Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Monday, November 2, 2009

Baggu!!

Gone are the days with messy wrapping paper... Baggu it instead!! Check out this Youtube video for an instructional video of how to wrap a present with this adorable reusable bag! It comes in different pattern and over 50 vibrant colors for those who have their favorite shade of pink, orange, green, violet, and blue. Simple, cute, and practical-- these will definitely give you a reason to turn down a lame plastic shopping bag at the grocery store.





Word. :D

Friday, October 16, 2009

awesome way to reuse

Everyone that knows me knows that I'm obsessive over the Olympic Games-- the history, culture, unity, and competition really gets to me everytime the summer or winter games come around. Even though the Olympics happen every other year... it's still pretty cool they're incorporating everyday resources to make such a coveted award... OLYMPIC MEDALS!! Artists Corrine Hunt and Omer Arbel have designed the Vancouver Olympic '10 games from reclaimed gold, silver, and copper from old electronics (namely circuit boards)! Check it out!


pretty badass, eh?








WORD!!

Friday, September 18, 2009

only real balla's REBOUND.

Balla's can be green too!! Check out Wilson's "Rebound" basketball made from 40% recycled rubber!




wuuurd.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

I want this!

Roxy, Volcolm, and a bunch of other brands have made eco-friendly totes. I've never bought one because I think they're overpriced and because I'd probably never use it. But this Eco Warrior Bag is FREEEEAKIN' awesome! It becomes a Mexican Wrestler Mask when it's empty!! Granted... not many of us would go around wearing a bag on our heads for the sake of the environment (willingly, at least) but it's still a very cool idea! Props to the Japanese for their awesomely weird products!



The bags come in different colors. Check it!


Word!

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

I'd rather be skateboarding...

... than doing credit memos.

Who knew that skateboarders were so enviornmentally conscious?? Check these awesome skateboards (including my beloved Arbor board, Arnold) made from bamboo!!
Arnold!

These are only Sector 9 and Arbor boards... and I'm sure there are more out there. I just put these models up cuz they're the prettiest :D They also use bamboo in their apparel!

Check out the descriptions from Sector 9 and Arbor about the materials they use for their products:
Bamboo is the most environmentally friendly alternative available today. Its superior performance also makes it an ideal fabric for a life based around surf, skate, and snow.

For us, Bamboo falls in-line with a belief that you can't just be “green” for the sake of being green. If it were that easy we'd all be wearing hemp. We want our customers to expect improved performance and style when making an ecological choice.

Today there are no natural fabrics that are 100% “green.” But when considering how the available natural fibers are cultivated, harvested, produced, and function for the end user - it's clear that bamboo is by far the best solution.
With an eye toward the environment, and patented laminating process, Sector 9 started making boards from 100% bamboo. An ideal raw material, Bamboo can regenerate itself by up to 4 feet a week. Save a tree. Ride a weed!!!
save a tree. ride a weed! word!!

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Missing Hawaii

Hello! It's almost been a week since I got back from my first trip to Hawaii... and I hella miss it. To those who say that Hawaii is nothing more than a hub for tourists... I say 2shieh. The island I went to was Maui... and you could definitely feel the resentment towards tourists there. I don't really blame them, but at the same time... should they feel flattered? Hawaii is one of the most beautiful places ON EARTH. Damn. Anyway... onto happier things. Why I love Hawaii:


1. Hawaiians are totally environmentally conscious-- they have recycling centers EVERYWHERE... even for post consumer goods AND they even have a rental car company that uses bio diesel for their cars ... AND a lot of businesses work really hard to preserve the Hawaii's natural habitat.

2. Hawaiians have awesomely bad food. Case in point: the Chili Moco from Zippy's. 2 scoops of rice. 1 hamburger patty. 1 bowl of chili. 2 eggs. Put all that together... and you get heartburn and heaven all in one bowl:



If only they served Primo (Hawaiian Lager) at Zippy's... chilled beer and a chili moco= awesome combo.



woooooord.

3. (this probably goes with point#2) Hawaii has the sweetest fruit. For example: I usually hate papaya. But while I was in Hawaii... I decided to try it out while we were at a luau and it was probably one of the sweetest fruit I have EVER tasted. Bombass.


4. Hawaii has such a laid back culture. Even if you have road rage (guilty), it all tends to go away when you're driving on the streets of Hawaii.


OK so all the things that I love about Hawaii relate to (mostly) food... but come on! I was on vacation!! Anyway... just thought I'd share. Back to work!

Thursday, August 6, 2009

dude talk about reusing... SO AWESOME.

Dude. How awesome is this? I'm sure we all still have at least one cassette lying around the house. Cassettes are pretty useless now, but Contexture Design took care of that problem. A cassette as a 4Gen iPod Nano case/cover???









WORD!

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

word?

Nike Quietly Goes Green

The sole of Nike's (NKE) new Air Jordan is made with ground-up bits of old Nike sneakers. But the company isn't selling it as an eco-friendly shoe: That might not be good for business.
Nike, which is No. 42 on BusinessWeek 's list of the top-performing companies, has an unusual problem. Like many companies, it is trying to make its supply chain and products greener, which brings obvious environmental benefits and, just as important these days, financial ones, too. But while executives at General Electric (GE) and Wal-Mart (WMT) eagerly advertise the eco-conscious changes they're making, those at Nike choose to play down sustainability initiatives. Nike customers buy shoes to make them feel fast, slick, and hip; they don't care much about being eco-chic. "Nike has always been about winning," says Dean Crutchfield, an independent branding consultant in New York. "How is sustainability relevant to its brand?"


Nike came to this same conclusion after a less-than-successful experiment a few years ago. The company launched its first line of environmentally friendly shoes, called "Considered," in 2005. It had high hopes for a walking boot, made with brown hemp fibers, that looked obviously earthy. Critics called the $110 shoes "Air Hobbits" because of their forest-dweller feel and took Nike to task for a design that detracted from its high-tech image. The boots didn't sell well, and within a year were taken off the shelves.

The lesson for Nike was that its green innovations should continue, but its customers shouldn't be able to tell. "We want to do more and say less," is the way Lorrie Vogel, who oversees Nike's green business practices, puts it. The company also has to be careful about promoting itself as socially responsible because of its past use of sweatshop labor in Asian factories.


The sustainability push comes at a time when Chief Executive Mark G. Parker is also trying to streamline operations. The financial imperative to do so has never been clearer: Nike's revenues fell by 2%, to $4.4 billion, during its most recent quarter, which ended Feb. 28. In May it laid off 5% of its worldwide staff. The company doesn't give estimates of how much it might save by making its manufacturing more green, but it expects to reduce the amount of material it wastes by 17% over the next decade.


PERFORMING WELL
Nike's marketing, though, doesn't suggest a feel-good, do-good attitude; and its designs don't compromise quality. 'Saving money [with an environmentally friendly product] only works if people buy it,' says Sam Poser, an analyst with brokerage firm Sterne Agee. 'It has to be fabulous, not just green.

Last year, Nike debuted the Air Jordan XX3, which was designed so that all the pieces of the shoe fit together like a jigsaw puzzle. That eliminates any excess plastic. The company also invented a sewing machine that speeds up assembly time, which saves electricity. Nike simply heralded the XX3 as the next iteration in a 24-year string of Air Jordans. In January it rolled out the 2009 version, which also makes use of eco-friendly manufacturing.

And what do you know? The Air Jordans continue to sell well, recycled materials and all, suggesting that customers are still happy with the shoe's performance. Charles D. Denson, Nike brand chief, says that during the company's most recent quarter Air Jordan helped the basketball shoe division achieve double-digit growth. Nike's lineup now includes eco-friendly basketball, football, soccer, tennis, and running shoes.
nice. Both articles found on Businessweek.com.

hmm...

Nike HAS done some shady things in the past...2shieh. But they are having a firmer hand in CSR. Two articles on Nike:







Nike won't use leather from Amazon-bred cattle

By Stan Lehman - Associated Press

SAO PAULO — Sportswear giant Nike Inc. announced Wednesday that it will stop using leather from cattle raised in Brazil's Amazon rainforest, saying the move is part of the company's commitment to curbing the region's deforestation.

In a statement, Beaverton, Ore.-based Nike said its Brazilian leather suppliers have until next July 1 to "create an ongoing, traceable and transparent system to provide credible assurances that leather used for Nike products is from cattle raised outside of the Amazon Biome."

"We understand how important rainforests are to the health of the planet and the implications deforestation has on climate change and global warming" the statement added.

Nike did not say how much it spends on Amazon leather.

A statement from Greenpeace praised the company, saying the company's decision was prompted by a recent report from the environmental group showing that leather and meat produced from cattle in the Amazon are major contributors to the region's deforestation.


"We applaud the leadership that Nike is taking on the critical issue of Amazon deforestation," Greenpeace's national campaigns director, Lisa Finaldi, said.

She said deforestation in the Amazon — most of which involves the burning of trees to clear land for ranching and farming — is the world's fourth-biggest emitter of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

According to the Greenpeace report, "Slaughtering the Amazon," which was released in June, "every eight seconds, an acre of Amazon rainforest is destroyed for Brazilian cattle ranching, which is the biggest single driver of deforestation in the world."


The report was released after a three-year investigation that "tracked beef, leather and other cattle products from ranches involved in deforestation at the heart of the Amazon rainforest," Greenpeace said.

The Center for the Brazilian Tanning Industry did not have immediate comment on Nike's announcement, but its president, Luiz Bittencourt, said last week that the sector had the same concerns.

In a signed article published by the Sao Paulo newspaper Diario de Comercio e Industria, he said guidelines were being prepared to guarantee that Brazilian leather is produced in "an environmentally sound way."

Last month, the Greenpeace report prompted Brazil's three largest supermarket chains, Wal-Mart, Carrefour and Pao de Acuar, to announce that they would suspend contracts with suppliers found to be involved in Amazon deforestation, the Brazilian Association of Supermarkets said on its Web site.

Word.


too awesome.

I could really use this tonight...




more pics here



a DIGITAL measuring cup?! WORD.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

ooh... BURN.

For those of you who know where I work... you'll know why I have some biases... but nevertheless... I'm going to have to give this article a big fat WORD.
Taken from www.environmentalleader.com
July 29, 2009

Greenpeace Nails HP Building Over Computer Chemical Concerns

8.09.66kw04Greenpeace, showing the kind of embarrassment it can cause a corporation it puts in its sights, painted giant letters spelling out “Hazardous Products” on the rooftop of HP’s headquarters.

The July 28 protest, carried out in non-toxic children’s finger paint, came as a result of HP delaying until 2011 the phaseout of toxic chemicals, including polyvinyl chloride and brominated flame retardants, from its computer equipment. The company had recently backtracked from a promise to cease using the chemicals in 2009, saying that it did not have a suitable replacement for the chemicals.

Greenpeace put the letters, which spanned over 11,500 square feet or about two-and-a-half basketball courts, atop HP’s Palo Alto, Calif., headquarters.

HP shot back that, “The unconstructive antics at HP’s headquarters today did nothing to advance the goals that all who care about the environment share,” according to BusinessWeek.

On the Greenpeace USA blog, a writer opined: “Greenpeace is tired of hearing excuses from HP. … If Apple can produce electronics that are virtually free of PVC and completely BFR-free — what is the hold-up for HP?”

The protest hearkens back to a 2005 protest, in which Greenpeace activists protested at HP’s headquarters over the same computer chemicals, floating a small blimp that read, “HP: Harmful Products.”

In this most recent protest, Greenpeace even elicited the help of William Shatner, who recorded a message to be sent in a series of robocalls to HP staffers.

In Greenpeace’s latest Guide to Greener Electronics, released in early July, HP ranked 14th out of 18 electronics makers in terms of commitment to reducing harmful chemicals from electronics.

HP reportedly will begin selling a notebook free of BFRs and PVC later this year.

























word. :D

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

I don't have an iPhone but...

... this is pretty cool. An iPhone case made from post-consumer plastic bottles!

For those who think that it's kinda dull... and would much rather have something flashier made by Speck or Incase... I say "2shieh". It's definitely not the prettiest... and it doesn't come in very many colors or styles, but it's nice to know that a case like this is out there. Reviews show that this case is now sold at discount retail stores like TJ Maxx... AWESOME!! This retails for $34.95... but I think I'll wait till I actually GET an iPhone or until I see it at my local TJ Maxx. :DThe pics are of the blue version, but it also comes in black and white. Check out the
EcoShield Slider for iPhone from Agent 18!












  • Secure locking mechanism – never again worry about your case sliding apart at an inopportune time
  • Interior silicon pads to prevent product scratching
  • Side grips to make sure this baby will never slip out of your hand again
  • Made from post-consumer plastic bottles- which means this is a lean, green, protection machine
  • Protective screen film and table stand included
  • Fits the iPhone 3G S and iPhone 3G


word.

first post... word.

Even though it's only August 2009... and I haven't gone on my summer vacation yet, I'm already planning for NEXT year's summer. So here are my options...

1. Paris, France to see the last stage of the Tour de France

The Tour de France is one of the most epic sporting events in the world, and the last stage in Paris is the only stage that you get to see the riders more than once. AND it's in Europe. It's been 5 years since I've been to Europe... and I definitely want to do more than just the Asian tour bus thing. Right?

























Word.

2. Shanghai, China for the 2010 World Expo

Ok, so it kinda sounds nerdy... and borderline boring... 2shieh. But hey... It only occurs every couple years and it's one of the three world's largest collaborative events (aside from the modern Olympics and the FIFA World Cup... and yes, I did get this info off of wikipedia hahaha). For those that don't know what the World Expo is... here's a quick blurb:

It's a world fair that features many countries' developments, innovations, and contributions to global culture and economics. The Eifel Tower-- one of the worlds most recocgnizable structures-- was actually built for the 1889 World Fair. Word.

Ok so now that that's out of the way... Shanghai's theme is "Better City – Better Life" which denotes their position as an up and coming economic and cultural hub. Different countries are going to have different exhibits but there isn't an official list of what each nation is going to show. I know that Japan is going to display a "living" room.... a room that actually breathes, exchanges air, and other... stuff...?

Anyway, check it.
http://en.expo2010.cn/















Let me know what you guys think!