unconsumption:

According to The Wall Street Journal, “consumers received 82.5 billion pieces of advertising mail through the [U.S.] postal service in 2010 ….” 
Now an app can help with that. PaperKarma, a free app for iOS, Android, and Windows smartphones, was designed to help curb the delivery of unwanted junk mail — and reduce paper waste.  

PaperKarma allows you to take photos of the junk mail you wish to stop. Snap a photo, and you’re done. We automatically contact the Mailer and remove you from their distribution list. PaperKarma can stop most junk mail that is addressed directly to you.

Have you tried using the app? To reduce your paper waste, what’s worked for you? 
(via PaperKarma | Control Your Mailbox, Stop Paper Junk Mail - Using Your Phone!)

unconsumption:

According to The Wall Street Journal, “consumers received 82.5 billion pieces of advertising mail through the [U.S.] postal service in 2010 ….” 

Now an app can help with that. PaperKarma, a free app for iOS, Android, and Windows smartphones, was designed to help curb the delivery of unwanted junk mail — and reduce paper waste.  

PaperKarma allows you to take photos of the junk mail you wish to stop. Snap a photo, and you’re done. We automatically contact the Mailer and remove you from their distribution list. PaperKarma can stop most junk mail that is addressed directly to you.

Have you tried using the app? To reduce your paper waste, what’s worked for you? 

(via PaperKarma | Control Your Mailbox, Stop Paper Junk Mail - Using Your Phone!)

Time declares Unconsumption one of “30 Must-See Tumblr Blogs”

unconsumption:

(Readers’ Pick) When environmental advocates go on about sustainable living, the concept can seem murky at best. The Unconsumption project seeks to provide inspiration for everyday people to creatively reuse items and reduce waste. The Tumblr account provides creative ideas like using wine bottles as candle holders and turning board games into jewelry boxes.

Somehow it’s extra cool that we’re a “readers’ pick,” no?

The entry is here.

thegibsongirl:

(Swiped from http://www.copenhagencyclechic.com/)
dar-ling!

dar-ling!

fuckyeahyoga:

shaunadacus:

yoga octupuss

 i guess this is tree pose.
like his 3rd eye.

fuckyeahyoga:

shaunadacus:

yoga octupuss

 i guess this is tree pose.

like his 3rd eye.

unconsumption:

Retired tires make fashion debut!
via palepink’s etsy shop

unconsumption:

Retired tires make fashion debut!

via palepink’s etsy shop

tumblrbot asked: WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE INANIMATE OBJECT?

chai

contained:

Via unconsumption:

Today’s cargotecture fix:
One hundred shipping containers now serve as studio apartments (each outfitted with a kitchen and washroom) in a student housing enclave in Le Havre, France. Designed by the Paris-based architecture firm Atelier Cattani.
(via Cité A Docks Student Housing by Cattani Architects » Contemporist)
Related: Previous Unconsumption posts about shipping container reuse.

contained:

Via unconsumption:

Today’s cargotecture fix:

One hundred shipping containers now serve as studio apartments (each outfitted with a kitchen and washroom) in a student housing enclave in Le Havre, France. Designed by the Paris-based architecture firm Atelier Cattani.

(via Cité A Docks Student Housing by Cattani Architects » Contemporist)

Related: Previous Unconsumption posts about shipping container reuse.

mollyblock:

Auto-reblogging my Unconsumption post because:
a) the project is in Toronto, and involves b) adaptive reuse of old buildings, c) the preservation of green space / creation of a nature preserve, d) a public-private (non-profit) partnership, e) a farmers’ market, f) a repurposed shipping container, g) community gardens, and h) sustainable building principles, among other things that are of interest (to me)!
Via unconsumption:

A retired shipping container, known now as the Welcome Hut, helps to orient visitors as they enter the grounds of Toronto’s Evergreen Brick Works (EBW), a new 40-acre nature preserve / redevelopment project — billed as “Canada’s first community environmental center.” EBW is a project of Evergreen, a national charity dedicated to bringing nature into public spaces, schools, and homes.
Several components of EBW’s master plan have been completed on the site that was, for more than a century, a brick factory with massive kilns (decommissioned in the 1980s), with adjacent clay/shale quarry in a ravine along the Don River. 
From an August 2010 Toronto Life story:

In an earlier age, Toronto would have torn down the brick sheds, but we are beginning to see new value in these old places. We don’t just come for the food or the chit-chat with a charming artisanal cheesemaker. We also come for the worn-down bricks and the history immersion. We crave these historic buildings that can root us in our city’s past and tell us where we came from. The fashion for ruins was also hugely popular in 18th-century England. Back then, people were leaving the land to work in factories. Similarly, as our factories close, we’re developing a nostalgic appreciation for manufacturing.

 
EBW’s offerings are slated to include a sustainable garden center, farmers’ market, demonstration gardens and kitchens, conference and event facilities, community bike space, art exhibition areas, and programs for families and kids. 
The Welcome Hut — Dwell.com slideshow here — was designed so that it could be relocated elsewhere on the property, to serve other purposes as needed. 
(spotted on Twitter, via Dwell’s Miyoko Ohtake, @miyokoohtake)

mollyblock:

Auto-reblogging my Unconsumption post because:

a) the project is in Toronto, and involves b) adaptive reuse of old buildings, c) the preservation of green space / creation of a nature preserve, d) a public-private (non-profit) partnership, e) a farmers’ market, f) a repurposed shipping container, g) community gardens, and h) sustainable building principles, among other things that are of interest (to me)!

Via unconsumption:

A retired shipping container, known now as the Welcome Hut, helps to orient visitors as they enter the grounds of Toronto’s Evergreen Brick Works (EBW), a new 40-acre nature preserve / redevelopment project — billed as “Canada’s first community environmental center.” EBW is a project of Evergreen, a national charity dedicated to bringing nature into public spaces, schools, and homes.

Several components of EBW’s master plan have been completed on the site that was, for more than a century, a brick factory with massive kilns (decommissioned in the 1980s), with adjacent clay/shale quarry in a ravine along the Don River. 

From an August 2010 Toronto Life story:

In an earlier age, Toronto would have torn down the brick sheds, but we are beginning to see new value in these old places. We don’t just come for the food or the chit-chat with a charming artisanal cheesemaker. We also come for the worn-down bricks and the history immersion. We crave these historic buildings that can root us in our city’s past and tell us where we came from. The fashion for ruins was also hugely popular in 18th-century England. Back then, people were leaving the land to work in factories. Similarly, as our factories close, we’re developing a nostalgic appreciation for manufacturing.

EBW’s offerings are slated to include a sustainable garden center, farmers’ market, demonstration gardens and kitchens, conference and event facilities, community bike space, art exhibition areas, and programs for families and kids. 

The Welcome Hut — Dwell.com slideshow here — was designed so that it could be relocated elsewhere on the property, to serve other purposes as needed. 

(spotted on Twitter, via Dwell’s Miyoko Ohtake, @miyokoohtake)