Friday, October 11

Have a "Green" Thanksgiving

With Thanksgiving weekend here, most of us are either being entertained or hosting. With the latter duty falling on me this year (to my excitement), it got me thinking once again of hosting a "green" party. For this reason, I thought it would be fitting to re-post my previous hosting article from when the entire Barr clan came for Easter. So excuse the spring time colours, but there are some great ideas hiding below. And I will post more pictures next week from what will be a fantastic Orphan Turkey Feast. Have a great Thanksgiving!

I don't know about you, but I love to entertain. In a city that is as expensive as Vancouver, it is definitely the cheaper option. To make playing hostess even better, how about some tips and tricks to make it "green" - and when I say green, I mean it in a couple ways. What I want to know are ways to save money and be easy on the environment. Some of these ways may have a higher start up cost, but will save you more in the long run than running to the dollar store every time you host a theme party or want a pretty table. 

The event that inspired this article is this: my family came to stay with me for Easter long weekend. I was excited to show them around the city, go to Stanley Park, walk along the sea wall and the amazing weather was everything I could have asked for. But when I started planning for them to come it dawned on me, my apartment is barely stocked for 1, let alone 6. So I started thinking spare towels, sheets, blankets, plates. All those things you don't think of until a car full of Barrs show up in your parking spot.

While snooping and trying to figure out the best way to accomplish all this yet maintain a budget, I've stumbled on some tips and tricks that I thought I could share. First off, make a list. If you know what you need and only what you need, you'll save yourself from aimlessly wandering around the store and walking home with a crockpot (which I did). I needed pillows, towels and sheets so I hit up Home Sense. I got organic cotton sheets for $40 that I love, 2 super awesome pillows for $16 a pop and a set of organic towels that I gifted to myself and downgraded my neon pink set to the guest closet. It might have been an upfront cost, but now I'm stocked for the next time I have a large group coming to stay.


The dinner is more what I was focusing on for this article however. All the food and drinks and decor can add up financially, and the waste and sources can leave a mark on the environment. But as always, I want everything to look great. I found a nice colourful pastel piece of fabric at the thrift store to use as a tablecloth and bright coloured reusable placemats from Dollarama. West Elm had some amazing cloth napkins that we used (in the picture there are paper napkins - my Mom brought them, and they happened to fit right in). I needed two extra sets of cutlery, which I also found at the thrift store. For the rest, I decorated with potted flowers. They won't keel over like cut flowers, and still add life to the room.

As for the food, we bought a free run farm turkey from our friend in the Okanagan (there are lots of turkey farms throughout BC that take requests for the turkey-serving holidays) and veggies from Granville Island Market. Served up with homemade pumpkin pie, Summerhill Organic red wine, U-Brew white wine and Canada's first sustainable brewery's Stanley Park Amber Ale, our table looked awesome, was stocked with local, sustainable fare and came in under budget. A happy hostess and happy guests made this long weekend the relaxing, fun and easy holiday we were all hoping for.

Our next event we will be hosting is a spring cleaning Clothing Swap. We will make sure we keep everyone posted on the details, but sock it away in the back of your mind and check back every week for updates. And if you want any recipes that I've mentioned or have tips and tricks of your own to add, please let us know!
- Kim

Tuesday, October 8

Get Your Green On

Today (Tuesday) finds us right smack dab in the middle of Vancouver Eco Fashion Week. I hope you were on its radar, because the shows, events and educational sessions this organization puts together twice a year is a fantastic collection of creativity, design and global awareness. In its seventh edition, this 4 day stint of events brings together the brightest and most inspiring minds in our local industry. Being on the West Coast, we tend to be too far away and too small a city to really have any impact on the global fashion community. However, the Vancouver industry has figured out a way to be heard.

First, you carve out a niche. Then you perfect it, you own it, you live by it. Then you look around you and notice that half the people around you are also living by it. That is the point where Eco Fashion Week stepped in. They identified the impressive sustainably-minded business owners, chatted with them, found sponsors and got them all on a large stage with flashing lights big and bold enough to yell at the rest of the fashion world "Not only are we incredibly talented but we are also really really cool..."

Of course, this is my shortened, by-observation analysis of the whole thing, but I truly love what they have done. British Columbia has such a huge Social Venture Network that when trying to get noticed amongst New York, Toronto and Paris, we really need to play to our strengths and pull the proverbial rabbit out of the hat. So we highlight our stereotypical "west coast", laid back, liberal-thinking vibe to the industry and you have a whole new fashion sector. No longer is fashion just a superficial business. It now has heart.

To have that blossoming out of Vancouver is such an honour. It may have started in Europe and Australia. We may be a little late to the party. But as for North America, many of our designers are on the forefront. And don't be thinking hippie clothes now. These are designers who are creative and talented. They just think sustainably and bring that into their business. Its not a selling feature, but rather an after-thought for the buyer. A "oh, I love this design" and "by the way, its made of tencel" kind of collection. If we can somehow get the majority thinking this way, the use of petroleum by-products such as polyester, harmful dye toxins and fast-fashion garbage-dump-filler may be a thing of the past.

If you are unable to make the shows this season, I highly recommend attending the shows or sessions in for the next instalment in April. Until then, you can check out some of our local talent listed below and watch the current shows on the Eco Fashion Week website and live streaming or taped shows via livestream.com

Nicole Bridger - www.nicolebridger.com
Claire Bouvier - www.theclairecloset.com
Dandelion Wind Opaine - www.dandiwind.ca
Kenneth Wyse - http://ecofashion-week.com/designers/07/kennethwyse.html
Cherry Blossom Design - www.cherryblossomdesign.ca
Young Oak - http://ecofashion-week.com/designers/07/youngoak.html

The Nicole Bridger team that I am so happy to be a part of.

Hope you are able to enjoy the great event that is 100% truly west coast!


- Kim