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5 Easy Recycling Resolutions for You this New Year

  • December 27, 2019December 19, 2024

In a few days we will celebrate New Years, and with each new year comes new resolutions to make positive changes in our lives. While brainstorming ideas on what you’d like to work on in your private and professional life, please consider these simple ideas that will further efforts made to keep textiles and other materials out of landfills and keep your home tidy too. As we mentioned in our last blog on the 5 R’s, “over 11 million tons of recyclable clothing, shoes, and textiles make their way into landfills each year.” If we all do our part in recycling our textiles and household goods, we can make a large difference in the care of our planet and its future. Here are five ideas to inspire and get you started or help you continue in your recycling journey…

1. Recycle Your Textiles

Though Spring hasn’t arrived, a big cleanout is not completely necessary to simply begin recycling textiles as they wear out or no longer fit. Recycling textiles is important because textiles occupy “about 5% of landfill space and the amount is growing.” (Read more here) “Consumers throw away shoes and clothing [versus recycle], an average of 70 pounds per person, annually.” This means we have a long way to go in our recycling goals and in helping the environment.

What You Can Do

The first and most basic step is choosing to start a pile for the donation bin or resale store rather than immediately filling the trash can with old textiles. Remember to donate ALL old textiles because those who sort your donation will know best as to what is recyclable and what can only end up in landfill. 

Education about textile recycling is another step in solving this problem so spread the word in the workplace and in your personal relationships so we can move toward becoming a greener country.

For more info about bin locations for Chicago Textile Recycling, please contact us. Also, we are perpetually looking to expand our area with new bin locations, so if you know of a local business near you that could host a bin, please let us know!

Benefits

-Aid in keeping textiles out of landfills

-Sense of purpose in helping the environment

-Sharing newfound knowledge to aid in spreading awareness about the importance of textile recycling

-Gives others inexpensive buying options for their own closets 

–Creates rags for numerous industries in their day to day cleaning needs

-Used as insulation/stuffing/sound-proofing/padding etc

2. Reduce Your Textiles

Another resolution you can make for 2020 is to reduce the amount of clothes you buy. Fast fashion is a large part of the problem why many textiles end up in landfills. Fashion companies are over-producing clothes to constantly offer new items for sale and using cheaper materials that give clothes a shorter shelf life. “One garbage truck of clothes is burned or sent to landfills every second! The average consumer bought 60 percent more clothes in 2014 than in 2000, but kept each garment for half as long.” Advertising constantly pushes consumers to buy these new clothes which also adds to the amount of clothes that consumers then throw out. Part of solving this issue is for the  retailer to see their role in this problem and producing less, but the other part of solving it is for you as the consumer to send a message to retailers by buying less.

What You Can Do

The main step for this resolution is to create the goal of buying less textiles. 

Another step to help you in this goal would be to go ahead and unsubscribe from retail store emails, cancel those retail credit cards, and limit the advertising you choose to view on tv and the internet.

Coinciding with the first resolution in reducing your textiles would be to clean out your closet and textiles in your home and recycle what you no longer need or want. If you think you may need to buy something new, instead take everything out of your closet and perhaps you will discover items that you forgot existed. Get creative! Look online at different fashion blogs, pinterest ideas, youtube videos using clothes you already have and get new ideas on ways to wear these items with other pieces you already own. You can create a whole new wardrobe with items you already have.

Benefits

– Gives you a better sense of what you have and what to wear

-Simply paying attention to what clothes are wearing out quickly can help you make more informed choices when buying clothes and being mindful about the importance of choosing quality clothes for the long-term over quantity.

-Creativity with your styling choices and ideas

-Dual benefits of saving money you can spend on other things, pay off debt, or save for future

-This leads to another possible resolution…

3. 30 Day, 30 Items Wardrobe Challenge

The third resolution is a 30 day, 30 items wardrobe challenge. There are numerous blogs about it and the benefit of being limited in your everyday options of what to wear. Blogger Emily Recker wrote about her experience here. Doing this challenge/making this resolution will help you discover what you own, what you need, and be more mindful of how many clothes you have. This challenge also helps in getting more creative, intentional, and easing the morning routine in drastically decreasing options in what to wear, which has been a positive experience for most people who have taken this challenge.

Emily shared that “the crazy part is—I didn’t feel frustrated or limited by this challenge–I felt freedom. I spent less time trying to figure out what I’d wear every day, less time picking clothes up off the floor (bye, clutter…hello calm), less time digging through drawers, and even less time folding laundry!” Doesn’t that sound dreamy: “less time folding laundry”?  She went on to say she enjoyed the challenge, that the process was fun, and that she wanted to keep going after the 30 days were up.

What You Can Do

For Emily’s challenge, she chose to only include tops, bottoms and shoes in her 30 items, and to not count undergarments, pjs, and workout clothes, so it is up to you to decide what to include or exclude from your thirty.  

Choose close to 30 items from your closet that are basic enough that they pair well together, and maybe one or two pieces that pop more or are busier if you enjoy more variety in patterns and color. Commit to wearing only these items for the next 30 days. Share that you are taking this challenge with others so that they can hold you accountable.

Place all of your other clothes in storage or simply push them to the back of your closet for the next 30 days. Who knows? Maybe these next 30 days will inspire you to find freedom in decluttering your closet even more.

I am an avid tiny house show watcher. I’ve always been fascinated by miniatures, and one of the things I hadn’t thought about before watching these shows was the amount of paring down one must do to move into a tiny house. This most definitely included your closet, so for tiny house homeowners, the 30 item challenge is not just a challenge; it’s a way of life.  If you had to move into a tiny house, what would you take? What would you leave? Maybe one of your new year’s resolutions could be to take this challenge and see how it can change your way of thinking about clothes and textiles and how much you really need.

Benefits

-Have positive and refreshing experience learning more about clothes and how to pair them well

-Much easier to get dressed in the morning 

-Less clutter, more calm

-Less time folding laundry

-Decluttering reduces stress

-Ready to move into a tiny house! 😉

4. Recycle More than Textiles

Though we are a textile recycling company, we are committed to recycling in general, which includes much more than textiles with items such as cardboard and paper, glass, aluminum, plastic and any other product that can have a second life. It is important to recycle all products that you can to keep landfill waste to a minimum, and help take care of our Earth.

What You Can Do

The first thing to learn when recycling is what should I recycle and how should I recycle it? Our local waste company, SWALCO has made this very easy by creating an informative flier with guidelines about which household items should go in recycling bins and other considerations such as cleaning containers and not bagging recyclables. Check out their flier here.

“In the United States, we throw away 2.5 million plastic bottles every hour – about 42,000 per minute, or about 695 per second.” This statistic doesn’t have to be the case. Recycle the bottles you do use, and when possible, take your own reusable water bottle with you. Airports and other high traffic places have added water bottle refill stations to the already existing water fountains to make it easy to have clean water in an environmentally-friendly bottle while you are traveling or out and about.

Benefits

-Do your part in taking care of the Earth

-Gain a sense of purpose in recycling responsibly

-Know that you are recycling the right things in the right way so that more doesn’t end up in landfills

-Become a part of a community that works toward helping the environment and creating a better future for our planet

5. One Step Further

For those of you who already recycle items at home and your textiles, your resolution might be to go one step further in helping the environment. As we’ve mentioned before in other blog posts, we urge you to not only recycle household items, but to go one step further in reducing your carbon footprint. There are always new ways we can change how we live to make a difference for our planet. 

There are many ways to make simple lifestyle changes that can affect the environment for the better. Small changes build up to large differences, especially when you help spread the word so that others also make these small changes. The biggest difference you can make is doing your part in recycling and helping Chicago Textile Recycling spread the word about the importance of recycling for everyone.

What You Can Do

As you unsubscribe from retail store emails with advertising that begs you to buy more clothes and other products, also contact those companies and stores sending junk mail and other unwanted printed advertising mail. Recycle what does come in the mail because “the majority of the 4 million tons of junk mail that Americans receive annually ends up in landfills.” Another interesting fact is that “the energy used to create and distribute junk mail in the US for one day could heat 250,000 homes.” By doing small things, we can help to reduce this number.

As the major shopping holidays are now behind us, we should be aware that “while the United States celebrates the holidays, Americans produce an additional 5 million tons of waste (four million of the 5 million tons consisting of wrapping paper and shopping bags).” As we look toward the new year, let’s resolve to lessen that statistic dramatically. Take reusable bags with you as you shop, find creative ways to wrap such as tea towels, cleaned chip bags used inside out, wordsearch puzzle paper, or simply recycled and recyclable craft paper colored by you or your children.

Go paperless. Switch all of your bill paying to online. This will help you save money by no longer buying stamps but also save unnecessary use of paper, and save trees. “On average, Americans use 650 pounds of paper a year. Each.” Also, “U.S. businesses use around 21 million tons of paper every year.”

Benefits

-Decrease your carbon footprint

-Feel good about educating others on how to do the same

-Support tree life by doing what you can to decrease paper intake and output in your own home 

-Becoming creative in present giving

-Inspire others who see you out and about with reusable bags

Looking Forward to the Year Ahead

The idea of a fresh start for a new year can be a very exciting and promising venture. Regardless of where you are on your recycling journey, there are always new ways of doing more and new ideas on becoming creative with what you already own. Chicago Textile Recycling is wishing each of you a wonderful new year in 2020 and will continue to encourage and challenge you through blogs, articles and idea posts to make small changes in your life so that all of us collectively can have a healthier planet for our future. 

Recycling Statistics pulled from this website

Fashion Statistics pulled from this website

Finding Peace in the Frenzy: A Spirit of Gratitude…

  • November 26, 2019January 10, 2020

finding peace in the frenzy: a spirit of gratitude this holiday season

Last year in 2018, “the period between Thanksgiving Day and Cyber Monday generated 19.2% of the total holiday revenue. In total, that five-day period accounted for $24.2 billion in sales, a 23% increase as compared to 2017.” Worldwide, we spent “$998.32 billion” dollars on Holiday spending in 2018. (Read more here.)  

 

During this very frenetic season of shopping and buying and giving, it can be hard to focus on living a life of gratitude for what we already have. The desire to constantly find the best product for the best price for that person on your Holiday list, or even a little something for yourself, can be exhausting, and can go head to head with the very eco-conscious decision to truly be content with what we have. This season, Chicago Textile Recycling challenges you, our reader, to try and pursue contentment where you are, and to pursue a sense of gratefulness for all that you already own. Further, we challenge you to pursue gratefulness for our Earth and the gifts it shares with us year round.

 

This will look different to each of you, but there are many ways you can pursue gratefulness amidst the hustle and bustle of the season and find peace in the frenzy. Here are suggestions for four ways that may help you focus and find gratitude this season:

 

giving to those in need

Giving to Those in Need

For some of you, it may mean taking the focus off of yourself or things, and placing the focus elsewhere, such as giving time or money to low income schools, volunteering at a hospital or soup kitchen, or donating toys to one of the many organizations that help others in need, such as Toys for Tots, or Angel Tree. You may also know of someone in your neighborhood or at your workplace or school who is struggling and could use some help with the Holidays for their family.

 

Here at Chicago Textile Recycling, we purchase unusable items during the holiday season and year round.  Two of the organizations we work with are Share our Spare and Cradles to Crayons in Chicago. We purchase items they receive as donations and cannot use or are in excess. 

 

Share our Spare is a Chicago-based charity that serves families in need with diapers, clothes, and other baby and child necessities. They have open volunteer sessions on the calendar, or you can contact the organization to come volunteer as a family or group on your own.  They also have an Amazon wishlist and accept gently used items for children and babies. They also accept donations that go toward purchasing items for families in need.

 

Similar to Share our Spare, Chicago Textile Recycling also works with the Chicago branch of  Cradles to Crayons, a national organization serving families with children in need. Likewise, the organization accepts “like new” and new children’s clothing and necessities, monetary donations to buy said items, and volunteers either in your own neighborhood hosting drives to collect items, or at volunteer work stations at the Giving Factory in downtown Chicago. Another neat option they offer is sponsoring a KidPack for kids in need in Chicagoland. You can either pay for the total Kidpack or purchase items off the Amazon wishlist for each child. As these children’s Kidpacks are completed, new children in need pop up on the site.

 

 

choosing gifts with purpose

Choosing Gifts with Purpose

For some of you, it may mean simply choosing to ignore fast fashion and products that you know are cheaply made in order to buy fewer but higher quality and longer lasting products for those you love. This Holiday season, try choosing eco-friendly products, or even recycled products as gifts for others this year could be a way of living eco-consciously and choosing gratitude for well-made products that help the Earth. “Today, the average consumer spends $1,226 on Holiday Gifts.” When you as the consumer are out (or in) buying holiday gifts, be mindful and make buying decisions that help and not harm the environment.

 

This could also mean making homemade gifts this year. From sugar scrubs to baked goods to crafts to painted textiles, there are thousands of homemade gift ideas, which are often appreciated even more as the recipient knows you spent time and love pouring into its creation.

 

taking stock and gratefulness

Taking Stock and Gratefulness

For some of you it may simply mean finally cleaning out what you already own and taking a better calculation of what you have, so you can truly know what you need. A part of this is choosing to recycle textiles you no longer need to your local resale store or donation bin. Usually, when you realize how much you already own, it helps you appreciate what you have, and hold more gratefulness for your material things. Also, this often results in buying less stuff, which is definitely eco-friendly. Contact us for info about bin locations near you.

 

This too is a great way to give to those in need by donating your items to small local resale stores with charity partnerships or causes you believe in. At CTR, we work with over 40 local partner stores, the majority of which help to fund a small local nonprofit. By simply asking around or looking online, you can find your nearest resale store that offers help and hope to those in need in your area too.

 

gratefulness for the world around us

Gratefulness for the World Around Us

And for some of you, it may not be about stuff, but about stepping back and breathing amid the chaos that can sometimes consume us this time of year.  Take a look around at the gifts our planet shares with us. Take time to appreciate and enjoy the beautiful sunset, the white of the snow, the crispness of the fall chill, the stars in the sky, the cycle of the Earth as Autumn slowly turns to Winter and the trees and plants go into hibernation.

 

Make snow angels with your family, go sledding at the local park, take a wintry walk, and breathe in the fresh cold air as you look around and take in our beautiful planet.

 

choose what is important

Choose What is Important

Regardless of what gratitude and peace may look like for you this season, remember to slow down and enjoy the most important things. Surrounded by family and friends is a good place to be. Avoiding the Holiday crowds, the hustle and bustle and frenzy of lines can only make life a little sweeter and a little less stressed these next few weeks. Choosing gifts for others we can be proud of and stand behind, and choosing what matters most can only add to our joy as we seek gratitude and stillness in this Holiday season.

 

 

Orange, Black and Green: Choose Environmentally Conscious this Halloween

  • October 24, 2019January 10, 2020

Environmentally Conscious This Halloween

One week from today those who celebrate the holiday will be out in their neighborhood (or a favorite spooky neighborhood) walking from door to door, ringing doorbells and shouting “Trick or Treat!” Kids will be excited and on sugar highs already, houses will be decorated, and children will be unrecognizable in donned costumes and alternative personas for one haunted evening of fun. 

 

Where does Chicago Textile Recycling fit in this post about Halloween festivity? In our pursuit of encouraging each of you to recycle textiles, we also want to provide eco-friendly ideas whenever you need to purchase a new outfit, even if it is one to embrace your inner witch. Or ghost. Or superhero.

 

Shopping Creatively: Resale stores and your closet

Shopping Creatively: Resale Stores and Your Closet

Shop Resale Stores

Resale stores are a great place to shop for Halloween inspiration. Our local Goodwill not only resells previously worn costumes for kids and adults, they also set up spots in their aisles with costume ideas that can be found in the regular clothes’ sections of their stores. In these spots,  employees have pulled together items in the store to complete the look. 

 

For instance, one spot had the idea of “Scarecrow,” gave simple directions on what to buy to to create the scarecrow costume, and had already pulled flannel shirts and overalls under the sign to look through and purchase. Add a straw hat, a few pieces of hay and some scarecrow looking makeup, and you are ready for Halloween!

 

Over the last six years, I have only purchased new costumes once or twice for my children, choosing instead to pull ideas from pinterest or buy secondhand from kids’ consignment and resale stores.  By choosing to buy used, you are keeping perfectly good costumes out of the waste stream in landfills. Children’s costumes are the most prevalent option in resale stores, but there are adult costumes also, as well as ideas for pulling together costumes from what you already own or from the clothes’ racks of resale stores. An added bonus is that this option is always cheaper too!

 

Shop Your Closet

Your own closet is another great place to look for Halloween inspiration.  It doesn’t take much to pull off a witch. When hosting a Halloween party with roommates a decade ago, I pulled a black dress, some orange and black striped socks, black tights and black boots together, borrowed an orange autumnal scarf from a classmate, and was left with only a witch hat to buy, which I found secondhand. Voila!

 

As noted above, there are other costume ideas that could be pulled from an already filled closet. A scarecrow would be simple with a flannel shirt and overalls. A zombie equally easy to create with some tattered dark clothes, or old clothes you could tatter yourself. Frankenstein would need a solid t-shirt, sports jacket, and a pair of slacks. With a small dose of creativity, and possibly a little pinterest inspiration, you can easily pull off many Halloween looks in the comfort of your own home.

 

Costume Ideas

Costume Ideas

Spider

Last year my son went as a spider for Halloween. I really couldn’t find many good premade spider costumes on the internet, so decided to check out pinterest and make one myself.  I consider myself somewhat crafty but am definitely no sewing goddess, so this is not a hard one to make. It was simply a matter of looking for the pieces to make the whole. 

 

He wanted to be a brown wolf spider, or something similar based on a Halloween decoration I purchased from our local Goodwill.  Shopping around local thrift stores, I found a brown sweatshirt with an orange truck I was able to turn inside out, a pair of brown corduroy pants and a brown knitted hat.  At the nearby craft store, I purchased an 8 pack of medium sized googly eyes and some brown ribbon. I then purchased two pairs of brown socks and a pair of brown gloves at our local Dollar Tree.

 

Following a look I found on Pinterest, I filled the two pairs of socks with plastic grocery bags, sewed them closed and onto the sides of the sweatshirt, and then hot glued ribbon to connect his two long sleeved arms to two socks on either side, with his legs creating eight legs total for the spider.  A hot glue gun also helped with adhering the googly eyes to the front top of his knit hat, and he was an adorable spider that Halloween.

 

Farmer/Scarecrow

A farmer or scarecrow would be fairly similar in style. With a plaid flannel long-sleeved shirt, a pair of overalls and a straw hat, your basic look would be set. A pair of work boots could complete the look for a farmer, and some straw and makeup would turn you into a scarecrow.

 

 

Pirate

For a pirate, you will need a white shirt, black pants or cut offs, a red sash which could be an old t-shirt or pair of leggings and a sash or kerchief for your head. Or instead of a kerchief, a secondhand pirate hat or similar black hat would work well.  A pirate sword could also be picked up secondhand, and you can choose to complete the look with an eyepatch. A black piece of felt with ribbon could suffice, or you can attempt to find an inexpensive one at a costume shop. Lastly, you can always add details like  a parrot, or a vest made from an old shirt or sports coat.

 

 

Robot

If you have an excess of boxes lying around, and some dryer flex hose, a robot would be a fun and creative project to make for Halloween. Some paint is all you would need to add to make it your own.

 

 

Vampire

Do you already own a tuxedo? There is no better reason to pull it out of the depths of your closet than an evening of impersonating a vampire. Add a black cape made from an old sheet, or one found secondhand, some black hair spray (if your hair isn’t black), and the only new thing you really need is a pair of pointy teeth. I do not suggest buying those secondhand.

 

If you do not currently own a tux, a button down white shirt with black trousers would do the trick. And earn yourself a treat!

 

 

Many More Ideas

Many More Ideas

For inspiration, seek out your local resale store or type in “diy halloween costumes” on google or pinterest.  There are so many easy and creative costumes you can make from already owned textiles and items in your home, and if you are feeling absolutely zero creativity in the craftiness department, there are many, many costumes and costume ideas at resale stores that involve simply reusing someone else’s costume from last year.  Either way, you are doing your part in reducing waste, increasing the longevity of textiles, and recycling one person’s old costume (would be trash) into your new costume treasure.

 

Happy Halloween!

 

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