View allAll Photos Tagged reusing
Doing some tiding in the garden I found this old bird's nest that had been reused as a mouses food cache.
I have a craft fair coming up this weekend so have been thinking of new ideas to sell at our stall. Bags seem like a quick and easy sell.
i really enjoyed making these, they are created using recycled coffee sacks which are 100% biodegradable. I was originally going to recycle plastic shopping bags and make them into reusable bags but discovered since I stopped using supermarkets almost a year ago I have a serious lack of plastics in my house.
and anyways I think the coffee sacks look far better :D
Stylish, reusable high chair cover to protect baby from germs and provide a cushy, comfy safe spot to dine.
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Reusable felt gift tags to go with reusable fabric gift wraps (furoshiki) - with a rolled up slip of paper inside for the message.
This glass was used as a lid of the glass container for exterminating a fly around 1930.
From now on, this will be used in order to decorate a flower.
KONICA AUTOREX
Konica HEXANON 35 - 70mm F3.5 EE
lomography color 400
Various postcards made in May, in honor of "put a bird on it" month :^)
Reused boxboard with gesso and/or acrylic; various book or magazine or calendar clippings.
This summer, a bird found a good use for an a derelict locomotive sitting in the woods near Albany, N.Y.
Nobody else has!
Jan. 8, 2009 - I'm finally getting in the habit of regularly using my cloth bags for grocery shopping.
This is the storage solution I came up with for my (currently) unused magnets. I'm seriously addicted to magnets & can't possibly use them all at the same time. So, the rotation is easier if they have a special place of the own. And I got to reuse an egg container ! (ALL the magnets shown here were purchased on Etsy)
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Photo cannot be reused in any way without permission.
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We reuse these wraps every year, writing the gitftee and date on the box each year..Saves time and the landfill.
New Kingdom Dynasty 20, ca. 1185-1070 BCE
I ancient Egypt, writing materials were often reused. One side of this large flake of limestone is inscribed in hieratic with a legal text regarding repayment for a jar of fat. The text includes an important reference to the length of the reigns of Kings Ramesses III and Ramesses IV. The opposite side has an ink sketch (shown in the photo) of two figures that represent the Nile, symbolically unifying Egypt by the entwining the hieroglyph for "unification" with the emblematic plants of Upper and Lower Egypt, and two lines of hieratic text concerning the delivery of copper.
Refuse Single Use Plastic, Choose Reusables - Our Children’s Fight for their Rights to A Sustainable Future.
Jacqueline Elbing-Omania is a public-school classroom teacher in Berkeley, California, USA, and an Heirs to our Ocean Chapter Leader. “My classroom is the first Zero Waste classroom in our entire city of Berkeley California. For the 180 days of school my students have worked together to be waste free. We generated only a one-quart jar of waste (a little less than a liter) for the entire school year. We did this by choosing reusable items and planning in advance for not making waste. The word of our success went out and the students were invited to a press conference with the mayor. This is at that event which was held at the Waste Transfer Station in Berkeley California. What you see behind the youth is a day of plastic waste (“recyclables”) generated by our town. The students learned from articles and film that plastic recycling is a myth. It is largely not happening, and plastic is also exported to countries like the Philippines where Sam (center child) has roots and has seen the impact firsthand.”
Jacqueline Elbing-Omania, female, Germany
Refusez le plastique à usage unique, choisissez les produits réutilisables - Nos enfants se battent pour leurs droits à un avenir durable.
Jacqueline Elbing-Omania est enseignante dans une école publique à Berkeley, Californie, États-Unis, et la responsable d’une section ‘Heirs to our Ocean’. « Ma salle de classe est la première salle de classe zéro déchet dans toute notre ville de Berkeley, en Californie. Pendant les 180 jours d'école, mes élèves ont travaillé ensemble pour ne pas produire de déchets. Nous n'avons produit qu'un pot d'un quart de déchets (un peu moins d'un litre) pendant toute l'année scolaire. Nous l'avons fait en choisissant des articles réutilisables et en prévoyant à l'avance de ne pas faire de déchets. La nouvelle de notre succès s’est répandue et les étudiants ont été invités à une conférence de presse avec le maire. Cette photo a été prise lors de cet événement qui a eu lieu à la station de transfert des déchets à Berkeley, en Californie. Ce que vous voyez derrière les jeunes, c'est l’équivalent d’une journée de déchets plastiques (« recyclables ») générés par notre ville. Les élèves ont appris à partir d'articles et de films que le recyclage du plastique est un mythe. Il est largement inexistant, et le plastique est également exporté vers des pays comme les Philippines où Sam (enfant du centre) a des racines et en a vu l'impact. »
Jacqueline Elbing-Omania, femme, Allemagne
This one is a first, reuse of a London Permaculture photo of the reuse of a London Permaculture photo. Creative cycling I guess.
This is on another one of those accumulator sites that just seem to self harvest data from elsewhere, without a farmer around to plant things. I tend to find them quite depressing, and wonder how many pages of the internet are now these ghostly accumulators...
Still, some foragers seem to be visiting these places and moving on from there to richer lands. I followed one foragers trail backwards, to come across this site.
Based on my "most popular" photos, there's quite an interest and desire out there for Earthships. So why are there so few in the world?
The Kabas incorporated reused materials throughout their net-zero ready home including this bathroom vanity counter which was made from left over structural materials. Photo supplied www.greenenergyfutures.ca/episode/episode-80-chasing-net-...
www.1001gardens.org/2013/01/riy-hanging-garden-handbags/
Don't know what to do with your old handbags ? Make fun and colored plant holders with them with this "Recycle It Yourself" idea ! Hang the handles from hooks on a wall, on a fence or dangle them from tree branches and your garden will be unique !
++ More information at HGTV website !
4/52 (Leading Lines)
Image of a bunch of green onions that my wife is trying to get another serving from. This is taking recycling to the next level.
Reused materials – the thick, insulated walls presented the perfect opportunity to make use of some reused church pews as creative sitting space in the windows in the Kaba Beverly Heights near net-zero home. Photo David Dodge www.greenenergyfutures.ca/episode/episode-80-chasing-net-...