What better way to celebrate and participate in the season of giving than with gifts that truly keep on giving? Here are just a few of our favorite discoveries this year of products we'd be thrilled to give and receive.
Anti-waste clothing and gear
Image credit: Brita
For the growing little gremlins in your life:
Upchoose may just be a dream come true for new and
expectant parents — the new platform offers soft, sustainable, organic baby
clothes in curated sets for each stage of growth (for rental or purchase). When
a baby outgrows the clothes, they can be returned for another set in bigger
sizes — the returned clothes are cleaned and sold to someone with a smaller
child, eliminating some of the egregious waste inherent in the children’s
apparel industry.
The ugly Christmas sweater that doubles as a PSA:
For the holiday season,
Brita — itself an antidote to our plastic-bottle pollution problem — is
shining a light on our ugly water bottle habit with its Ugliest Ugly
Sweater collection, woven
from single-use plastic waste. The limited-edition collection features five
distinctly “ugly” sweater designs, inspired by the traditional tacky holiday
sweater, but featuring imagery of plastic waste and its ugly impact on the
environment.
For those who like to #OptOutside (or upside-down):
Here are some upleveled gear and clothing options for your active loved ones:
Designing for Circularity-Friendly Behaviors
Join us as leaders from BBMG and REI examine how leading brands are innovating and scaling circular models to attract new fans and earn customer loyalty, all while eliminating waste — Thurs, May 9, at Brand-Led Culture Change.
Sustainably made yoga mats and accessories from Yoga Design
Lab: These mats — made from materials such as cork,
sueded microfiber (made of recycled plastic bottles) and natural tree rubber,
printed with water-based inks — benefit more than just the yogis who use them.
Used apparel and gear from REI,
Arc’teryx
and The North
Face
allow consumers to suit up for outdoor adventures with top-quality, refurbished
products for an affordable price and reduced environmental impact. And Ogio’s
ALPHA Convoy collection of
backpacks repurpose discarded plastic into durable products that are designed to
last.
To complete the look — footwear that helps us tread more lightly: Denmark-based
Rockay makes
high-performance running socks from recycled ocean plastic. Flip-flops made from
the aptly named Green Flip Flops, based in
Brazil, are 100 percent recyclable and made from renewable, plant-based
materials such as soy and sugarcane; the Recycled Black line is just that.
Speaking of recycling, Nothing New’s
sneakers are a dead ringer for classic Converse, only with recycled plastic
uppers.
And you can always take your sustainable-shoe commitment even further, with our
climate-neutral
favorite, Allbirds; and terrain-ready boots and
shoes from Sweden’s Icebug, which earlier this year
became the world’s first climate-positive outdoor footwear
brand.
And there’s nothing better than the ability to take your tunes with you outdoors
— without pesky wires. Earlier this year, House of Marley introduced the
Liberate Air —
next-generation wireless earbuds with a 9-hour on board battery life; designed
using bamboo, recyclable aluminum and signature REWIND™ fabric composed of
recycled plastic bottles for truly sustainable sound. Added bonus: House of
Marley’s Project Marley is helping
to sustain the outdoors through a global reforestation partnership with One
Tree Planted.
For the conscientious epicureans in your life
Image credit: Cooks Who Feed
1 apron = 100 meals:
Cooks Who Feed aprons
are creating impact on multiple levels: Their
production is providing job
training and secure wages to underprivileged women in India; and for each
apron sold, the company donates 100 meals to those in need by partnering with
nonprofits that rescue food waste — to date, Cooks Who Feed says its giving
partners have served over 20 million meals by using food that would have
otherwise been thrown out.
Chocolate that shares the wealth:
The Other
Bar
– a UN- and Fairchain Foundation-backed social experiment, launched in
October, gives consumers the power to take a bite out of poverty through the
simple act of buying a chocolate bar. Through a unique token system, customers
can direct proceeds from their purchase back to the cocoa farmers or toward a
discount on future purchases. For the holidays, the company has partnered with
Moyee — the world’s first fairchain coffee — for the perfect gift
pack.
Other ethical indulgences include chocolate from Tony’s
Chocolonely — which is on a mission to create a
100 percent slave-free cocoa supply chain in Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire, both
notorious for human rights abuses on cocoa farms; and Theo
Chocolate — the first organic,
fair-trade, bean-to-bar chocolate producer in the US — which is providing safe,
secure livelihoods for cocoa farmers in Peru and the Democratic Republic
of Congo (another country with a nasty history).
Climate-beneficial booze:
Whether you enjoy wine or
gin,
vodka or hard
kombucha,
these adult beverages provide benefits beyond the buzz … Bonterra’s organic
and biodynamic wine-cultivation processes increase the amount of carbon stored
in the soil — such regenerative ag practices will be a critical component in
fighting climate change. Speaking of grapes, UK-based Foxhole Spirits found
a unique way to recycle an estimated 166 million surplus table grapes — by
turning them into premium Hyke Gin.
Meanwhile, JuneShine is a delightful, organic hard
kombucha that’s easy on the environment in many more ways than one; and each
bottle of Air Vodka removes a pound of CO2 from the
atmosphere — equivalent to the daily CO2 intake of eight trees.
Better beauty and pampering
Image credit: BeeSpa
For your favorite earth-conscious glamourpuss, there’s a growing selection of
biodegradable glitter — from companies such as
Bioglitz
and Today Glitter — so he or she can be at
their glittery finest, guilt-free. And EcoLips’ vast
selection of certified-organic, cruelty-free and ultra-affordable Lip Food,
balms/oils, scrubs and tints will make them feel pretty and pampered, even on
their more casual days.
Speaking of pampering, Life Elements has a
lovely line of CBD bath bombs, scrubs and oils for relaxation and pain relief;
and BeeSpa’s rich hand and foot creams not only nourish
dry skin, they support local pollinators and beekeepers.
Wrapping (or, the fly in the ointment of sustainable gift-giving)
No matter how sustainable your gifts, what they’re wrapped in can still often be
problematic, in terms of waste: The glossy, laminated finish of most gift wrap
makes it unrecyclable — the same goes for paper with metallic, glitter or
textured finishes; tape remnants can even make recyclable paper unrecyclable;
and most ribbons, bows and holiday cards are also not accepted at recycling
centers, for the same reasons. Including any of the above in a bin with other
paper products might make an entire batch unrecyclable.
But, fear not! A little research and creativity will reveal a growing array of
waste-free wrapping options, including:
Oh, and let's not forget about cards – try and only buy those without problematic elements such as glitter, ribbons and cellophane wrappers.
e-commerce, elevated
Image credit: RePack
The whole online shopping — and returning — process is riddled with waste, both
in packaging and product. But several new solutions are working to correct that:
Two new platforms, Shop Your Fit and
FlipFit, aim to eliminate waste from online clothes
shopping.
And more and more forward-thinking retailers are using reusable packaging
solutions such as
RePack
(participating retailers) and
Returnity
(participating retailers) to cut down on the
mountains of plastic and cardboard packaging waste.
Happy holidays from the SB team!
Main article image — L-R, top: Brita’s Ugliest Ugly Sweater (image courtesy of
Brita), mat from Yoga Design
Lab,
a
LUSH
reusable knot wrap,
Rockay socks,
House of Marley earbuds;
Bottom: EcoLips balm, Life
Elements vegan CBD bath
bomb, Today Glitter, an
Upchoose onesie, Nothing
New sneakers.
Published Dec 12, 2019 7am EST / 4am PST / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET