Society today likes to have lots of options. We like to have lots of variety in our life that allows us to have multiple options. We like to have this is all aspects of our life whether it be food, clothing, or even just what we want to do with our lives. This is especially common in the United States. The average closet in the U.S. is very large and packed full of lots of clothes. A lot of these clothes are very similar. Some of the clothes are even the same thing just in different colors. This is a huge problem because of the making of these products has been bad for the environment and now they are going to waste.
In Contemporary Expressions Design Activism, Fuad Luke discusses how important it is to meet the basic need of all people by designing new and better basic products. This first my start with the designer. We must educate or designers on how to design clothing that can be used for more than one type of function or event. These products also need to be made out of materials that are healthy for the environment and that can be broken down and used for other things after they are recycled.
My design concept is to produce merchandise that can be worn in multiple different ways and that can be worn on multiple different occasions. Lots of items in my clothes are very similar and are definitely not completely necessary. I think that if a designer got really creative they could create nice clothing that could be reversible. One side could have a cute print that would be great for a night on the town or a casual day. The other side could be a solid, classic more expensive looking fabric. This way one skirt, pant, or top could be used for more than one occasion. The designer could even get creative enough to make a skit or a top that was not only reversible but could also look very classy or worn a different way would be great for a weekend night. In my opinion, I think this concept could save people room in their closet, help the environment, and help them save on money.
I have really enjoyed this course and learned a lot from it. I had no idea before this class how much the fashion industry really effected the environment. After taking this course I have a much bigger passion for making the industry more environmental friendly. Because of this class I now take more caution and put in more thought when shopping and buying new clothes. One thing I would change about this class is the fact that it is online. I know it is nice for some people not to have to go to class. However, I feel like this class teaches us very important concepts and would have a greater impact on students if it was an actual class.
Life of Kellee Craddock
Friday, April 13, 2012
Friday, April 6, 2012
From One Use to Another
Recycling is a very common word to almost everyone, but does the general public really know what what happens to items they recycle? Most people take their clothing to a recycling bin and never think about what happens to it after that. For all they know it might not even actually get recycled. If this is the case they are helping to continue the cradle to grave cycle. However, I think more people will actually recycle if they know exactly what their recycled items are going toward. Are their clothes going to just be given to someone else or are they going to be made into something better. The hope is that they are going to be made into something better, which is what we call cradle to cradle or upcycling. To me this is technical metabolism, knowing what exactly is taking place in the closed repeating loop of the recycling process.
In the Cradle to Cradle reading from this week it discusses how important it is to use natural fibers and chemicals that do not hurt the environment. In my opinion, this is the first step. If our designers and producers are still using products that hurt the environment it ultimately won't matter if they are recycled or not because at some point they will not decompose. This means we must first convince and teach manufacturers and designers what is good for the environment and what is harmful. In Textile Futures, Quinn explains cradle to cradle saying all discarded fabrics are seen as having potential to acquire fresh life as a new form. This will help eliminate the concept of textile waste.
The new concept I came up with this week helps the apparel world and interior world come together. I don't know about everyone else, but I have a huge pile of tshirts in my room that I know longer wear. Some of them have been washed so many times they are worn out, but I can't bring myself to just get rid of all of them. The idea I have is taking these t-shirts and making them into shag rugs. If you cut the t-shirts into small strips and weave them together they make the perfect shag carpet. Another good reason they would make good rugs is because like I said before most of them have been washed thousands of times and are very soft because of this. Turning old t-shirts into rugs turns something that has no use besides sitting in a drawer to something of great use and something that is appealing to the eye of customers.
In the Cradle to Cradle reading from this week it discusses how important it is to use natural fibers and chemicals that do not hurt the environment. In my opinion, this is the first step. If our designers and producers are still using products that hurt the environment it ultimately won't matter if they are recycled or not because at some point they will not decompose. This means we must first convince and teach manufacturers and designers what is good for the environment and what is harmful. In Textile Futures, Quinn explains cradle to cradle saying all discarded fabrics are seen as having potential to acquire fresh life as a new form. This will help eliminate the concept of textile waste.
The new concept I came up with this week helps the apparel world and interior world come together. I don't know about everyone else, but I have a huge pile of tshirts in my room that I know longer wear. Some of them have been washed so many times they are worn out, but I can't bring myself to just get rid of all of them. The idea I have is taking these t-shirts and making them into shag rugs. If you cut the t-shirts into small strips and weave them together they make the perfect shag carpet. Another good reason they would make good rugs is because like I said before most of them have been washed thousands of times and are very soft because of this. Turning old t-shirts into rugs turns something that has no use besides sitting in a drawer to something of great use and something that is appealing to the eye of customers.
Friday, March 30, 2012
From Crib to Case to Covers
Every year students move in and out
of their houses at the end of December and May. What does not move around with
them is the extra baggage that out of style clothes and fabrics cause. I’m
speaking from personal experience- when it’s time to move out, its time to move
out. The last thing I am worried about is a shirt I bought last summer that
doesn’t fit anymore due to my outdated dryers that bake clothes rather than dry
them. This is where the Concept of Cradle to Cradle comes into play, and
something I believe would be extremely sustainable. In cradle to cradle, waste
or outdated products have a second life. In this second life, they are used as
a resource. Sounds crazy I know, but my baked T-shirts can be reincarnated.
I’ll explain in a second. Unlike recycling, where products are separated for
specific components and made less valuable. In my idea, the uptaking takes the
stage over recycling. On the podium, my idea creates waste into something MORE
valuable. One significant difference is that not only will my crispy tshirts
turn an out of style college freshman into Miss OSU, but it also please the
ones who enjoy making frequent visits to coffee shops with their friend
Macbook. Now to the idea.
Starting with me, I
will begin collecting old clothes and use them as a “technical nutrient” which
will allow the out of style college girls to have a trendy iphone case that is
made from this fabric. This is one of the two concepts that are pertinent in
Cradle to Cradle. Don’t worry I wasn’t trying to offend anyone who enjoys going
to starbucks, because I am a coffee addict and own a macbook. Consider me a
hypocrite, but spare me. The phone cases can be useful in many ways, but with
my idea they can useful to the environment by promoting healthier and more
beautiful gardens. The fabrics from the iphone cases have many uses to the
environment- solely promoting biological process- not deterring. Holding in
moisture, protecting from erosion, and protecting plants from chemicals that
may enter the soil without this covering.
Lastly, I found an
interesting excerpt from the article. “Whatever our society makes does not go
away, and whatever is natural here, does not go away.” In saying, why should we
not allow these things to provide the out of style girls with a dream guy?
Cliché I know, but if the guys have are worth anything at all, they have a
sense of style, and Iphones can make or break some girls. You don’t want your
phone breaking on a night out with the girls, and you also
don’t want to your phone to look like all the other ones, might as well make it
cute.
From Crib to Case to Covers
Every year students move in and out
of their houses at the end of December and May. What does not move around with
them is the extra baggage that out of style clothes and fabrics cause. I’m
speaking from personal experience- when it’s time to move out, its time to move
out. The last thing I am worried about is a shirt I bought last summer that
doesn’t fit anymore due to my outdated dryers that bake clothes rather than dry
them. This is where the Concept of Cradle to Cradle comes into play, and
something I believe would be extremely sustainable. In cradle to cradle, waste
or outdated products have a second life. In this second life, they are used as
a resource. Sounds crazy I know, but my baked T-shirts can be reincarnated.
I’ll explain in a second. Unlike recycling, where products are separated for
specific components and made less valuable. In my idea, the uptaking takes the
stage over recycling. On the podium, my idea creates waste into something MORE
valuable. One significant difference is that not only will my crispy tshirts
turn an out of style college freshman into Miss OSU, but it also please the
ones who enjoy making frequent visits to coffee shops with their friend
Macbook. Now to the idea.
Starting with me, I
will begin collecting old clothes and use them as a “technical nutrient” which
will allow the out of style college girls to have a trendy iphone case that is
made from this fabric. This is one of the two concepts that are pertinent in
Cradle to Cradle. Don’t worry I wasn’t trying to offend anyone who enjoys going
to starbucks, because I am a coffee addict and own a macbook. Consider me a
hypocrite, but spare me. The phone cases can be useful in many ways, but with
my idea they can useful to the environment by promoting healthier and more
beautiful gardens. The fabrics from the iphone cases have many uses to the
environment- solely promoting biological process- not deterring. Holding in
moisture, protecting from erosion, and protecting plants from chemicals that
may enter the soil without this covering.
Lastly, I found an
interesting excerpt from the article. “Whatever our society makes does not go
away, and whatever is natural here, does not go away.” In saying, why should we
not allow these things to provide the out of style girls with a dream guy?
Cliché I know, but if the guys have are worth anything at all, they have a
sense of style, and Iphones can make or break some girls. You don’t want your
phone breaking on a night out with the girls, and you also
don’t want to your phone to look like all the other ones, might as well make it
cute.
Friday, March 9, 2012
Return the Favor
Today our world is beautiful, but what is to come of it in the possible near future? When you walk outside your front door you see the green grass, the beautiful trees and flowers, and breathe in the fresh air. This is something we all take for granted every day. If we continue to live the way we do our environment will end up in a crisis. We must teach our population today to change their ways. Big changes must be made and we must change the way our society thinks.
I think that in order to do this we must first educate people and secondly make sustainability easy for them. In the article, Closing the Loops in Commerce, Janine Benyus describes different principles of ecology and describes how each one relates to our world today. In my opinion, every one of her principles made great points. However, there were a two principles that I really liked and supported my concept of educating and making sustainability easy.
The first principle I strongly agreed with was using our waste as a resource. As we know by now solid waste is a big problem in our world today. This can be minimized if we find other ways to use our so called "waste". Just because you do not use or wear old clothing does not mean that it could not be used by someone else or in some other way, shape, or form. In order to make recycling easy for people I think we need to set up a system just like our trash system. What if we had a container just for recycled clothing that got picked up every other week or even once a month. This would require almost nothing from people. It is as easy as taking out your trash. The "waste" could be taken to the appropriate locations to be recycled. It could be used by others or broken down to make other things.
The other principle I really like was optimize rather than maximize. Although, the assembly-line and mass producing has made things very easy for manufacturers I do not think it has had a positive impact on the environment. When products are mass produced they do not have the same quality as when they are hand made. Most mass produced products are cheap and do not last as long as hand made products. This means they are trashed and new ones are bought. This is a continuous cycle that leads to lots of solid waste. If we educate our consumers to buy less of the more expensive high quality products than in the end we will have less waste.
If we use these principles to educate our society and teach them how easy these simple things are to change our healthy environment will last much longer.
I think that in order to do this we must first educate people and secondly make sustainability easy for them. In the article, Closing the Loops in Commerce, Janine Benyus describes different principles of ecology and describes how each one relates to our world today. In my opinion, every one of her principles made great points. However, there were a two principles that I really liked and supported my concept of educating and making sustainability easy.
The first principle I strongly agreed with was using our waste as a resource. As we know by now solid waste is a big problem in our world today. This can be minimized if we find other ways to use our so called "waste". Just because you do not use or wear old clothing does not mean that it could not be used by someone else or in some other way, shape, or form. In order to make recycling easy for people I think we need to set up a system just like our trash system. What if we had a container just for recycled clothing that got picked up every other week or even once a month. This would require almost nothing from people. It is as easy as taking out your trash. The "waste" could be taken to the appropriate locations to be recycled. It could be used by others or broken down to make other things.
The other principle I really like was optimize rather than maximize. Although, the assembly-line and mass producing has made things very easy for manufacturers I do not think it has had a positive impact on the environment. When products are mass produced they do not have the same quality as when they are hand made. Most mass produced products are cheap and do not last as long as hand made products. This means they are trashed and new ones are bought. This is a continuous cycle that leads to lots of solid waste. If we educate our consumers to buy less of the more expensive high quality products than in the end we will have less waste.
If we use these principles to educate our society and teach them how easy these simple things are to change our healthy environment will last much longer.
Friday, February 24, 2012
Changing the Future
What is to come for our environment in the next 50 years? In my opinion we have two options. We continue to use and abuse it like we do today or we work with technology and come up with a plan to use the resources we have in a new and positive light. If we choose to continue to live our lives like we do now, in 50 years we could have no trees, we will have more pollution than ever before, and it could even get to the point where we do not have fresh food and water to eat and drink. However, on the other hand, if we do change some of our living habits there is no limit to how much better we can make the world we are living in. The majority of people today want to see change, but want others to change it for them. In my opinion our population knows that we need to change our habits in order to keep our environment healthy, but I do not think that a lot of them know what to do to help or some of them think that what they do won't effect the world as long as everyone else changes their ways. This means that we need to change the mental modes, which is the values, beliefs, and assumptions, of the population. I think that if we educate today's society and show them how easy change can be they will be much more optimistic about it.
I think we can first educate people on limiting consumption. The media is making our customers feel like they need so many different items and lots of time more than one of the same item. For example, in an article we read earlier this semester it discussed how the average person had at least 8 pairs of jeans. Is this really necessary. The article Limiting Consumption, I learned that right now we are consuming faster than we ever have before. This is partially because material good are cheaper, therefore, people can afford to buy more even if they do not necessarily need these items. In all reality, most of these items end up going to waste.
We also need to teach consumers on the future of our environment. Are our consumers thinking about what is to come for them, their children, or even their grand children? In the article Thinking Ahead, it discusses just how important this is. Most people today have the pessimistic attitude that they can't change the environment and at this time it is not affecting them anyways. One of the biggest things we can do is educate them and change this attitude to a more positive one. However, after reading Visioneering: An Essential Framework in Sustainability, I learned that people aren't going to change their mind and their ways over night. We have to make them believe that our vision and plan for the future is worth following. We have to make today's society realize that our needs can be met in ways that will not hurt the future. I think this can be done by teaching consumers to only purchase what is truly necessary and to recycle items when they are finished with them. If we successfully do these things I think we can become a more sustainable culture.
I think we can first educate people on limiting consumption. The media is making our customers feel like they need so many different items and lots of time more than one of the same item. For example, in an article we read earlier this semester it discussed how the average person had at least 8 pairs of jeans. Is this really necessary. The article Limiting Consumption, I learned that right now we are consuming faster than we ever have before. This is partially because material good are cheaper, therefore, people can afford to buy more even if they do not necessarily need these items. In all reality, most of these items end up going to waste.
We also need to teach consumers on the future of our environment. Are our consumers thinking about what is to come for them, their children, or even their grand children? In the article Thinking Ahead, it discusses just how important this is. Most people today have the pessimistic attitude that they can't change the environment and at this time it is not affecting them anyways. One of the biggest things we can do is educate them and change this attitude to a more positive one. However, after reading Visioneering: An Essential Framework in Sustainability, I learned that people aren't going to change their mind and their ways over night. We have to make them believe that our vision and plan for the future is worth following. We have to make today's society realize that our needs can be met in ways that will not hurt the future. I think this can be done by teaching consumers to only purchase what is truly necessary and to recycle items when they are finished with them. If we successfully do these things I think we can become a more sustainable culture.
Friday, February 17, 2012
Hemp Is The Way To Go!
Before reading the article Hemp: Historical Fiber Remains Controversial I knew almost nothing about hemp and I especially did not know that it could be used in so many different ways. I knew that hemp could be used in some fabrics, but I had no idea that it could be used in paint or even used in place of our most basic fabrics. Hemp has been used by some of the more famous fashion designers such as Calvin Klein, Giorgio Armani, and Ralph Lauren for over 15 years. Calvin Klein was even quoted saying that he thought hemp would be the fiber of choice in the fashion and home industries. I understand why there is some controversy over this issue, but in my opinion the benefits of using more hemp and even growing hemp in the United States definitely out weighs the downfalls.
Hemp is not near as damaging to our environment as other fiber such as cotton and other synthetic fibers. Since hemp is naturally resistant to mold, bacteria, and pests there is no need for the use of pesticides. Hemp plants can be planted very close together and produce more fibers that cotton. Hemp plants only take 2 to 3 years to regrow compared to flax plants that can take up to 6 years. I also learned from the hemp article that no part of the hemp plant goes to waste, it call all be used in some way. All of these traits of hemp can not only help our environment, but they can also help farmers save and make more money than they can on other crops. When hemp and cotton are compared hemp beats cotton at almost every aspect. Hemp has a greater tensile strength and also a better tear strength.
In the video Hempsters: Plant the Seed I learned a lot about the confusion and controversy about hemp. People opposing the growing of hemp plants in the United States think it is too closely related to and look too similar to the plant that grows marijuana. I understand this argument, but the two plants are very different. In fact, if someone were to smoke the plant that hemp is made from it would most likely make them very ill.
As you can tell from reading my blog thus far, I do think that hemp can be called a miracle fiber. In the article, Are you being bamboozled? we learn that we do not always know the truth about the fibers in the products we are buying. Most consumers think if they are buying something made of bamboo they are buying something that is not harmful to the environment. However, most consumers don't know that a lot of bamboo is actually made of rayon. So my question is why not purchase something that consumers are positive does not harm the environment. I think the solution to this is hemp. Being able to grow hemp in the United States would help our farmers make more money, hopefully lower the price for consumers since it will no longer have to be shipped into our country, and help our environment. If the growing of hemp is closely monitored with laws and restrictions I do not see any reason not to legalize the growth of it.
Hemp is not near as damaging to our environment as other fiber such as cotton and other synthetic fibers. Since hemp is naturally resistant to mold, bacteria, and pests there is no need for the use of pesticides. Hemp plants can be planted very close together and produce more fibers that cotton. Hemp plants only take 2 to 3 years to regrow compared to flax plants that can take up to 6 years. I also learned from the hemp article that no part of the hemp plant goes to waste, it call all be used in some way. All of these traits of hemp can not only help our environment, but they can also help farmers save and make more money than they can on other crops. When hemp and cotton are compared hemp beats cotton at almost every aspect. Hemp has a greater tensile strength and also a better tear strength.
In the video Hempsters: Plant the Seed I learned a lot about the confusion and controversy about hemp. People opposing the growing of hemp plants in the United States think it is too closely related to and look too similar to the plant that grows marijuana. I understand this argument, but the two plants are very different. In fact, if someone were to smoke the plant that hemp is made from it would most likely make them very ill.
As you can tell from reading my blog thus far, I do think that hemp can be called a miracle fiber. In the article, Are you being bamboozled? we learn that we do not always know the truth about the fibers in the products we are buying. Most consumers think if they are buying something made of bamboo they are buying something that is not harmful to the environment. However, most consumers don't know that a lot of bamboo is actually made of rayon. So my question is why not purchase something that consumers are positive does not harm the environment. I think the solution to this is hemp. Being able to grow hemp in the United States would help our farmers make more money, hopefully lower the price for consumers since it will no longer have to be shipped into our country, and help our environment. If the growing of hemp is closely monitored with laws and restrictions I do not see any reason not to legalize the growth of it.
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