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Presents of Mind
This holiday season, why not buy presents that scream green?
By Michael Shapiro
Typewriter keys transformed into earrings, bike chains that become bracelets, journals bound between the covers of old books and decorative bowls made from old LP records. These are just some of the recycled goodies for sale at Renga Arts (3605 Main St., Occidental, 707.874.9407),
a relatively new Occidental store that turns one person's trash into another's treasure.
Wander the aisles and you'll find a birdhouse constructed of discarded redwood and shoulder bags made from the vinyl advertising sheets that once covered billboards. And then there are green drinking glasses cut from old Perrier bottles and bracelets made from salvaged bicycle chains.
"It's tactile jewelry; you can come in and feel it," says co-owner Sherry Huss. She and husband Joe Szuecs left their high-tech careers to turn junk into gems. "We're creating an online network of people who have salvaged materials," Huss says. "The idea is to save things that would otherwise go to the dump."
The store is just one of a number of green holiday options in the North Bay. In downtown Santa Rosa, a store called Kindred (605 Fourth St., Santa Rosa, 707.579.1459) sells imported crafts from fair-trade collectives around the world. Many of the goods come from developing countries where items that we'd chuck into the dumpster are salvaged for crafts.
In the Philippines, craftspeople recycle newspaper into durable placemats and coasters; Heineken cans from Vietnam are smoothed into surprisingly supple handbags.
You may experience a Warholian glee seeing these familiar brands turned into art, and by buying at such stores as Kindred and Renga Arts, you're supporting a more ecological approach to holiday gift-giving.
Kindred owner Lien Cibulka opened the store some three years ago, and most of the crafts for sale and the collectives that produce them are certified by the Fair Trade Federation. The FTF determines a sustainable wage for craftspeople and monitors production to ensure that it's environmentally sustainable, says Kindred staffer Noah Aschauer.
For more fair-trade shopping, join the Sustainability Tour (www.daily-acts.org) on Saturday, Dec. 3, when it takes off on its annual Fair Trade Shopping Day. The tour begins at Taylor Maid Farms (7190 Keating Ave., Sebastopol, 707.824.9110), where Taylor Maid's Mark Inman will discuss how the company ensures that its coffee comes from fair-trade producers and how the purchasing choices of North Americans can help farmers and artisans around the world. The tour continues to Kindred and ends the day at Indigenous Designs (www.indigenousdesigns.com), a Santa Rosa–based clothing manufacturer open to the public only twice a year.
A family-run operation, Indigenous was founded in 1994 with the primary goal of providing training and sustainable employment primarily to the mountain people of Peru and Ecuador. Specializing in fiber arts mostly made from organic alpaca, Indigenous currently works with some 275 knitting and hand-looming collectives in South America. Everything about its commerce and manufacturing is done with an eye to sustainability and health. The resulting pure wool and cotton is anything but dreary. The day's tour also heartily promises chocolate.
Speaking of treats, here's a healthy edible stocking stuffer: Penngrove resident Mel Lefer, who ran restaurants in San Francisco until he had a massive heart attack, has come out with the Figamajig (www.figamajig.com). What's a Figamajig? A chocolate-covered fig bar with very little fat and lots of fiber. Add a dash of bioflavinoids and a pinch of antioxidants, and you get a candy bar that even a cardiologist could love.
A final note: Based in Corte Madera but without a physical presence in the brick-and-mortar world, the online Green Museum (www.greenmuseum.org) features artists, art and writing that aims to improve our relationship with the natural world. The Green Museum particularly focuses on environmental art and community. When considering a donation as a gift this year, think about gifting a membership to the Green Museum.
More green gifts to love
Method Home Products
EcoExpress
Solar Backpacks
Thinking Gifts
The Gift of Glug
--Heather Irwin
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