About Kat

I started this blog to share with you all the results of years of turning trash into treasures. Hopefully I'll spark some new creative thoughts and if that happens I hope that you'll share your discoveries and together we’ll build a blog that will singlehandedly reduce global warming and save the world! Okay, maybe that’s a grand goal but we should be able to at least downsize our own trash output.

Swap Your Style: Recycled Clothing

Swapstyle is an online fashion swap party where you can Swap Clothesswap accessoriesswap cosmeticsswap shoes and lots more with people from all around the world at any time, day or night. And it’s Free! Recycled clothing and recycled clothes have never been so easy.

Imagine browsing at your leisure through an extensive international fashion wardrobe and choosing exactly what you want. It takes minutes to register, then you’re on your way to updating your fashion wardrobe, and the only thing you pay for is the postage.

Swapstyle goes far beyond the traditional home-based fashion swap parties. It’s convenient, saves time, and offers so much more variety.

Rehashing is an environmentally-conscious way to get rid of clothing, accessories and books you don’t use in exchange for items you will use. You trade your stuff with others who are seeking a new library or wardrobe and in exchange revamp your collection. Rehashing is simple, you just: Join – Post – Find – Swap – Save. CLICK HERE to go the Rehash site.

Pimp My Jeans is a one of a kind service. They work with you to customize your own jeans or you can choose one of their semi-custom jeans options. This is an excellent way to keep a pair of jeans out of the landfill.

I’ve used them to customize a pair of jeans that fit beautifully but were out of style, to rescue a pair of jeans that had ripped in the wrong place, and to take a pair of bargain jeans to the next level.

Laundry Room Exchange

My friend Sheryl lives in a small apartment complex that has a community laundry room. One day she was clearing out some things from her kitchen and instead of taking the items to the thrift store she placed the box in the laundry room with a sign saying “Help Yourself”. When she went back the next day all the items were gone. A week later someone else had left a couple of dining room chairs in the laundry room with a sign on them. Now it’s a regular thing for those in this apartment community to leave items they no longer want in the laundry room. If an item has been there for a week or longer someone will either toss it in the trash or take it to a local thrift store.

Home Redecorating – Un-Decorating Your Home

I’m approaching home redecorating from a different angle this time around. Instead of buying new stuff and giving away or selling my old stuff, I’m redecorating by un-decorating. I had always thought that by not throwing my old stuff in the landfill that I was being eco-responsible, until I realized that I could go one step further by making more of an effort to not buy new stuff at all.

I started my home redecorating project by removing everything from each room I was redecorating and then only putting back things that I truly wanted in that room. Besides how it contributed visually to the room I considered the fact that anything I put in the room would have to be cleaned or dusted.

Then I lived with each room for a few days to a few weeks, taking away even more things as I found they didn’t add to the room’s visual appeal or usefullness or putting a piece or two back into the room if needed.

Some of the things that I removed from one room I ended up using in other rooms. Other items I sold or gave away.

The next step in my redecorating project was to re-purpose items:

  • quilts became wall hangings
  • tablecloths and scarves became window valances
  • branches from outdoors were arranged in vases
  • I traded bed and sofa pillows
  • an outdoor plant pot became an indoor umbrella stand
  • dining room chairs became a new patio set after the cushions received a triple-coating of Scotchguard and the chairs were treated with marine-grade polyurethane
  • patio chairs received new cushions and became my new dining room chairs
  • a floor runner became a table runner

By the time I was finished my home redecorating project I’d spent less time than I normally would have (since shopping for new things takes a tremendous amount of time), saved loads of money and didn’t add a thing to the landfill!

Natural Kitty Litter

My friend Gail got tired of buying kitty litter, so she came up with a way to not only get free litter but save on the recycling fees her city charges to pick up recyclables. She starts by shredding papers she would normally have shredded anyway such as bank statements, bank credit card offers, etc., then she mixes in some shredded newspaper. When she first introduced this natural kitty litter to her cat she mixed the shredded paper with her normal kitty litter. Now, she just fills the kitty litter box with her shredded recycled paper and empties it daily. Brilliant!