Author Archive

Late breaking dumpsters

Monday, May 11, 2009

You know why I loved Decorative Dumpster Day? Because it gave me a festive sense of community and solidarity among garbloggers.Thanks again to all who participated in this international extravaganza. And start collecting decorative dumpster images for next year!

ddd-loFor those who missed the first annual adventure in group blogging about trash receptacles, here’s the roundup. Co-organizer and DDD logo designer Little Shiva was traveling and without solid internet connection on May 1, here’s her late breaking submission à la française.

Be sure to also check out MS the Younger‘s 3-part entry on the lack of decorated dumpsters in Japan at MadSilence here, here and here.

Requiem for a Paper Bag

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

A while back, FOUND Magazine founder Davy Rothbart sent out a call to some pretty famous storytellers and asked them to send him their best stories about things they’d found in the street or by accident. Or if they didn’t have such a story, to make one up. The published responses can be found in Requiem for a Paper Bag, an entertaining read so far, with submissions from a host of folks ranging from Chuck D. of Public Enemy to Susan Orlean of the New Yorker. Translation: literary trash of the highest caliber.

Curious Americans can catch Davy, his brother Peter and a selection of special guests performing songs and reading from found notes and letters as part of their patented Denim and Diamonds tour. Check listings for dates. For New Yorkers, the show is this Friday night. To get a vague notion of what they do, see the YouTube clip.

Style Studio

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Using sewing machines donated by their community, a group of high school students in Kalamazoo, Michegan took old items purchased at the local Goodwill and turned them into stuff they would actually wear as part of a class called Style Studio.

Jonathon Gruenke | Kalamazoo Gazette

Jonathon Gruenke | Kalamazoo Gazette

I wish my high school had offered a course in upclycing. I might have attended more often. And speaking of my high school experience, it took place largely in State College, Pennsylvania, home to Penn State University and not much else. The only way in or out by air was to take a puddle jumper to Pittsburgh. I don’t know if it’s still there, but for a long time the puddle jumper wing of the Pittsburgh airport included a long hall with only two gates: one bound for State College, Pennsylvania and one for Kalamazoo, Michigan. I have, for this reason, always felt oddly connected to people from Kalamazoo and secretly wondered what went on in that college town with a name even more ridiculous than my own. And now I know. Upcyling. Lots of upcycling.

I heart Instructable

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Case in point: “Solar powered stove using 100% recycled materials

What to do with an old satellite dish and those now-obsolete things called CDs

What to do with an old satellite dish and those now-obsolete things called CDs

Garbage can’t prevent the flood

Monday, May 4, 2009

Sad story in The New York Times today about trash as a building material in Senegal, where people reinforce their floors with old plastic to keep out water and where a little boy drowned in his own home after slipping through the trash floor he didn’t realize was floating.

Happy Decorative Dumpster Day!

Friday, May 1, 2009

ddd-loIt’s here! It’s finally here! Here’s an early roundup of the gorgeous decorative dumpster images found around the garblogosphere today:

More to come as participants send in their links. Stay tuned. And send your dumpster pics—today and every day.

UPDATE: MadSilence joins the party with a post on the art of the dumpster.

UPDATE: Gutter Envy in the house!

P.S. Special shout out to the Yanbukis, we hope you’re documenting the dumpsters you decorate today!

P.P.S. DDD logo by Little Shiva of The Visible Trash Society.

Der Schlachthof

Friday, May 1, 2009


dumpsters_trio

Originally uploaded by buzzygirl

It’s Decorative Dumpster Day, a day to reflect for a moment on the objects we use to contain waste. And to decorate them. In preparation for this day, I have spent some time thinking about dumpsters and graffiti and the fact that where you find one, you often find the other. The vibrant murals that coated the train yards and back alleys of my youth are hard to find these days in my city. It’s not easy to tell which is the chicken and which is the egg: more people ride the trains and walk the alleys, fewer artists put up their stuff. Anyway, I was touched by buzzygirl‘s photostream on flickr when I came across her series over time of Der Schlachthof, Germany. Check out the evolving landscape she captures at four points in time (and counting). Thanks for letting me share your work, buzzygirl. These photos capture the most basic relationship between trash, art and the potential unleashed when a fresh perspective is applied to a forgotten space.

2009

2007

2006

2002

Requiem for a Paper Bag

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

If you haven’t heard of FOUND Magazine, check out the publication’s charming origin myth. Incidentally, FOUND founder Davy Rothbart has a book coming out called Requiem for a Paper Bag. Like all books about trash, I want to read it. Stay tuned.

Pretty reblog

Monday, April 27, 2009

Upcycled lightbulb vases from esprit cabane via curbly. Scroll down for salt and pepper shakers, as well. Too cute.

Lightbulb vases from esprit cabane

Lightbulb vases from esprit cabane

Postcard from Kampala

Monday, April 27, 2009
Marabou storks trash digging through trash in Kampala

Marabou storks digging through trash in Kampala

Posting may be light or Victor-centric this week as I (Leila) am in Uganda for the day job. While waiting for my ride outside of the Statistics House in Kampala today, I noticed some Marabou storks lunching in a parkinglot accross the street and promptly dashed over, in heels and through a lot of mud, to take some photos. Let me tell you, I’ve always found the Marabou storks nesting in treetops around the city a bit creepy when overhead. They are even more so up close and on the ground. And so BIG. Imagine if pidgeons were larger than our children!

Sometimes, when killing time in airports

Sunday, April 26, 2009

…I root around online for trash tidbits. At home, I search Google News at least once a week for terms like  “trash,” “garbage,” “solid waste,” “recycle,” and “compost,” but I rarely take the time to dig into specific sites for newly posted trashy treasures. Clearly I should more often. Just look what I found today searching Flickr for photos tagged “upcycled”.

PJ Harvey upcycled album bouquet via scribblenation on Flickr

PJ Harvey upcycled album bouquet via scribblenation on Flickr

In case you were wondering, there are over 16,000 photos tagged “upcycled” on Flickr (and an overlapping nearly 8,000 tagged upcycle) like the stellar photo above from scribblenation’s photostream of an upcycled album cover via which I discovered the Trashion Nation photo pool and entries in the Upcyclist Party Contest pool.

The Story of Stuff

Friday, April 24, 2009

Reading Annie Leonard‘s contributions to Mother Jones’ “Is Recycling a Waste?”  forum this week made me realize, it’s been a while since I last watched The Story of Stuff. And shouldn’t a quick viewing be an annual habit, like getting a physical?

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Weekly Compactor

Friday, April 24, 2009

This week in trash news:

@everydaytrash, @bernhardtz

Thursday, April 23, 2009

We are on Twitter, here and here and encourage you to use #trash.

Zero waste digit exchange

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

As you may remember after my enthusiastic discovery of and posting on contxts earlier this year, I use a free texting service as a business card. By use, I mean I have set it up. But I haven’t actually had much use for it. Yet. And while I’m sure I will, this past weekend at a green festival in New Jersey is the perfect example of why the business card still serves a purpose. For the time being. The folks who came out to the event were not an iPhone bumping crowd. These peeps were too cool for excess gagetry. Which is why I wanted to stay in touch with many of them, which brings me back to the original dilemma: how to give out contact info without creating trash at an event where a lot of people aren’t carrying cell phones and even if they are, reply “oh, I don’t text” if you mention that option.

I ended up writing down my info on scrap paper, which is  a perfectly acceptable solution. And even though the vast majority of social settings I encounter involve people twitching to check their mobile device every two seconds (myself included), I still want  a “slow card” option. And it must look good.

Enter instructables. The other day someone posted a how-to guide for creating your own plantable paper notecards.

Plantable notecard

Plantable notecard via Instructables

This is an idea I’ve thought of for business cards—as in having them printed on paper with embedded flower seeds. But now I’m thinking, a) why not make them myself with my own designs and b) why not use the plantable paper cards as small batch event take-aways with the name of the site and continue to participate in the paper-free mobile revolution for personal contact info? So that’s the plan. Stay tuned for tales of paper making mishaps as everydaytrash dares to ask: can homemade seed cards be sleek and chic? And the important follow up question: will New Yorkers plant them?

For more on paper-free digit exchange, I recommend this short episode of MobileBehavior called “Will Mobile Kill the Business Card?“. Industry experts weigh in, including my sister who has the best idea of all (no bias!): let there be music.

Vodpod videos no longer available.