• Stripped couch sitting by a wall
    Articles,  Audacious Ideas,  Furniture Waste,  Personal Reflections

    Re-framing the Future: A Call to Action for a Just Transition for the Reupholstery Industry

    ‘Unite and rebuild’ proclaimed an article, in 2019, about how an industry once left to perish could be on the verge of a comeback. The idea that the National Upholstery Association, a brand new trade association started solely by women and dedicated to a trade full of tradition, honor and importance, had launched with such little media fanfare, infuriated me. Determined to imagine a narrative beyond the tired, formulaic piece about DIY upholstery or an upholsterer’s retirement, I wrote one myself. I typed that proclamation as one of the NUA’s newest volunteers, hungry to join others in collective action at the industry level. I knew already that reliance upon upstream…

  • stained lavendar couch
    Furniture Waste,  Personal Reflections

    What I Learned From Studying Furniture Waste for One Year

    Yesterday I presented “What I Learned From Studying Street Furniture for One Year” at the California Resource Recovery Association’s 45th annual conference. I’ve attended this conference once, as a volunteer in 2016, when I helped host a topic lunch around reuse and repair. In 2018, I proposed and won a pre-conference tour slot for the upholstery shop I worked for at the time. We had dozens of conference attendees come to east Oakland to tour our nearly 100 year old, locally owned, 10,000 square foot upholstery workshop. The opportunity to shift the narrative of and image around waste prevention—to include furniture refurbishment, replete with a team of skilled labor earning…

  • Antique Dresser
    Audacious Ideas,  Furniture Waste

    How Do You Like Your Coffee?

    If this gorgeous dresser was a cup of coffee it would be Turkish, robust, dark, slightly sweet. It savors patience over speed, respects tradition, and expects you to know how to avoid the grinds. Its perfect match is someone who loves craft over convenience and staring at tiny details. The opposite of this dresser is an instant coffee pod with sweetened creamer.

  • Vintage Brown Couch
    Furniture Waste

    Not Everything on the Curb is Fast Furniture

    Our society is built on disposability at every level: culturally, economically, politically. While we champion investments in frictionless consumption—think one click, free overnight delivery—our systems of refurbishment, reuse, and redistribution remain woefully underfunded, difficult, expensive, and stigmatized. That’s how an old couch that’s made to last, but out of date, receives the same end-of-life treatment as a single-use couch made with glued together wood chips. Our system wasn’t built to tell the difference. Extractive systems, that prioritize disposal first, that externalize costs, that stigmatize labor and second hand goods, and that equate imperfect pieces with useless, are the challenge. Regenerative, place-based solutions are the opportunity.

  • Big free desk
    Furniture Waste

    A Collective Blind Spot

    Hidden in plain sight. In every town I visit, I find discarded furniture. I’m never looking for it. I’m just not blind to it in the way others are. No matter how much a piece stands out, once absorbed into the local rhythms, life dances around it like it’s not even there. It’s one of our collective blind spots. Why does every community seem to suffer from this same affliction? What does this mean locally, and at scale? More dump trucks? More startups? How did we get here? While it may be easy and popular to blame fast furniture, the situation is deeper, more complex. Who has benefited most from…

  • Free pile
    Furniture Waste

    Another Day, Another Free Pile

    They’re so common in these parts. Passersby know the drill—take what you like and move on. Sounds nice and generous and in many ways it is, but it’s also a massive challenge. We can’t nurture a system of reuse one free pile at a time. Stuff perishes on the street, which takes it from having some value to no value, quickly. Tons of money is spent cleaning up stuff that is all over the place–Oakland has over 2,700 illegal dumping instances every month. Is there room to dedicate some money to collect, consolidate, refurbish, and redistribute/resell the stuff instead? We’ve been taught to look at street furniture first as waste.…