GREEN YOUR: CELEBRATIONS {DECOR}

Now that life has slowed from a sprint to a steady run, I have been using the extra time to do some much needed house cleaning.  I always feel much more equipped to tackle the challenges ahead when everything is in order.  Or, I am just procrastinating by cleaning rather than the work I should really be doing.  Either way it is nice to have a clean house.

Amidst my top-to-bottom scrubbing and total reorganization I made a startling observation.  I think I am a hoarder.

I hoard garbage.

How else would you explain the stockpiles of cardboard, glass jars, yogurt containers and 112 egg cartons?  Apparently we eat a lot of eggs.

Clearly I have issues throwing things away.

But that is only because they cannot be recycled, will not be recycled and I hate waste.

So I hold on to them.  Clogging my house rather than the landfill.

Just about the time I am ready to call the hoarders’ hotline, I find a use for some of that garbage.

Use cardboard and newspaper for an easy weed-free garden.

The piles of cardboard and newspaper make for an easy weed-free, no-dig garden through sheet mulching.

yogurt container trophy cups

Yogurt containers and solo cups are transformed into trophy centerpieces for a sports banquet.

glass jar centerpieces

Empty spaghetti sauce jars are perfect vases when you need a lot of centerpieces on a budget.

scrap paper flower centerpieces

And scrap paper can be repurposed into floral centerpieces when you have no budget.

Sometimes, when the mountain of crap becomes overwhelming, I just want to pitch it all and have nice clean shelves again.  But as I hover the item over the trash bin or recycling receptacle, I stop and think… I just might be able to reuse this some day.

And that is how I end up with 112 egg cartons.

Rebecca Jean

{ 16 comments }

One of the things I struggle with in planning events is the waste they create.  A LOT of waste.  I call it the unnecessary evil of events.  Zero waste events do exist.

My portion alone for the Guardian Gala of Hope produced a pile of floral and paper waste.  For someone who lobbies against single use, it’s hard to deal with.  I try to inject sustainability into each event I’m involved with, but in the end I am at the mercy of the client.  Luckily, I had a little more control with this one.

The flowers I used were sourced from sustainable growers, with the majority coming from an Eco-certified Silver Rose Award winner – recognized for responsible and sustainable horticulture.  Not only do they emphasize environmental sustainability, but also social and economic sustainability.  Granted, any way you slice it, they still ended up being trashed… sustainably grown or not.

floral waste

My only redeemer was that after the event nearly all of the floral landed in my compost pile, not completely wasted.  From centerpiece to garden fertilizer.  It’s how I beat single use.

I’m not thrilled with trucking flowers thousands of miles to be used for one night.  Hardly sustainable.  I find myself more and more designing decor not based on floral.  I especially like using non-traditional items in new ways.  Like trash.  I tend to stash things away in hopes of using them again some day.  I have an extensive collection of yogurt containers and egg cartons.  Some day I will come up with a fabulous way to use them.

trash to trophy cups

Paper was another large waste producer of this event.  One that I didn’t have much control over.  Ideally I would use an eco-friendly printer that uses recycled papers, vegetable based inks and a waterless press.  This printer does offer some of those options, but I do not know if they were employed for this job.  The only portion I could control were the table number and menu signs that came home with me after the event.  They were printed in-house on recycled stock and now are my stock of scratch paper.

scratch paper

I have an eclectic mix of scratch paper, ranging from children’s homework to mail to tenderloin filet and salmon dinner menu cards.  Every scrap of paper gets used multiple times around here.  I even run the backsides of mail through the printer when doing proofs.

Now I just need to convince clients of the value of reusable service {plates, glassware and silverware} and banish “disposable” plastic from my events.

How do you keep your celebrations sustainable?

Rebecca Jean

{ 3 comments }

Design on a Dime.

Thumbnail image for Design on a Dime.

What do you do when challenged to come up with table centerpieces for a sports award banquet attended by 280 guests with a $5.00 budget? Oh, and you have seven days to accomplish your mission? If you are wondering why things have been so quiet around here the past two weeks, my Monday post at [...]

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