Forget Extreme Home Makeover.
Forget the cost and headache (not to mention waste) of a renovation.
Stop comparing your life to the pristine museum interiors showcased in
the home design glossies. Keep it simple — and sustainable — by making
easy, affordable changes to create a beautiful space right where you
are.
Dawn Ritchie and Kathryn Robyn, authors of The Emotional House
(New Harbinger), lament the glut of home improvement shows that “focus
on just the exterior not the interior life of a home.” It’s not about
the spotless granite kitchen counter top, but rather the sunny
breakfast table where newspapers have been read and conversation shared
over coffee,” says Ritchie. It’s about bringing a little soul into the
rooms we spend time in.
And of course, no soulful addition
is complete without a healthy dose of sustainable design. But greening
your home isn’t simply about investing in eco products. Architect Carol
Venolia believes “we’ve gotten to a place where we don’t think of
ourselves as dwelling in nature. We need to blur the boundaries between
indoors and out and realize we’re part of rather than separated from
the larger environment beyond our own four walls.”
As you
nest, remember: resist the throwaway item. Buy the oak cabinet, not the
particleboard shelving; pick the cast iron skillet over the chemically
laden Teflon. Patty Grossman of O Ecotextiles, a Seattle-based fabric
company, marvels at how a truly organic piece of cloth can last a
century or two and with wear and tear only gain in luster. The greatest
home improvements are the durable domestic objects that travel with us
over the years and weave themselves into our lives.
With these tenets in mind, we bring you six easy, earthwise solutions for breathing new life into the way you live.
Problem: Too many chaotic piles of stuff are harshing your mellow
Solution: Time to put your house in order
Seana Hansen, author of the blog eco-organizer.com,
believes “the whole concept of organizing — purging what you don’t
need, being spatially aware in your personal environment — is
fundamentally eco-friendly. It encourages efficiency, conservation and
simplicity.”
If you’re letting go of stuff, repeat after us:
recycle, Freecycle or donate. Try repurposing jars and boxes you
already have, and if you do need to buy storage or shelving, Hansen
advises choosing products that use the highest percentage of
post-consumer recycled content. As with anything you buy, make sure it
can be recycled again.
For the design aesthetes out there,
good-looking, eco-friendly storage does exist. Engage Green’s traymats
do double duty — they’re sturdy recycled paper bins that unsnap to
become placemats in chic floral and striped patterns (engagegreen.com).
Viva Terra’s flashy recycled Flip Flop Bins look like they’re woven
from candy-colored bicycle chains. Or if you’re seeking something a
little more streamlined, check out their shelving and organizers made
from recycled wood remnants (vivaterra.com).
Scott Bennett of Housefish Key builds sleek modular storage units from
sustainably harvested maple plywood that’s finished with zero VOC
(volatile organic compound) finish. The units fit together without
screws or glue, just sturdy aluminum pegs, and you can add optional
sliding metal doors in a suite of bright, minimal colors (housefish.com).
Problem: Those stark white walls are making you blue
Solution: Embrace color and brighten up your world
Wisdom has it that “if walls could talk,” they’d tell us a lot about
ourselves. And in fact they do — they’re the canvas on which we’re free
to express who we are: bright and cheery, cool and serene, traditional
or modern.
If you want to liven up a room with a fresh coat
of color, opt for paints made from all-natural substances like milk,
botanicals, clay and earth pigments. Or choose a zero-VOC paint like
AFM Safecoat, American Pride, Green Planet or the gorgeous hues from
Yolo Colorhouse. (There are zero-VOC tints as well.)
What’s a VOC?
Often used in paint, carpet, plastics and
cosmetics, VOCs are volatile organic chemical compounds that have high
enough vapor pressures under normal conditions to significantly
vaporize and enter the atmosphere. Suspected carcinogens, VOCs can
cause acute symptoms like headaches and dizziness. Even zero VOC paint
has some VOCs, as any paint with VOCs in the range of five grams/liter
or less can be labeled “Zero VOC,” according to the EPA.
To create
a warm mood, American Clay’s wall plaster gives a room an earthy,
Mediterranean feel and can be applied directly over paint. The plaster
has a laundry list of benefits — it’s non-fading and easy to patch, it
inhibits mold and supposedly emits “negative ions” that purify the air (americanclay.com).
Or try lime plaster-based EcoStucco, which can be used inside or out
and repels water and air pollution, absorbs structural movements and
retains its color over decades (ecostucco.com).
Looking for something livelier than paint? Wake up your room with
wallpaper. As the design savvy among us will have already noted, we’re
in the midst of a bit of a wallpaper revival, and that means more
fabulous patterns are hitting the market every day. But before you grab
a roll and get gluing, consider that most conventional wallpaper is
made of (or at the very least, coated in) toxic PVC vinyl.
Fortunately, the newest crop of wallpaper designers includes quite a
few eco-minded artisans who are substituting hand silk-screened papers
and water-based glazes in lieu of the chemi-laden plastic stuff. Mod
Green Pod (modgreenpod.com), Madison & Grow (madisonandgrow.squarespace.com), Palacepapers (palacepapers.com) and Pottok Prints (pottokprints.com) all feature gorgeously green works of art.
If the landlord won’t let you paint or paper, try removable wall
treatments. Sherwin Williams’ non-vinyl EasyChange sheets go up and
come down without a trace — and without solvents. You can also look for
exotic flora and fauna patterns by UK designers Graham and Brown (grahambrown.com). For something sculptural, Inhabit’s (inhabitliving.com)
embossed white wall tiles add eye-popping texture to a room with motifs
such as Braille or Industry. Made from bamboo pulp, they feel like
heavy cardboard and can be left pristine or painted.
Interests: Anything with an ING:
dancing, biking, listening, talking, writing, reading,
watching, eating, drinking, running, thinking, working, dreaming,
surrendering, laughing, smiling, acting, traveling, singing, surfing,
driving, shopping, thanking, observing, welcoming, connecting,
loving, learning, sharing, practicing, asking.
Inspiration: Books: Letters to a Young Poet, Rainer Maria Rilke/
Music: Linkin Park and The Cure/
People: My mother and all of those that have come before me that have fought their
own battles and didn't give up/
Places: Carl Schurz Park, New York, NY/
Movies: In Search of a Midnight Kiss, Stealing Beauty, Beautiful Girls, When A Man Loves a Woman, In America, Magdelene Sisters, The Notebook, Run Fat Boy Run/
Things: Causes worth fighting for: Lupus and other auto-immune disorders, Organ Donation and impoverished and at-risk youth.