... and it’s a Buddhist Temple
From: Doug, 24Oct08, greenUPGRADER
"Thai monks from the Sisaket province have used over one million recycled glass bottle to construct their Buddhist temple. Mindfulness is at the center of the Buddhist discipline and the dedication and thoughtfulness required to build everything from the toilets to their crematorium from recycled bottles shows what creativity and elbow grease can accomplish."
Monday, 24 November 2008
Friday, 21 November 2008
Amoeba Vs Enamore
The Enamore Collection of womenswear, lingerie and accessories has long been a source of eco fabulousness. Using recycled, organic and other sustainable fabrics, designer Jennifer Ambrose and her team have consistently turned out beautiful, unique pieces of ethical fashion that delight and inspire. So it should come as no surprise that the Enamore movies, made in conjunction with Amoeba, are just as beautiful and inspiring.
There are four short films in the series. You can watch them all when you join the Enamore Group on Facebook as well as on YouTube. bluAngel loved them and we're sure you will too. We will post the next one here shortly - enjoy!
Further Info:
Enamore / Amoeba
There are four short films in the series. You can watch them all when you join the Enamore Group on Facebook as well as on YouTube. bluAngel loved them and we're sure you will too. We will post the next one here shortly - enjoy!
Further Info:
Enamore / Amoeba
Tuesday, 18 November 2008
Green Porno With Isabella Rossellini
I am rendered almost speechless. Disturbed? A little. My flabbergasted yet quietly impressed jaw is still on the floor. I have to share this with you, to see what you think. Wow!
Watch here: Green Porno
Warning! Some viewers may find these videos offensive as they contain scenes of a very sexual nature. If you don't like it, don't watch it. Click PAUSE or STOP, close the window... Go make some tea and calm down.
Take the quiz instead:
Watch here: Green Porno
Warning! Some viewers may find these videos offensive as they contain scenes of a very sexual nature. If you don't like it, don't watch it. Click PAUSE or STOP, close the window... Go make some tea and calm down.
Take the quiz instead:
Monday, 17 November 2008
Go Ganesha Go: Peace Made Visible
Naturalmente Roma is an art initiative, founded in 2003 by Rose-Marie Gnausch. The group are requesting expressions of interest from worldwide artists to take part in an exhibition next May celebrating peace. Entries demonstrating peace, manifest in the symbol of the elephant inspired by Hindu deity Ganesha, son of Shiva and 'Remover of Obstacles', will be shown in Cyprus with the possibility of travelling further afield thereafter. To take part apply here.
From: Go Ganesha Go
"AN INTERNATIONAL CALLING FOR ARTISTS OF ALL DISCIPLINES AND ALL MEDIUMS
Topic: Elephant as symbol of PEACE
Site: Ledra Street, Cyprus
Proposed time period: May 2009
The common symbol for this project is the elephant. The elephant stands for grandeur and peacefulness, it being an animal that lives in harmony with its disparate surroundings.
Artworks in the form of elephants in all different shapes, sizes and mediums will be exhibited on Ledra Street, on both sides of the dividing line, in Spring 2009. Through its calm presence, the elephant will transcend its status as a symbol and become a real, visual and tangible experience of peace open to everyone. The works will be shown alongside the artists name, address and nationality. Thousands of different elephant figures created by people from all around the world will be testimony to a worldwide affirmation of peace."
For more information and to enter the exhibition visit Go Ganesha Go
From: Go Ganesha Go
"AN INTERNATIONAL CALLING FOR ARTISTS OF ALL DISCIPLINES AND ALL MEDIUMS
Topic: Elephant as symbol of PEACE
Site: Ledra Street, Cyprus
Proposed time period: May 2009
The common symbol for this project is the elephant. The elephant stands for grandeur and peacefulness, it being an animal that lives in harmony with its disparate surroundings.
Artworks in the form of elephants in all different shapes, sizes and mediums will be exhibited on Ledra Street, on both sides of the dividing line, in Spring 2009. Through its calm presence, the elephant will transcend its status as a symbol and become a real, visual and tangible experience of peace open to everyone. The works will be shown alongside the artists name, address and nationality. Thousands of different elephant figures created by people from all around the world will be testimony to a worldwide affirmation of peace."
For more information and to enter the exhibition visit Go Ganesha Go
Tuesday, 11 November 2008
How Things Could Change...
From: Amnesty International
"Billions of women, men and children face levels of deprivation that undermine the right to live with dignity. Hunger, homelessness and preventable disease are not inevitable social problems or simply the result of natural disasters – they are a human rights scandal.
In 2008, we have a great opportunity to take a leap towards securing justice for people everywhere whose economic, social and cultural rights are violated."
Further Info:
Amnesty International
Monday, 10 November 2008
Take The Handmade Pledge
The silly season is approaching fast and I can see your mind ticking over gift lists, wondering where to shop, what to get, how to wrap. Well, hang on just a minute dear reader!
Before you traipse your generous self and eco shopping bag down to the stores, make a cup of tea, find some paper and a pencil, have a little sit down, doodle a little, maybe nibble on some cake (I find it helps loosen the creative urge), let your mind wander and think about gifts you can make instead.
'What?' I hear you screech from down the cables of the internet highway.
'Me, little old me? Make something? From scratch? Moi? Non! Ce n'est pas possible!'
Well, my friend, protest as much as you like, but I don't believe a word of it. We can all make something. Let's think. Perhaps you can bake a cake, cook up something fruity, brew some beer, draw a pretty picture, sew and stuff a small toy, knit a bobble hat, crochet a long scarf, take a photograph or two and frame them, write a heartfelt poem on beautiful handmade paper, plant a seed in a pretty pot, carve something out of wood, make an interesting clay model, paint an abstract, colourful picture on canvas...
Perhaps there is something you used to make at school but have forgotten how? Well, look it up on the internet (that's what it's there for after all) and remind yourself how. Perhaps you've harboured dreams of being a photographer, well get out there and practice - see what you can come up with.
If you're unsure, there are heaps of places online and off-line that can offer advice and tips for everyone no matter how lacking in skills or creative inspiration you may think you are. And if you don't get it right the first time, persevere and you may even find yourself having fun along the way.
There is definitely at least one thing we can all make using our skills and resources that will make someone else smile when they receive and unwrap their gift. I guarantee it - only give it a go!
And if you really feel you can't come up with the goods, then find someone else to make it for you. Whatever you decide to do, take the pledge with us and buy handmade this year.
From: Buy Handmade
"Buying Handmade makes for better gift-giving.
The giver of a handmade gift has avoided the parking lots and long lines of the big chain stores in favor of something more meaningful. If the giver has purchased the gift, s/he feels the satisfaction of supporting an artist or crafter directly. The recipient of the handmade gift receives something that is one-of-a-kind, and made with care and attention that can be seen and touched. It is the result of skill and craftsmanship that is absent in the world of large-scale manufacturing."
Further Info:
Buy Handmade
Before you traipse your generous self and eco shopping bag down to the stores, make a cup of tea, find some paper and a pencil, have a little sit down, doodle a little, maybe nibble on some cake (I find it helps loosen the creative urge), let your mind wander and think about gifts you can make instead.
'What?' I hear you screech from down the cables of the internet highway.
'Me, little old me? Make something? From scratch? Moi? Non! Ce n'est pas possible!'
Well, my friend, protest as much as you like, but I don't believe a word of it. We can all make something. Let's think. Perhaps you can bake a cake, cook up something fruity, brew some beer, draw a pretty picture, sew and stuff a small toy, knit a bobble hat, crochet a long scarf, take a photograph or two and frame them, write a heartfelt poem on beautiful handmade paper, plant a seed in a pretty pot, carve something out of wood, make an interesting clay model, paint an abstract, colourful picture on canvas...
Perhaps there is something you used to make at school but have forgotten how? Well, look it up on the internet (that's what it's there for after all) and remind yourself how. Perhaps you've harboured dreams of being a photographer, well get out there and practice - see what you can come up with.
If you're unsure, there are heaps of places online and off-line that can offer advice and tips for everyone no matter how lacking in skills or creative inspiration you may think you are. And if you don't get it right the first time, persevere and you may even find yourself having fun along the way.
There is definitely at least one thing we can all make using our skills and resources that will make someone else smile when they receive and unwrap their gift. I guarantee it - only give it a go!
And if you really feel you can't come up with the goods, then find someone else to make it for you. Whatever you decide to do, take the pledge with us and buy handmade this year.
From: Buy Handmade
"Buying Handmade makes for better gift-giving.
The giver of a handmade gift has avoided the parking lots and long lines of the big chain stores in favor of something more meaningful. If the giver has purchased the gift, s/he feels the satisfaction of supporting an artist or crafter directly. The recipient of the handmade gift receives something that is one-of-a-kind, and made with care and attention that can be seen and touched. It is the result of skill and craftsmanship that is absent in the world of large-scale manufacturing."
Further Info:
Buy Handmade
Friday, 7 November 2008
Graffiti Reborn
So you think you know graffiti? You're down with Banksy. Friends think of you as an expert in street art, perhaps? Think again. Watch and learn...
The new graffiti is here, in reverse. It's clean, literally. It's green and greenwash simultaneously. It looks great.
From: Reverse Graffiti Project
" Standing in one of the moss and dirt covered tunnels in Leeds, England, Paul Curtis, "Moose" as he calls himself, saw marks on the wall where the shoulders of unsteady drunks and the fingertips of curious children had exposed the shiny white tile. And with only a pair of socks as his tool, reverse graffiti was born.
No paint. No defacing. Moose makes his art by cleaning; removing the ills of dirt and pollution by de-defacing- wiping away dirt into large type and shapes, leaving nothing behind but a beautiful work of 'green art.'"
From: Street Advertising Services
"Street Art by Street Advertising Services with Water pressure cleaning is not illegal, we are simply cleaning the streets and are not in breach of the Highway Act"
Further Info:
Reverse Graffiti / Street Advertising Services
The new graffiti is here, in reverse. It's clean, literally. It's green and greenwash simultaneously. It looks great.
From: Reverse Graffiti Project
" Standing in one of the moss and dirt covered tunnels in Leeds, England, Paul Curtis, "Moose" as he calls himself, saw marks on the wall where the shoulders of unsteady drunks and the fingertips of curious children had exposed the shiny white tile. And with only a pair of socks as his tool, reverse graffiti was born.
No paint. No defacing. Moose makes his art by cleaning; removing the ills of dirt and pollution by de-defacing- wiping away dirt into large type and shapes, leaving nothing behind but a beautiful work of 'green art.'"
From: Street Advertising Services
"Street Art by Street Advertising Services with Water pressure cleaning is not illegal, we are simply cleaning the streets and are not in breach of the Highway Act"
Further Info:
Reverse Graffiti / Street Advertising Services
Wednesday, 5 November 2008
Get Crafty With Wardrobe Refashion
As an artist, I am blessed with a natural predilection for creating stuff from other stuff. As a woman I can lay claim to a magpie eye for shiny, pretty things, particularly haberdashery and fabrics and the patience to source and return them to the nest.
This talent (which some neanderthals may refer to as a design fault) sits very well in combination with the desire I have been cultivating over the past 10 years to lessen my impact on the planet. Thus, I have in recent years, along with many others it seems, developed an addiction to salvage, reclamation and re-design.
The hunt for perfect and potentially perfect pre-loved items is one that beats regular shopping hands down. Whether it's vintage shopping at the local market, hunting on the never ending aisles of the internet or good old charity store foraging, taking new-old finds home and turning them into something else is a magical experience that I highly recommend.
Often the new item turns out to look less than 'perfect' in the commercially-branded-made-from-new-ingredients-hot-off-the-production-line sense. This is because it isn't one of those. It is a handmade piece of me and all those who previously owned it with a history that stretches further than a faceless person in a far flung sweatshop. I can take pride in this and the kind of individual 'faults' and unique quirks that only come from free creativity.
Thinking about having a go yourself but not sure where to start? There are a growing host of sites (many of which are listed in the bluAngelAlmanac sidebar) full of information and tips for beginners as well as more advanced ideas and patterns for when you become an expert.
Give yourself time and a lot of patience to discover and develop the right skills for you but don't expect to become an expert overnight. Practice, practice, practice and the art of salvage and re-creation can be yours. Think of all those surprised happy faces at holiday times and birthdays as beautiful, handcrafted, thoughtful gifts are unwrapped instead of shop-bought, homogenous items. And no more traipsing round the high street searching for perfection in the house of smoke and mirrors either!
To encourage your handmade fashion recycling, creative Nichola Prested has set up Wardrobe Refashion, a blog site where users can take the following pledge and vow not to buy new items for either 2, 4 or 6 months at a time. There is a simple list of Rules to follow and support from other users. If you have a needle and thread, some time and a desire to connect rather than disconnect through fashion - why not give it a go?
"I __________________ pledge that I shall abstain from the purchase of "new" manufactured items of clothing, for the period of 2 / 4 / 6 months. I pledge that i shall refashion, renovate, recycle preloved items for myself with my own hands in fabric, yarn or other medium for the term of my contract. I pledge that I will share the love and post a photo of my refashioned, renovoted, recycled, crafted or created item of clothing on the Wardrobe Refashion blog, so that others may share the joy that thy thriftiness brings! Signed__________________"
Read Nichola Prested's interview with the V&A here.
Further Info:
Wardrobe Refashion
This talent (which some neanderthals may refer to as a design fault) sits very well in combination with the desire I have been cultivating over the past 10 years to lessen my impact on the planet. Thus, I have in recent years, along with many others it seems, developed an addiction to salvage, reclamation and re-design.
The hunt for perfect and potentially perfect pre-loved items is one that beats regular shopping hands down. Whether it's vintage shopping at the local market, hunting on the never ending aisles of the internet or good old charity store foraging, taking new-old finds home and turning them into something else is a magical experience that I highly recommend.
Often the new item turns out to look less than 'perfect' in the commercially-branded-made-from-new-ingredients-hot-off-the-production-line sense. This is because it isn't one of those. It is a handmade piece of me and all those who previously owned it with a history that stretches further than a faceless person in a far flung sweatshop. I can take pride in this and the kind of individual 'faults' and unique quirks that only come from free creativity.
Thinking about having a go yourself but not sure where to start? There are a growing host of sites (many of which are listed in the bluAngelAlmanac sidebar) full of information and tips for beginners as well as more advanced ideas and patterns for when you become an expert.
Give yourself time and a lot of patience to discover and develop the right skills for you but don't expect to become an expert overnight. Practice, practice, practice and the art of salvage and re-creation can be yours. Think of all those surprised happy faces at holiday times and birthdays as beautiful, handcrafted, thoughtful gifts are unwrapped instead of shop-bought, homogenous items. And no more traipsing round the high street searching for perfection in the house of smoke and mirrors either!
To encourage your handmade fashion recycling, creative Nichola Prested has set up Wardrobe Refashion, a blog site where users can take the following pledge and vow not to buy new items for either 2, 4 or 6 months at a time. There is a simple list of Rules to follow and support from other users. If you have a needle and thread, some time and a desire to connect rather than disconnect through fashion - why not give it a go?
"I __________________ pledge that I shall abstain from the purchase of "new" manufactured items of clothing, for the period of 2 / 4 / 6 months. I pledge that i shall refashion, renovate, recycle preloved items for myself with my own hands in fabric, yarn or other medium for the term of my contract. I pledge that I will share the love and post a photo of my refashioned, renovoted, recycled, crafted or created item of clothing on the Wardrobe Refashion blog, so that others may share the joy that thy thriftiness brings! Signed__________________"
Read Nichola Prested's interview with the V&A here.
Further Info:
Wardrobe Refashion
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