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Recycling Everyday Items

August 22nd, 2011

Read this fabulous article recently in Woman’s Day and wanted to share with you. Great tips on recycling and donating.

Avoid the landfill by giving new life to electronics, shoes, eyeglasses and more

By now you’ve probably got the hang of recycling the easy stuff, like newspapers, aluminum cans and cardboard boxes. But what about other frequently used items, such as appliances, game systems and cell phones? According to the Environmental Protection Agency, in 2009 about 54% of our waste (243 million tons!) ended up in landfills. Surprising, right? Luckily, “everything we use comes from some natural resource,” says Marti Matsch, communications director of the nonprofit recycler Eco-Cycle in Boulder, Colorado. “If we can turn items back into raw materials, we won’t have to consume additional natural resources to create new products.” Read on for easy ways to skip the dump and give common household items a new life instead.

Kitchen Appliances

If you’ve recently updated your kitchen, you probably have a few working appliances—like a toaster, microwave or refrigerator––to spare. If they’re less than eight years old (some must be less than five years old), Habitat for Humanity may accept them in their ReStores, which sell used items and surplus building materials to fund the construction of Habitat homes. If it’s time to retire a nonworking appliance, call your city or county recycling coordinator to ask about bulk waste pickup, or check Recycle-Steel.org to find a nearby steel recycling center. “Even nonworking appliances have a second life,” says Gregory L. Crawford, executive director of the Steel Recycling Institute. “For example, we get about 67 pounds of scrap steel from a full-size refrigerator,” which can go toward making everything from guard rails to appliances. Photo: Nathan Winter / Thinkstock

Eyeglasses

Whether you’ve updated your specs style or your kids have graduated to contact lenses, you don’t have to relegate old glasses to the trash. Send reading glasses, prescription glasses (they also accept pairs of prescription lenses without the frames) and regular or prescription sunglasses to New Eyes for the Needy, which supplies them to international charitable organizations for people who can’t afford glasses. The organization accepts pairs in good condition via drop-off or mail (the cost of shipping is tax-deductible). Or take reading glasses, prescription glasses, and regular and prescription sunglasses that are still in one piece to a Lions Clubs International community drop-off box, found at libraries, optometry offices, banks and more. Donated glasses are then distributed within developing countries. Log on to LionsClubs.org to find your nearest club (call for drop-off locations) or to donate by mail. Photo: Medioimages / Thinkstock

Electronics

When your kids upgrade to a new gaming system, send their old video games and working handheld devices, like the Gameboy, PSP or Nintendo DS, via U.S. mail to GamesforHeroes.com, which ships them to troops deployed overseas. For other types of consumer electronics, some retail stores such as Best Buy will let you drop them off for recycling, no matter where you originally purchased them. Though small fees may apply for some items, such as $10 for 32” TVs, you might receive a gift card in return. Staples also accept drop-offs of smaller electronics, like PDAs or digital cameras, for free. The company will take care of the recycling to turn your old electronics into everything from playground equipment to furniture. You can also log on to DigitalTips.org to find additional places to recycle your digital goods—if there’s a cause you care about the site will help you find a way to contribute; for example, donating cell phones to CollectiveGood helps the Center for Domestic Violence Prevention, while donating flash drives to Inveneo will help people in remote and underserved communities. Photo: Ciaran Griffin / Thinkstock

Cell Phones

Excited about your new smartphone? Don’t let your old device go to waste: Recycled phones yield valuable raw materials such as gold, plastic and copper. Send any make or model—in any condition—to Cell Phones for Soldiers, which sells donated phones to a recycler, then uses the proceeds to purchase calling cards for troops stationed far away from loved ones. Log on to CellPhonesforSoldiers.com to print a free shipping label (or use your own postage to help the charity even more). You can also head to GoWirelessGoGreen.org for a list of additional wireless recycling programs. CITA-The Wireless Association, the nonprofit organization behind the site, advocates for eco-friendly standards in corporations; check out their list of corporate recycle programs to see if a company you’re affiliated with participates. Photo: Jupiterimages / Thinkstock

Printer Cartridges

When your printer cartridges have run dry, resist the urge to toss them in the trash. Instead, drop them off for free at Best Buy or Staples, where you can receive a $2 Staples Rewards credit to use toward a new cartridge. Many printer manufacturers, such as Brother and Hewlett Packard, also take back used cartridges for free in order to reclaim the plastic; look inside the cartridge box or check the printer company’s website for prepaid mailing labels.Photo: Shutterstock

Athletic Shoes

You already know that you can donate athletic shoes in good condition to local charitable organizations, but if they’re totally trashed (think worn out soles, holes or ripped cushioning), you can drop them off at Nike and Converse stores nationwide or download a mailing label to ship to the company’s recycling facility. The company processes athletic shoes (dress shoes, sandals, flip-flops, or shoes with metal parts or cleats not accepted) into raw materials, then turns them into everything from running tracks to playground surfaces. More than 1.5 million pairs are collected annually. Photo: Thinkstock

Plastic Shopping Bags 

How many garbage can liners do you really need? While paper bags can be recycled with other paper products such as newspapers, plastic bags tend to pile up. Log on to PlasticBagRecycling.org to find out where you can recycle plastic bags in your area. Or pay attention the next time you go shopping—many grocery and retail stores now have bins near the entrance for plastic bag collection. If you really want to cut down on the number of shopping bags in landfills, tote your own reuseable bags to the store; BAGGU makes collapsible and roomy sacks in a rainbow of fun colors and patterns. Photo: Shutterstock

Pantyhose

When your pantyhose, knee highs and tights have seen better days, don’t toss them in the trash to end up in a landfill for hundreds of years. Instead, send nylon-based hosiery, which most brands are, back to No Nonsense to be melted down and eventually turned into products such as anchor ropes for boats, plastic park benches and playground equipment. Keep a shoebox in your closet to collect stretched out or ripped hose; once it’s full go to NoNonsense.com to print out a shipping label, then box up any brand in any condition (just make sure they’re clean and dry). Typically, a few dozen cost just a few bucks to send back. Photo: Jupiterimages / Thinkstock


Consumer Cafe: Pesto, Bacon and Mozzarella Panini

August 19th, 2011

I love Panini sandwiches.  Here’s a delicious one for you to make asap!

 

  • 1/3 cup prepared pesto
  • 1 loaf ciabatta bread (about 1 pound), halved crosswise and lengthwise
  • 2 medium tomatoes, sliced thin and salted
  • 8 ounces fresh mozzarella, sliced thin
  • 8 slices thick-cut fried bacon (optional)

Heat a large skillet or griddle over medium-low heat. Spread pesto over all 4 bread slices. Top each piece with a portion of tomatoes and cheese; lay optional bacon over bottom slices. Place on warm griddle and cook until bread is crisp and golden and cheese melts, about 5 minutes per side.

 

Glam Alert: First Aid Beauty Ultra Repair Cream

August 18th, 2011

This is the best hand cream out there.  I started using it last winter and now it’s my new favorite.  I have a very hard time in the winter keeping my skin silky soft.  And when the holidays start coming around, with the baking, and wrapping, and cleaning, fuggedaboudit. The First Aid Beauty Ultra Repair cream is thick and rich, but not sticky. It soaks in and stays. I get these scaly things on the top of my hands, that make me look like the creature from the black lagoon.  This cream keeps those icky things at bay. It’s no miracle. It doesn’t cure dry skin, but it sure makes it look better, and makes it feel so much better.  Sometimes my skin gets so dry it actually hurts! I use on my hands year round. When the dry winter weather starts, i slather up in this stuff.

From First Aid Beauty’s website:

Ultra Repair Cream is for anyone with severely dry, scaly skin due to harsh winter weather, aggressive cosmetic treatments or any of the following conditions: psoriasis, atopic dermatitis, irritant eczema, allergic eczema, seborrheic dermatitis, keratosis pilaris.

So stock up on this STAT.  (get it? first aid, STAT?  never mind).  I keep a jar in the bathroom and one in my office.

Website of the Week: Anthropologie. The store, not the science

August 17th, 2011

I am lucky enough to have the store in my favorite mall. The store front is one of the very few left that always have a large, themed storefront display. That always makes me want to go in. That and the wondrous smell of candles. I must admit though that the store itself is a bit overwhelming.  Not to mention the checkout line is ridiculous. It may come as no surprise that I do most of my shopping online.  I love to go out and about for ideas, but I also love the convenience of shopping online and having my little treasures delivered to my front door.

Anthropologie has it all.  Vintage clothing, bedding, household items, fragrances, candles, linens, curtains, rugs, and even furniture.

Milk bottle measuring cups $24

or Austin’s Flora measuring cups $28

Love this look:

Deviled Egg Tray $24

Capri Blue Mercury Glass Candle $25

Clothes? yes.  Jewelry? yes.  Shoes? yes.  Just too hot for me to be picking out fall/winter stuff for you now, which is all I am finding on their website.  Check out anthropologie.com and let me know what you find!