Here is a purse I made from upcycling materials I got at the re:use market here in Boise, thrift stores, and friends.
I know a lot of people who are interested in eco-living, and every time I mention upcycling they ask me: "What's upcycling?" I say, "It's taking something that you would otherwise throw out and finding a way to make it into something else."
But then I started wondering where the term came from and if it was possibly a little more complicated than repurposing things. So I started digging, and this is what I found out about upcycling...
Upcycling is taking waste and making it into something that has equal or greater use or value. "Isn't that the same as recycling?" I asked myself. As it turns out, no.
The term was first used by William McDonough and Michael Braungart in their book Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things. McDonough and Braungart compared upcycling to the "downcycling" of recycling a plastic, for example, into a lesser grade plastic. To put it simply, downcycling reduces the quality of the materials, while upcycling maintains or improves the quality of the materials.
Keen entrepreneurs have built successful businesses on upcycling. Marty Stevens-Heebner founded Rebagz to make handbags out of juice packs and nylon rice sacks. Joey Santley and Steve Cox founded ReSurf.org to upcycle broken surfboards into asphalt filler.
* article written by naturally savvy
1 comment:
hooray for upcycling! (and it's about time you made another blog post, haha) I may have to hit that reboutique and check it out.
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