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It's getting tough out there. Feeling the pinch?
Comments
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For gift tags, I use a simple but effective hole punch and recycle all of our birthday/mothers day/xmas/etc etc cards this way. I have so many cmas tags now that i give some away to friends and family to use. The inused parts go in recycling (if no glitter). And it means that any glitter cards at least get a second use before being binned.
Example
February wins: Theatre tickets18 -
Absolutely beautiful euronorris 🤩Be Kind. Stay Safe. Break the Chain. Save Lives. ⭐️2025 Savings Pot Challenge: As a monthly amount, running total = £379.00
Jan £5.00 Feb £12.74 Mch £23.26 Apr £32 May £43 Jun £50 July £62 Aug £71 Sep £80 Oct Nov Dec Grand Total £7 -
Those are lovely. Do you cut them out by hand- not sure I'd ever get them looking so neat.7
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euronorris said:Doom_and_Gloom said:euronorris said:For this reason, our council will not accept any christmas wrapping paper, regardless of whether or not it is plastic free. They ended up with too much contamination and rejected loads. Not only did this mean more stuff ended up in landfill, but fuel was also expended in both directions (to the recycling plant and back). So they have only accepted brown paper at Christmas time for the last few years.
My family mostly use festive bedding to do this. Pillow cases for little bits all together as a sack. You can use the festive duvet covers for larger gifts as needed. No need to cut them up.
We have been using the same set for many years now as have my parents. It saves waste and money over time.
You can of course do the same for birthdays.
You can also just use a piece of fabric that is large enough. I have a largish square scarf that has been used a fair few times to wrap gifts. I took the ideas from Japanese furoshiki; cloth wrapping.
I've also got gift bags and bottle bags that have been in use many years also.
Unfortunately my OH likes to use wrapping paper for a lot of his gift giving to his family, which he usually buys in the sales.
I do get him to reuse gift/bottle bags where possible (and he does ask for them back if they won't use it again themselves, indeed he's been given ones others had been given gifts in to add to our little collection 😁).
It is a shame that wrapping is being dismissed in recycling if not brown traditional paper. However I understand their reluctance as it isn't always or easily obvious which ones are recyclable Vs those that aren't by glance which is no help for workers.
There's no easy answer, but I do know 2 things - 1. It's better to have many people doing it imperfectly than to only have a handful doing it perfectly and 2. Large corporations have a much bigger impact than the individual and change needs to happen with them first and foremost.6 -
euronorris said:For gift tags, I use a simple but effective hole punch and recycle all of our birthday/mothers day/xmas/etc etc cards this way. I have so many cmas tags now that i give some away to friends and family to use. The inused parts go in recycling (if no glitter). And it means that any glitter cards at least get a second use before being binned.
Example
I have a pair of fancy-edged craft scissors hovering when the cards are taken down. And apart from the recycling aspect, the tags made from cards are usually a lot nicer than those you can buy.9 -
Personally i think as long as 100% of us try to do as much as possible, hopefully at least 80% that's better than 20% doing 100% and by that I mean doing what we do 'perfectly' to sure ensure we don't contaminate etc.Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage - Anais Nin9
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Pollycat said:euronorris said:Doom_and_Gloom said:euronorris said:For this reason, our council will not accept any christmas wrapping paper, regardless of whether or not it is plastic free. They ended up with too much contamination and rejected loads. Not only did this mean more stuff ended up in landfill, but fuel was also expended in both directions (to the recycling plant and back). So they have only accepted brown paper at Christmas time for the last few years.
My family mostly use festive bedding to do this. Pillow cases for little bits all together as a sack. You can use the festive duvet covers for larger gifts as needed. No need to cut them up.
We have been using the same set for many years now as have my parents. It saves waste and money over time.
You can of course do the same for birthdays.
You can also just use a piece of fabric that is large enough. I have a largish square scarf that has been used a fair few times to wrap gifts. I took the ideas from Japanese furoshiki; cloth wrapping.
I've also got gift bags and bottle bags that have been in use many years also.
Unfortunately my OH likes to use wrapping paper for a lot of his gift giving to his family, which he usually buys in the sales.
I do get him to reuse gift/bottle bags where possible (and he does ask for them back if they won't use it again themselves, indeed he's been given ones others had been given gifts in to add to our little collection 😁).
It is a shame that wrapping is being dismissed in recycling if not brown traditional paper. However I understand their reluctance as it isn't always or easily obvious which ones are recyclable Vs those that aren't by glance which is no help for workers.
There's no easy answer, but I do know 2 things - 1. It's better to have many people doing it imperfectly than to only have a handful doing it perfectly and 2. Large corporations have a much bigger impact than the individual and change needs to happen with them first and foremost.
I wasn't meaning to infer that it's OK for people to recycle incorrectly. Sorry if that's how it read.February wins: Theatre tickets8 -
annieb64 said:Those are lovely. Do you cut them out by hand- not sure I'd ever get them looking so neat.February wins: Theatre tickets11
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GaleSF63 said:euronorris said:For gift tags, I use a simple but effective hole punch and recycle all of our birthday/mothers day/xmas/etc etc cards this way. I have so many cmas tags now that i give some away to friends and family to use. The inused parts go in recycling (if no glitter). And it means that any glitter cards at least get a second use before being binned.
Example
I have a pair of fancy-edged craft scissors hovering when the cards are taken down. And apart from the recycling aspect, the tags made from cards are usually a lot nicer than those you can buy.February wins: Theatre tickets5 -
I've come to learn that reducing our negative impact on the planet is not as straightforward as we would like to think. With companies often choosing to tout a different item as the solution. When, as another poster already said, the real answer is for us to reduce. Our older style of shopping is the better option, with butchers, greengrocers and refill type shops which would have a much bigger impact. Whatever way we look at it, recycling still requires more energy toThere is no straightforward answer and mostly the quick wins have already been identified with desired outcomes achieved or on the way to being achieved.Food packaging is complex, with functionality that most people are unaware of. Keeping food ‘looking’ fresh is part of the functionality. From experience, a freshly cut slab of steak on a meat counter quickly discolours. Wrap it in packaging and it keeps its colour for a longer period. Which option generates more waste / requires more energy / is better for net zero, and is whatever answer you give, holding true for all meats or just this steak? A complex problem.
carbon capture is also important8
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