairbands

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Apr 08
Elizabeth, Baltimore City

According to an article posted in The Sun, a UK newspaper you can save yourself over 100 hours (or about 1 week) of your time by not shopping for clothes this year!  Apparently the average woman spends nearly three years over their lifetime just shopping. While you obviously can’t give up shopping for food and household necessities, you can choose not to shop for clothing this year and save yourself a full week’s time for vacation and use the money that you didn’t spend to fund your new trip; wow!  I suspected this might be the case, but this is the first written evidence (outside of my own entry) that seems to confirm it.  So spend a bit of the time that you won’t use to shop this week and start planning for your next winter ski trip or Carribean cruise!

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Apr 06

Well, it’s a fact to which our TGAAD’ers will attest:  clothing swaps are revolutionizing America’s approach to fashion.

One fabulous organization I ran across online is worth checking out:  “Clothing Swap” has been around for 15 years, but the concept has really taken off in this economy.  Their founder, Suzanne Agassi, is a self-styled “philanthrapreneur” who’s mantra is “Be good. Be green. Be GLAM!”  Her Clothing Swap events have resulted in (literally) tons of clothing and shoes donated to women in need, family and homeless shelters and hurricane relief. Plus, $116,000 has been raised for a wide range of charitable organizations, many benefitting women and children.

Below is a little excerpt from Clothing Swap’s web site, but there’s much more great info online (and on FaceBook) to check out.

Happy swapping, everyone!

swap-america——————————————————————————-

About Clothing Swap®

Clothing Swap® has spearheaded ‘green glamour’ by gathering fashionable swappers together in a fun environment where they relax, mingle, get pampered and then SWAP (exchange) clothing, shoes and accessories and thus, happily augment their wardrobes in a “Girl’s Night Out” atmosphere.

This concept flips fashion upside-down and highlights the exciting Clothing Swap phenomenon that is revolutionizing our approach to fashion.

Our events simultaneously raise awareness of and donate to charitable organizations that benefit women and families in need. We are on the lookout for genuine volunteers who wish to get involved.

Our vision is to spread our message of “Fun, Fashion and Philanthropy” throughout the world. Our site helps Swappers socialize, learn, share and get inspired to participate in the art of swapping.

How a Clothing Swap® works:

1. Declutter: Clean out your closet and find items to swap

2. Find: Clothing Swap® events near youAttend. Bring unwanted but fab items in great condition

3. Get pampered: Relax, mingle, and sip during our signature Spa Treats

4. SWAP: Take home your favorites for FREE

5. Feel great: Relish new-to-you items and help a local charity

6. Share: Tell your story through Google comments, Facebook, Yelp and more

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Mar 23

Today was my first ever real temptation – in a way that I was so tremendously close to buying something, that I actually went to try it on, fell head over heels in love with it, and was ready to take it to the cash register…and then, then I changed my mind. But, like every other ‘real’ story, my story of almost buying a piece of clothing (if anyone is curious, it was an astonishingly beautiful lace t-shirt, perfect for layering…and I was wearing my jeans and a black jacket, and after trying out the t-shirt, it all looked so beautiful that for a moment I actually believed I really, really needed it to make my life a bit more cute&pretty) also has a background to it – and the background is, I find, much more important than the actual act.

The past few weeks of my life have been both gorgeous and sad in a way. Gorgeous because I have been able to spend them with almost all the favorite people in my life (some of whom have traveled great lengths to come and surprise me, which is probably the most beautiful thing anyone has ever done for me), and sad because I have finally realized why the diet frustrates me so much sometimes. OK, ‘finally realized’ is a bit too much to say – I have known it all along, but it is not something that one would say out loud and be proud of it. But the truth is, the source of my frustrations is simple: my inability to afford new and beautiful things, not in bulks but when it comes to selected pieces, makes me feel comparatively ’smaller’ sometimes when confronted with people around me, who are able to, whenever they want to, afford themselves a new little thing or two, be it 250-euro shoes (that I have also craved for, but which I couldn’t afford in a dream at the moment) or simple headpieces that I always have a soft spot for. Yes – what frustrates me is really not the diet itself, but the recession, and the fact that I have to learn to live without as an imposed rule. If I knew I could do as I wished, than I would find it much less problematic – but to know that you simply cannot do something can be frustrating on occasions…but then again, as I’ve said this morning to  dear friend who is currently in the same situation as me – who knows, maybe this whole experience will teach us some modesty, which is really not a bad thing. And besides, the new clothes eventually become old clothes, and the hype of possessing something brand new wears off – and with or without it, we’re still the same old, fun, great girls that we are, and we should be happy about that instead of frustrated about our silly cravings! :)

But if all this is so, how did I come to grab the gorgeous lace top in the first place?

Well, as we all know, sometimes shopping for things has very little to do with the things themselves, and much more with our emotional states…And for the past few days, I’ve been feeling a tiny bit alone – due to a strange set of circumstances, I ended up being in a foreign city, living in a house full of people who speak a different language and we can barely communicate, and without real friends to take for some coffee and conversations, which is something that always adds some happiness to my life. And while yesterday it was wonderful, since I took my time to wonder around the city, this morning I woke up with a fever that made me feel sad and alone – and in need of some comforting. And since none was in sight, I decided that wandering around the heated, safe and colorful paths of the local mall should be my activity of the day – and the wandering led me to the store, the store had the top, and the top seemed like a piece of happiness I desperately needed. Logical, no?

Well, not really. Standing there in the middle of the store with the top in my hand, I realized how stupid the idea of buying warmth and happiness was – and right on time, just before I bought the top. And so I put it back on the hanger, said goodbye to the mall, went for a long walk – and ended up spending money after all! On eggs and jam, which I used to make a million pancakes for my non-English (or Croatian, for that matter) speaking hosts when I came home. And the discovery of the day? People seem to communicate much easier over good food (yeah, as if I didn’t know that one before), pancakes are useful when attempting to get people to smile, and for feeling loved, sometimes it takes so little – like an SMS from a loved one far far away, who you know will be coming back to you soon. Go figure!

And tomorrow? No worries, I am definitely not buying that top either, even if it is darn pretty and really cheap. Tomorrow I am taking myself for coffee and some general discovering of this beautiful city, so that we would be strangers no more – and I am sure that, in a big latte and some fabulous local potato-filled pies, spiced up with some sunshine and a good book, is where my happiness will lie :-)

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Mar 22
Sally Bjornsen

FTA-logo

“True fashion is about non-toxicity. If fashion pollutes, it should no longer be called fashion, it should be called pollution.” 

 

-Horst Rechelbacher, Founder Intelligent Nutrients and AVEDA 

 

 

One of the best things about this diet is connecting with new people all over the world.  Apparently this is a topic that has hit a nerve and has been pondered for a while.  One of the people I have been in contact with is Kelly Drennan Founderof  Fashion Takes Action, www.fashiontakesaction.com.  Kelly has provided us with the facts below that are both depressing and enlightening.  Kelly is a thought leader in the fashion/sustainability arena and is a great resource for information on sustainable fashion. 

FACTS ABOUT THE FASHION INDUSTRY

 Consumption & Waste:

  • In North America, the average person consumes over 80 pounds of textiles per year.
  • Synthetic (man-made fibres) products will not decompose, and while woolen garments do decompose, they produce methane gas which contributes to climate change.
  • 38% of Canada’s methane emissions (greenhouse gases) comes from landfill sites.
  • On average, 80% of textiles thrown away still have 75% of their wear-ability left. 

  • If everyone in Canada bought one reclaimed woolen garment each year, it would save an average of 300 million gallons of water and 400 tonnes of chemical dyes (imagine what this means for the U.S. which is 10 times the size of Canada). 
  • Fashion is the second largest industry next to agriculture in terms of water consumption.

 Cotton:

  • One pound of low impact dyed cotton uses 100 gallons of water.
  • One single cotton t-shirt requires 357 gallons of water to produce.
  • A single t-shirt uses about 9 ounces of cotton, an average of 17 tsp of synthetic fertilizers and nearly a teaspoon of pesticides that are classified as among the most toxic by the Environmental Protection Agency.
  • Agrochemical companies make on average $2.2 billion selling cotton pesticides each year. 
  • Many of the agents used to spray cotton were originally developed in WWII as nerve gases.

Leather:

  •    95% of US tanneries have moved overseas to avoid environmental oversight penalties.  Tanneries are so toxic that many old tannery sites can’t be used for agriculture or built on or even sold
  • Quick and permanent chrome tanning creates soft leathers, dyes easily etc; however chemicals are extremely poisonous and linger in ecosystems
  • In addition to chromium, modern tanneries use synthetic chemicals such as sodium sulphide, formaldehyde, glutaraldehyde, sulphuric acid, bactericides, paints, dyes, degreasers and surfactants various solvents which release volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
  • Chromium (VI) is the most persistent toxin used by the leather industry. It is a known carcinogen with the following documented human health effects: skin rashes, upset stomachs and ulcers, respiratory problems, weakened immune systems, kidney and liver damage, alteration of genetic material, lung cancer and death (source: Organic Leather) – because of this most tanneries have switched to chromium (III) which is considerably less toxic but it commonly oxidizes into chromium (VI) during the tanning process and so the finished product contains toxins
  • Even in the finished product, chromium (VI) causes allergic reactions such as skin rashes and ulcers, and because of its oxidized nature, it moves easily across membranes such as human skin
  • According to EPA, 95% of all leather has been tanned with chromium.

Dyes:

  • All synthetic dyes are made from coal tar, one of the most carcinogenic substances on the planet.
  • Conventional dye process discharges massive quantities of toxic chemicals into the environment, including huge amounts of dioxins, the world’s number one carcinogen (source: Mike Betts, Director Better Thinking Ltd).
  • On the local level – effects on ecosystems – wet processing effluent discharged into rivers and streams, resulting in dead zones due to effluent aquatic toxicity and biological oxygen demand; areas where chemicals are found disrupt normal reproduction of fish.
  • On a global level – depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer due to emissions of chlorofluorocarbons and climate change due to CO2 and other greenhouse gases.
  • Heavy metals such as chromium and cadmium, while capable of making bright and vibrant dyes, can pose a threat wherever they appear in the product life cycle – during mining, use of the dye in dye wastewater, or as result of composting or incineration.

Synthetics:

  • Fibers, particularly micro-fibers, which are synthetic and petroleum derived, are perilous to our lungs. Tiny dust particles – micro-dust – coat our lungs, potentially inducing lung cancer. Some fabric dyes use cadmium, which with exposure to air, binds to small particles. It falls to the ground or water as rain or snow, and may contaminate fish, plants and animals. (source: Horst Rechelbacher)
  • The main catalyst used in polyester production is antimony – a known carcinogen and toxin that affects the heart, liver, lungs and skin. By products of antimony cause bronchitis and emphysema.

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Mar 19
Sally Bjornsen

Easy ButtonO.K.  I’m wrapping up the latest poll.  And the results are in…more people think this diet is easy than hard.  That said, it’s easier by a thin margin.  58% of you said it is relatively easy and 42% said it was hard.  For me it all depends on the day.  Today it’s hard, tomorrow it might be easier.  I think about the pre diet era.  There were days when I wasn’t feeling all that good e.g., bad hair day, ridiculous work meeting, argument with my seven year old.  My immediate reaction, conscious or subconscious, was to go buy something for myself.  Often times it was something completely wrong and poorly made and probably on sale (hence my closet full of crap).  It was an emotional impulse.

But the fact is life has its peaks and valleys, but for every valley there is a peak whether you’re wearing new clothes or not.  I hope for all of you this is an easy day but remember we will be here when its not.  5 mos. and 15 days.  Your fearless leader. 252033

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Mar 15

Themeof the Week ResizedHmmm… how, within the confines of a blog post, do I even begin to describe how this recession has changed the way I live?  With our family fast approaching the one-year mark with no income, the changes are innumerable.   I guess I could name a few of the many things we’ve chosen to forego.  I’d have to be selective, though, because our list of “do withouts” is enormous.  There are items on that list some would consider extravagances (vacations, firewood this winter, cable movie channels, dinners out and such), but it’s the simpler, more basic things I find harder to do without:  much-needed household repairs and improvements, replacing broken home goods, entertaining our friends, a sports program or summer camp for the kids… stuff like that.

One rather basic thing we’re doing without is presents for one another.  My heart broke a little not giving my older son much of anything for his birthday this year.  He was such a good sport about it, though, trying his best to look excited about the birthday poster I made and the couple of little items we scrounged together for him.  I still wish we could have given him a gift to make him feel more special.

My immediate family notwithstanding, gift-giving occasions in GENERAL are cause for angst nowadays.  And there’s no lack of these events on our calendar:  bridal and baby showers, weddings, Christenings, birthdays, and (perhaps the most frequent event) kids’ birthday parties.

Boy do I feel torn about kid birthday parties.  I wonder, “Am I wrong to feel resentful about spending money on someone ELSE’S kid when we’re not even buying for our OWN?”   I feel guilty not wanting to buy presents for others… and cheap when I spend less than I otherwise would have.  However, when we have no income and aren’t even buying gifts for each other, it’s painful spending money on those outside our immediate family.  A fear of being judged sometimes pushes me into buying a customary gift.  Other times, I do it because I just want to feel NORMAL again.

The reality is, gift-giving holidays and events are a regular part of life, so this dilemma will come up again and again.  As will the dilemma of social invitations for my two boys… things like movies, mini-golf, bowling, ice skating, etc.  Telling my sons they can’t go with their friends to these events because “we can’t afford it right now” is another change brought about by the recession.  I feel proud – yet at the same time sad – when my kids tell me, “But I can pay for it…  I have birthday money saved.  Pleeease?”  Oy!  What do I say to that?  Um, “We can’t afford for you to do that right now, son, but if you use YOUR money, I guess it’s OK.”???  That just feels wrong, and yet it’s one way to allow our kids to participate with their buddies and to feel “normal” again.

Previously, keeping up with household repairs was another “normal” for us… but this recession and unemployment thing has changed that too.  Having anything break or get worn out is a significant cause for concern these days.  When things go wrong, knowing we can’t afford to do anything about is worrisome.  I wish we could fix our pot-hole riddled driveway, our frayed and stained carpets, the cracks in the walls and molding, the old leaky fridge, broken light fixtures and unfinished drywall patches, etc.  When friends are keeping up on THEIR household repairs and home improvement projects, the condition of our home feels… well, embarrassing.  Especially after I see a friend’s newly-remodeled basement/bathroom/foyer, or their new furniture set or home entertainment system.

Having conversations about those purchases and renovations is also tougher these days.  In fact, this recession has very much changed what I enjoy talking about with friends.  For obvious reasons, discussing everyone’s home improvement projects, recent vacations, clothing or shoe purchases, and restaurant “finds” is not as easy or enjoyable as it used to be.  I try hard to listen with interest and enthusiasm when that is the chosen subject matter.  But, oftentimes, what I’m feeling in those moments is more a mix of envy and loss than delight .

My social activities with friends have also changed since the recession.  Obviously, movies, dinners and drinks out are all but eliminated.  But, previous to this recession, I was actually quite the social coordinator, frequently planning group events with friends and their families.  We are lucky to have a wonderful local arena and I would routinely arrange for groups of friends to attend fun events like Disney on Ice, American Idols Live, bull riding, monster truck shows, motocross racing, and more.  Now, however, I have pretty much ceased my role as event coordinator…  I very much miss planning these outings and attending them with my family & friends.

Well, I could go on and on about how this recession has changed the way we live, but this post is already WAY too long.  I guess I’ll just finish by telling you that I’m simply scared more now than I used to be… scared and worried about what the future holds for us.  Each month without an income that fear and worry grows a little bit bigger.

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Mar 15
Sally Bjornsen

Wrap-black-detail-8FarinazA lot of people are asking me these days, “How will you shop differently when the diet is over,” which by the way is in approx 168 days.  Well, I have been thinking a lot about that question lately.  One thing is for sure, I will attempt to buy quality over quantity, in all things, new and vintage.  You? 

Quality?  I know, it’s a word we all throw around like “superior,” “craftsmanship,” and “high-end.”  But I’m not talking about those marketing words…I’m talking about quality as in durability, sustainability and enduring style—perhaps even hand made (go figure). 

“Yah, yah, yah,” you say…”Quality like that costs money.”   Sure slapping down a Benjamin on a great sweater that you might wear for ten years sounds foreboding.  But the alternative is simply deadly and quite frankly bad for everyone involved (can you say Chinese labor?  Landfill? Excessive carbon footprint?  The possibility of looking tacky?).  Go with me on this.  What would you rather have….ten cheaply made pieces in your closet that you paid a total of $500 for? (You know what I’m talking about those trendy items that will likely last a season or two?)  Or an amazing piece of something or other that will take you to 2015 and beyond? 

So what is my “quality” litmus test?   In order to pass my “buy or reject” standard I must know the following before I buy it.

1)         Where is the company based who is selling the item.

2)         Who made the item? 

3)         Where was it made? Was it made in a country known for its quality?  Does that country tend to value craftsmanship and detail?   Are the people who work in the factory treated well? 

4)         Where will the product be shipped from?

5)         Is there a guarantee from the brand?   

6)         Is it cute? 

I suspect that my cost per item may go up in the short run but that I will save money and time in the end.  My hope is that I will end up with a “lasting” wardrobe that will endure the test of time and not go out of style within a few months. 

No more crap to wade through in my closet.  Just well made, core items that always look great! 

In the past few months I have uncovered some companies who produce and design amazing, high-quality products–some are local companies too.  These companies are commited to creating products that last, (who knew?).  Some of the gems I have uncovered are:  

Farinaz a rockin’ high quality blouse maker.  Products are designed in Seattle and manufactured in Vancouver Canada.   Farinaz is owned and operated by a local Seattle woman committed to quality and style.  Think Anne Fontaine meets Pink. 

The other company is Hillary Day.  A high end raincoat company in Portland Oregon.   Hillary Day is committed to creating amazingly beautiful raincoats that are on par with Burberry and Nanette Lapore. Gorgeous designs, technical fabric and amazing craftsmanship.  A Hillary Day raincoat may be the first thing I buy when I’m off the diet.  All products are designed and made in Portland Oregon.  Fabric is from Schoeller in Switzerland. 

“My first collection includes three styles,” says Hillary Day.  “Each raincoat is hand tailored here in Portland, Oregon. All are satin lined with a silver piping inside. Because, as we all know, a silver lining reminds us to look past the clouds, embrace the rain and sing.” 

 Lastly a company that I am really excited about buying from is an online company called Howies, a British company who is adamant about creating products that are so durably made that they can eventually be handed down to the next generation.  Their website boasts “These products have been made to last. So that one day you can hand them down to someone else. And they can carry on their little journeys.”

And of course there is Etsy.  www.etsy.com.  Hand made and often home made products by local (as in USA) designers.

Now the question to you….will you shop differently when this diet is over?

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Mar 09

Hi. I went to a play reading last night at Solo Bar on Roy street. The group New Century Theater Company put on a play reading, and all the cute actresses showed up to watch the event in their outfits. I noticed that the trend was a little dress, above the knee, leggings and boots. Kind of like back in 1989 when I first moved here! Minus the Doc Martins. Anyway….I started hankering for this look. I have the leggings. But, no little dress. I stared to feel so bad that I didn’t have the little dress. There is a store called Queen Anne Dispatch by my shop, and on my break I went in. I tried on 8 little dresses. One of the owners was there, she knew I was on this diet. She said “won’t Sally be mad at you?” Well, I just saw Sally. She laughed and said someone in the group said I was constantly cheating. Hey, this is only four times! Yes, this is the fourth time. I got a little navy tunic by Trinity. It was on sale, too! Only $42.00. Am I the biggest cheater? Or am I the only one who confesses????

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Mar 08
Natalie,  Columbus Ohio

We are well into March and I am still “abstinent”!  About a year ago I carefully packed up my winter sweaters—oh, yes, cashmere and cables; sumptuous silks and feminine flounces.  I have yet to find this box of sweaters.  I survived this season with one sweater that remained behind as a Spring chill “back-up”.  I used some jackets, blazers and I overused the one sweater I could find.

But the outcome of the equation is that one can survive a season with but one sweater.  I will have the entire summer to seek out the missing box.

I’m doing better–it’s been a long time since I cruised E-bay or Zappo’s or various other on-line sources.  I cannot quite give up looking at catalogues but I resist.  I am increasingly stunned by my own virtue and wonder just who was that person who “needed” scarves by Hermes (and then did not want to spoil them so never wore them!)

I hope everyone else is thriving.

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