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A Collective Blind Spot
Hidden in plain sight. In every town I visit, I find discarded furniture. Iâm never looking for it. Iâm 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 itâs not even there. Itâs 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…
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Panel on Sustainable Textiles: Moving Towards a Circular Economy
It was an honor last night to be part of a panel discussion about what a circular economy of textiles can and should be: transformational for individuals, artists, skilled labor, creatives, sheep farmers, the community, and ecosystems. That is my kind of future visioning. Here are some takeaway notes as captured by the moderator, Sy Baker: đ There is immense potential for decentralization and democratizationđA Sharing Economy exists–but needs to be expanded uponđWe must get more comfortable with imperfectionđTransparency is keyđRepair is essential–and can be modernizedđPeople are trying to do the right thing.Thanks @stopwaste for hosting us and thanks to @fibershed_ , @calpsc and Connie Ulasewicz for your efforts that…
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Unwanted Furniture Can Help Us Build Back Better
Looking back, looking ahead. Reflecting. Exhaling. Hoping. Readying for the job ahead. What does this moment, this election, have to do with this picture? This discarded, plastic office chair that sits outside of a closed down restaurant, below newly built luxury condos in one of the most expensive cities in the country, thatâs been ravaged by a housing crisis, Covid, racial and wealth inequality, and diminished economic prospects? Everything. We must build back better. We are part of the solution.
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A New Upholstery Association Wants to Unite and Rebuild the U.S. Industry
The American upholstery industry recently issued itself a call to action: Now is the time to unite and rebuild, or else… Part SOS, part call to arms, a new generation sought to preserve an industry that was left to perish when vocational upholstery programs closed their doors decades ago. Enter the National Upholstery Association (NUA). Founded by eight professional women upholsterers from seven states, it launched in July 2019 with a mission of âworking together to support and advance the field of professional upholstery.â The timing may be critical. Currently, seasoned upholsterers are in short supply. Shops canât afford the time and resources necessary to provide intensive training. And newcomers…
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Imagining Benefits that Benefited the Long Term
How much does language influence our thoughts? I love this example. A hospital connotes care, even when applied to furniture. This combination of words provides a gentle, refreshing reminder that furniture should not be disposable. Well made frames are built to have many lives. Talented reupholsterers are trained to bring each ownerâs specific aesthetic to life. This loving maintenance, also known as reupholstery, powers multigenerational reuse, is kinder to the planet, supports skilled labor, and enriches the local community. Beyond language, what about payment? A hospital is also synonymous with insurance. Companiesâ benefit packages offer pet insurance, and student loan payback perks, why not material maintenance insurance? It aligns our…
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In Honor of Secondhand September: My First Chair
Have you heard of #secondhandseptember? Sponsored by @oxfamgb, itâs a pledge to not buy new clothes for the month of September. To raise awareness of fashionâs environmental and social footprint (itâs pretty humongous), people are encouraged to tag images on Instagram and twitter of their fabulous second hand outfits. Cool! Will this help normalize second hand goods, beyond fashion? The resale market of second hand apparel, according to a report from ThredUP (a large online clothing reseller), is expected to swell to $41 billion by 2022! That would double the size of the market in just five years: in 2017, it was $20 billion. Whoa, thatâs a big pie. Tech…
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Fast Furniture’s Double Trouble
Padded seating-couches, sofas, chairs-is often purchased in pairs, which means it is often discarded in pairs. This both doubles the urgency and increases the opportunity around furniture waste. What do we want our furniture future to look like? Do we want to replicate the current fast fashion nightmare, where the average consumer buys 60% more clothes but keeps them for half as long? And where this churn sends one garbage truck of clothes per second to be burned or dumped; has created squalid labor conditions for the mostly women and girls who make our clothes; and is estimated to be responsible for 20% of the worldâs industrial water pollution? Is…