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Showing posts with label recycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycle. Show all posts

Radically Change the way you Dress




 Basic Changes you can Start Today

  • Take stock of your wardrobe contents and decide what you want and what you can give away 
  • Consider restricting yourself to a limited range of colours 
  • Research the ethical code of the shops that you generally buy your clothes from. Are you happy with it? Do you need to shop somewhere new?
  • Consider dyeing as one way to improve your clothing 
  • Review your laundry procedure ~ use less detergent and lower temperature settings (save money)
  • Get a washing line or rotary dryer if you have any space outside (save money)
  • Get a hat 
  • Start using charity shops (thrift stores) to buy and donate clothing (save money)
  • Stop caring about 'fashion' and start to develop your own 'style'
  • Grow a beard (if you can!) (save money)
  • Change your hairstyle to something 'low maintenance' and simple (save money)

Some Changes you might like to consider for the Future

  • Avoid buying new clothes with zippers 
  • Consider some variation on ‘new Plain’ as your mode of dressing 
  • Consider if modesty is something you wish to dress for 
  • Learn to knit (save money)
  • Learn to use a sewing machine (save money)
  • Make/alter/repair as many of your own clothes as you can (save money)
  • Learn to get the most out of your washing machine, look at the cost of differing ‘cycles’ and make economy one of your deciding factors in using it. (save money)
  • Learn simple washing machine maintenance – clearing the pump, changing the seal etc. (save money
  • As a consumer, apply pressure on retailers to develop and maintain a range of ethical policies in sourcing materials and labour. 

Some big radical changes you may want to move towards

  • Consider Plain dressing 
  • Try to become skillful enough to make all your own clothing (save money)
  • Get weaving! 
  • Stop using an electric washing machine and look seriously at the alternatives (save money)

How do I learn new skills?


Ask neighbours, friends, family. In particular elderly people may have lots of skills they are willing to pass on to anyone interested. In your area you may find evening or weekend courses you can attend. YouTube can provide easy free access to experts! 

(C) Ray Lovegrove 2022


See Also,


 


Simple Dressing


Clothing serves a number of functions for humans. Clothes keep us warm, protect us from rain and sun, hide our bodies from embarrassment, help confirm our social status, attract a partner, may signify our job or even help us get a job, allow us to identify with others, but also give us the chance to demonstrate our individualism. Given all these reasons for wearing clothing, it is not surprising that most of us spend a considerable amount of time and money on deciding how to dress.


When discussing clothing I will be using three terms; “simple dressing”, which means applying the same principles of simplicity to our clothing as we might to decorating our houses or developing our gardens; and “plain dressing”, defined as dressing simply but avoiding certain forms of dress or patterns of material and generally dressing in a restricted form of design and colours. I also use the term “Plain dress” with an upper case ‘P’, this is used to describe the distinctive form of dress used mainly by religious groups such as Amish, conservative Mennonites, some conservative Quakers and Hassidic Jews. As well as relating to any simple lifestyle we might also like to consider that any of the above may be adopted to preserve ‘modesty’ as a religous obligation, such as for those in holy orders or many ordinary Muslims, Jews and Christians.



Practical Dressing


Before we look at more controversial ideas about simple dress, we need to remind ourselves of some basics about keeping warm and using clothing as sun protection. The best way to keep warm is not to invest in some very expensive polar expedition wear, but rather to use the old idea of wearing layers of clothing. In winter, just dress yourself in as many layers as you need to prepare yourself for what you have to do. In the spring and autumn, days often start cold yet soon warm up, so the outer layers of clothing can simply be removed to allow you to remain comfortable. The same is true of working outside in very cold weather; start off with many layers and then, as the work warms you up, take off the outer layers. In both cases, as you cool down, put back the outer layers and you will continue to stay comfortable.


Sunlight is a gift, especially to those of us in northern Europe and North America. However, the powerful ultraviolet component of sunlight is very damaging to skin; at best it will give you sunburn, or result in premature ageing of skin, and at worst it can cause skin cancer. Those of us with pale skins are most susceptible to damage, but all skin types can suffer harm. The simple solution to this is to stay covered and wear long sleeves and leg coverings when working in the sun. Likewise, the damaging effects of sun on the eyes becomes apparent as we get older, particularly for those with pale blue eyes, so wear a broad brimmed hat outside when the sun shines, whatever the time of year. Dark glasses also work, but a broad brimmed hat has the added advantage of keeping the back of the neck cool in hot weather, an important point to note.

Obviously if your work involves you in particular dangers then you dress accordingly; digging the garden whilst wearing sandals is not really very clever, neither is beekeeping in shorts!




Aiming for Simplicity of Style

How you decide to dress as a part of your simple life is very likely to result in your having a major overhaul of what you wear, or rather what you have in your wardrobe. To reduce the size of your wardrobe, you must consider the number of items of clothing that you never or hardly ever wear. If you also want to simplify the process of deciding what to wear, you need to make some important decisions. Firstly, what are you most comfortable wearing? Use this to decide upon the range of clothes that you are going to base your wardrobe around. Secondly, what colours do you like? These are very individual matters, but all the same, try to limit yourself to a handful of styles and colours that you are happy with. Thirdly, decide on which fabrics you favor and there you go! You don’t need to follow any designer nor any trend; warmth, comfort, and practicality will be the most important factors.

Next, look at your current clothing collection and see whether it matches up to the decisions you have just made. Chances are that you have enough items already that match your criteria, but don’t rush out and buy new things if they don’t. Simply give what you don’t need, like, or that doesn’t fit you properly, to a charity shop and replace other items as and when you need to. It may take you a year or so to develop a truly simple wardrobe that you are happy with, but it will have been worth the wait. Spend a little time considering any major changes to the way in which you want to dress. It is not a simple solution if you find yourself spending time and money on things with which you feel unhappy a few weeks later. Poor decisions will only result in more items sitting unworn in your wardrobe before they also make that trip to the charity shop. Try always to buy things that will fit your needs in years to come very fashionable items have a habit of looking a little out of place next ‘season’.

Don’t be led into thinking that you need to change if you don’t want to, or that anything is particularly wrong with how you dress at present. Neither should you feel pushed into anything that is outside of what you want; if simple, ethically produced jeans and a t-shirt are what you decide on, or a simple skirt and top, then that’s fine.

Dressing for the Day

Many of us do different tasks throughout the day and may fall into the trap of changing clothes two or three times. Changing takes time and produces more laundry than necessary, so dressing for the day is a good idea. Decide the night before what you need to do (and if working outside, consider the weather); then dress in a way that will see you through to bedtime! Obviously if you work for an employer then this may not be practical, but for those who work from home and for all of us on weekends, it should be a goal to work towards.

May I put in a good word here for the ‘bib and brace’ overall (sometimes called dungarees in the UK); available in cotton, polyester/cotton or cotton denim, these are perfect for lifestyles that have you working inside and outside the house throughout the day. You need wear very little underneath in hot weather but you can easily wear extra layers underneath when it is cold. Try to avoid zippers when purchasing (see below) and consider polyester/cotton for a fast laundry turn around.




If you are cooking or doing other messy household tasks, invest in some easily washable cotton aprons. Those PVC aprons are really not good to wear but a cotton apron does the job and you can dry your hands on them as well. Cotton aprons need to go in the wash at the end of a busy day in the kitchen, so you need a few of them. You will find them easy to wash, dry and repair, and unless anything unexpected happens, they have an active life of many years. Buy them with pockets on the front and an adjustable buckle on the neck strap to fit you perfectly.

Natural versus synthetic fibre

When deciding of the fabrics for your clothing you might assume that the answer is always ‘natural’… but give it a little more thought. Some natural fabrics like cotton are wonderful; soft, washable, durable, and still look good, even when faded. Others such as wool are expensive, difficult to wash without shrinkage, and may take days and days to dry after washing. Another consideration is environmental issues surrounding the manufacture and ultimate disposal of your fabric, and you might also like to consider the chemicals used on the animal or plant that provided the fabric. The table below shows a classification system whereby fabrics are graded as to their sustainability with ‘Class A’ being best and ‘Class E’ being worst. Some fabrics are unclassified because of lack of research. Without going too much into detail, the idea of ‘natural is good, synthetic is bad’ is obviously not sophisticated enough as a mantra for buying clothes. Mixed fibres are an even greater problems to assess in terms of environmental impact.



No matter the fabric or the reason for choosing it, remember that well-chosen items, easily repairable and designed to last for many years, are always more environmentally friendly than items that are beyond use after a year or so. To reduce the impact that your clothing has on the environment, choose carefully, and choose clothing to last. Obviously, those who follow a vegan diet (or some vegetarians) will have strong issues with wearing wool, leather, and silk, all of which are of animal origin.

Choosing environmentally friendly fabric is only worth doing if the garment is going to last you a long time; if mixed fibre fabric is going to last you ten times as long, then it could still have less overall impact on the environment than ethically sourced clothing discarded after a year of wear.

Zip Fasteners

Zip fasteners (zips or zippers) are best avoided for the reason of durability and ease of repair. A zip on an outside coat is a great idea, but if the zip gets broken or damaged it will prove impossible, or at least very expensive, to replace. Taking out a damaged zip and replacing it with a new one, always assuming you can find one of the right size, is very difficult and requires the labours of a skilled tailor or dressmaker; the cost of doing this may exceed the original cost of the item. However, replacing buttons is something we can all do. I can think of several items of clothing that I have had to discard for the want of zipper repair when, had they used buttons instead, would still be in active service. Careful shopping can just about eliminate zippers from your wardrobe as items get replaced, but completely zipper-free existence seems difficult. In Europe, trying to find zip-free, rainproof outer wear seems impossible, so some compromise is always needed. Nevertheless, consider choosing clothing without zip fasteners wherever possible.


Ethical Shopping

Few of us are wealthy enough to provide all our clothing needs from non mass-produced sources, and even fewer of us are talented enough to make all our own clothes. Given this, it is important to make sure that unnecessary burdens have not been placed on those who make our clothes and that we minimize the environmental problems caused by manufacture.

John Woolman, a seventeenth century Quaker, caused quite a stir when he started wearing Quaker Plain clothing, but in raw uncoloured fabric rather than the customary ‘Quaker grey’. His point was that slave labour had been used to produce the dyes usually used for clothing; he could not support slavery so decided that he could live without fabric dye.

We need to be more like John Woolman in our role as consumers; rejecting goods that we cannot be sure have been produced to the highest ethical standards. It would be impossible to find the source of every item of clothing you buy, so you need to do homework on the companies you buy them from. All reasonably sized retailers will have an ethical policy and you should satisfy yourself that anything bought from that retailer is suitable. Smaller and independent retailers might be harder to ‘pin down’, but ask - if you are not satisfied, then don’t buy! Labels can be helpful in making your choices.



It is one thing to expect someone with a good income to be ‘picky’ about what they buy, but many people on restricted incomes will find that in reality, they have to read up on the stores policies and hope that they are doing a good job!

It is easy to make snap judgements when looking at the pay of workers in developing countries. We can blame companies for poor working conditions and wages whilst benefitting from low clothes pricing in our shops but remember - the workers who made your garment may have no work at all if you don’t buy and, in many locations, the only alternatives to low paid or piece work may be prostitution and drug dealing. Local wages may seem low to us but may be of a good standard in the area; it needs careful analysis. As far as working conditions go, workers should never be expected to work excessive hours, begin working at too young an age, or work until they are too old. Workers should also have sufficient heat and light to do their work comfortably – we rely on the companies we use to insist upon good conditions for their workers. Always expect to pay ‘reasonable’ prices when you buy and demand that ‘reasonable’ fees are paid to those who made your clothes.

“I find that to be a fool as to worldly wisdom, and to commit my cause to God, not fearing to offend men, who take offence at the simplicity of truth, is the only way to remain unmoved at the sentiments of others.”

~John Woolman (Quaker)

If you have concerns about the working conditions of those who labour to make your clothes then do take every opportunity to raise them with retailers. Over the last decade many high street retailers have developed some very pleasing ethical standards, but these will always need close supervision and constant appraisal.

Charity Shops

Called ‘charity shops’ in the UK, and ‘thrift stores’ in the US, these outlets are one of the greatest assets for those of us who wish to live simply. Use them to buy the clothing you need and when you have no need for items of clothing, donate them! Given that these items have been owned and worn already, they will need a careful visual examination when purchasing, and you might just need to do a few repairs. These items have already been purchased once by the previous owner, so ‘ethical shopping’ is not a practical issue as long as you are happy with the charity that runs the shop. I think you are so far removed from the original manufacture of the garment that it is a fairly empty exercise in trying to find out whether it was produced ethically or not, but labels may provide some help. Donations to charity shops are not always resold; some are sent directly to developing countries to help clothe the population (children’s clothes are often dealt with in this way), for disaster relief, and items unsuitable for sale are often shredded to make other products. No matter what is done with them, these are all far better ways to dispose of your clothing than opting for landfill. Always take a tape measure with you when visiting charity shops, as sizing might not be too accurate.




Making your Own Clothes

Whether you have the skills or simply need to revive them, making your own clothes is a fine thing to do. No matter if it’s making a dress or knitting a scarf, nothing gives you so much control over fabric, style or colour. Ethically-sourced working materials are all you need to worry about. If you are skilled at making clothes, be sure to teach your children and any interested friends how to get going on this.

Many people go a little further; they even spin their own yarn and weave their own fabric. You may not have enough time to do this, but you may find someone with these skills who can supply you with yarn or fabric.



Dyeing at Home

Dyeing clothing is a good way to improve the appearance of items, or to get your wardrobe within the colour range you have decided upon. You can buy dyes that work in the washing machine, or you may prefer to make some natural dyes of your own. Either way, you need to consider a few points. Some fabrics do not take up dye; polyester is notable for this. If you use black dye on fabric that is white polyester/cotton, then the polyester will stay white and the cotton dye black, the result ~ grey fabric. Many items made of cotton have stitching of a synthetic material that does not dye; after dyeing you will be left with seam stitching seams of a different colour. A most important point is that you cannot dye clothing that has been stained with bleach, scorched, or spotted with grease or oil; the dye will not cover these things and they may look even worse after dyeing. That aside dyeing can be a very useful way of extending the life of clothing and house fabrics.


Bleaching


Ordinary diluted domestic bleach can be used to change the colour of garments to make them more acceptable plain, or to give them a more natural look. The results are a little unpredictable and often result in not a lighter shade, but a different colour altogether, for instance blues often bleach not to pale blue, but to pink. Patterns, stripes and the like may be removed by bleaching, but are more likely just become to  made more pale. As with dyeing, grease stains will show up on any bleached fabric, and metal buttons and fittings may corrode. Still, many find this an inexpensive way to make secondhand clothing more acceptable. If you manage to buy cloth before it has been sewn into garments, then bleaching (after testing on a small sample) may give excellent results. As an alternative to chlorine-based bleaches, which are often harsh on fabrics, you can use readily available oxygen-based bleaches which are just added to the wash, these are excellent for ‘toning down’ colours that are too bright or too deep.

Designer Labels

Once upon a time, a label in an item of clothing was discreetly sewn in the inside, more or less as a reminder to you of who made it when the time came for a replacement. Now however, times have changed and the name of the manufacturer is commonly displayed in large letters, or some other recognizable logo, for the all the world to see. Why? If you have purchased the product it belongs to you, do you want to become a walking advertising placard? Why does the manufacturer insist on proclaiming its name on a product which no longer belongs to them? Simple living, if it is anything, is a proclamation of independence from the corporations that run so many aspects of our life. When you walk down the street make sure it’s you others see and not the products you wear. If you do buy ‘designer clothes’, buy them because they are well made, simple, durable and ethically produced. Reject them if they are using your body to sell more products. If you don’t want your body to advertise clothing companies, consider strongly whether you also want to publicize soft drinks, rock groups, political causes or any other message. Simple clothing does the job; it does not have to sell anything!


Hair, Makeup and Jewelry

Hair is one of the most individualistic and personal things about us and I think we all have to make up our own minds about it. Obviously if your hair style costs you lots of time, and money involving regular trips to the hairdresser, then you might want to consider something more simple and manageable in the long-term. Two manageable styles of hair, for either sex, are either so short that you can wash it and dry it and it causes you no problems all day long… or so long that you can wash it, dry it and tie it back. If you opt for a hair style that needs constant visits to a hairdresser, then consider the time and expense this costs and decide whether something more manageable might work for you.

Make up is not worn by Plain people like the Amish, but you have the freedom to make up your own mind. In choosing cosmetics, stick to a simple regime that goes with your overall style and try to keep it so simple that applying it does not become a long daily chore. You will want to take every care that the cosmetics you buy are ethically produced and not tested on animals. If you have sensitive skin, only buy cosmetics and toiletries labeled as 'hypoallergenic'.

Again, jewelry is not worn by Plain people; even watches are very rarely seen. Nothing spoils so much as too much jewelry on an otherwise simply dressed person. An old Mennonite piece of advice passed on from mother to daughter is; always remove the last item of jewelry you put on before going out. Try it! Wedding rings are not worn by many Plain people, but this trend seems to be changing over the last few years.

Facial Hair

A matter of personal preference for men is whether to grow facial hair or not (in fact it grows anyway so the decision is really whether to shave it off or not). Razor blades and shaving foam are not cheap and modern razors seem to be made of so many different materials that recycling is impossible, so not shaving may be more environmentally responsible! Traditionally, Plain men have grown beards but not moustaches, as they were identified with the military. This can be seen in the traditional Quaker/Amish beard of Pennsylvania and Ohio, but historically, such beards were once commonplace as seen on any portrait of Abraham Lincoln.

In many Plain and Muslim communities, men are clean shaven until they marry and then they grow a beard. It is likely that facial hair also had a function in protecting the faces of men from intense sunshine, as they traditionally worked out in the open air all day long. They also helped keep out the cold ~ these functions might also prove useful today.




Laundry

Laundry can be one of the most time consuming of household jobs, but need not be the most tedious. Washing clothes the way it was done one hundred years ago is something none of us, thankfully, have to do. Even the Amish use powered washing machines (powered by their own small generators) and I personally nominate these wonderful laundry devices as one of the most important technological advancements of any age! Still, it is better to keep laundry to reasonable levels and ensure that the process is as environmentally friendly as you can make it. Firstly, don’t wash clothes unless they need it; outer clothes can take a good brush to remove dust and dried mud without going near the washing machine too often. Always wash on the lowest temperature possible and wait until you have a tubful to save money and energy. Experiment with using less washing powder and look at ‘eco-friendly’ alternatives; consider whether you need to use fabric softener at all (if you live in a soft water area you may not).

Clothes are best dried outside on a washing line, or if you prefer, a substantial rotary dryer. The joy of seeing a line full of washed clothes dancing in the wind on a bright sunny day is boundless! Whether you use plastic or wooden pegs (I find the wood can stain the fabric) keep them in an open basket so that you can happily, and accurately, throw them in if you have to hurry getting in the washing due to rain.




Ironing is best done as soon after drying the laundry as possible; cotton benefits from being still a little damp when it is ironed. Sort washing before ironing, so you do all the ‘hot iron’ items in one lot and then all the ‘cool iron’ items in another. If you own a television, why not record what you want to watch and look at it while ironing. On showery days I like to keep the ironing board up and ready; if it rains, I iron and when the rain stops, I unplug the iron and go back out into the garden!

Grow some of the herb sweet woodruff in your garden and put the odd dried sprig in between your ironed sheets; it smells fresh and laundry-like!


(C) Ray Lovegrove 2016 2022


See Also,


Your Simple Home



For most households the living room is the most important place in the house after the kitchen. As it is a place where the family gather try to keep it open and uncluttered, you may like to consider moving the television out of this room altogether to some less prominent room of the house. You might like to consider moving most of your furniture out of the living room altogether and replacing it with a long refectory like table with enough seating for all the family, it can be used for working, talking, hobbies, reading or even eating. If you can encourage your family to spend winter evenings around this table you will save energy use in other rooms. Even if all members of the family are engaged in different activities quietly, they are also spending the evening together in companionship.
Bedrooms should be the simplest rooms in the house. If you can possibly manage it keep everything out of bedrooms except a bed, a small chair and table and furniture for storing clothing. If your bedroom is full of suitcases and storage items, of cardboard boxes, excess clothing and clutter, then see what can be disposed of or sent elsewhere. Bedrooms do not need televisions or computers or any form of amusement other than a small pile of bedside books and a light to read them by. Keep your bedroom sacrosanct for sleep and closeness with your partner.

 
Energy in the home

The simple home must also be a green home, make sure that your home is up to standard on insulation and that you do not waste energy. If you are able, strongly consider moving away from fossil fuel to wood to provide winter space heating and hot water. Get in the habit of keeping in that warm air that you have paid for by closing all internal doors, especially at night (this is a good fire precaution as well). When it gets dark in the colder months, make sure that all curtains are drawn to conserve heat. If you get cold sitting down in the evenings then cover your legs with a blanket rather than turning up the heating. Bedrooms should be on the cool side, but if your bedroom is bordering on Arctic conditions try using a hot water bottle or electric blanket both cheaper that heating the room. The most important way of keeping warm in your home is dressing properly, it will also save you money!

As for choice of fuel most of us live with what we have, if you have chance to put in your own heating avoid fossil fuels and go for wood burning. Some areas don not allow the burning of wood for domestic heating, so check with your local authority first. A modern wood burning stove will heat the room, heat your water and run a central heating system. Wood ashes are compostable, and wood, as a renewable resource is in plentiful supply. Wood should be well seasoned (aged and dried) otherwise will not be a clean fuel and will cause problems. Find yourself a fire wood dealer who convinces you fully that they are operating ethically and that the wood they supply is from a managed source and felled areas are being replanted.

“Winter is the time for comfort, for good food and warmth, for the touch of a friendly hand and for a talk beside the fire: it is the time for home.” 

- Edith Sitwell 


Appliances 


Your home is place to live in peace it should not look, or sound like a high-tech control center for space missions. As an exercise wander around your house one night before going to bed, look at those red glowing lights, and the white ones not forgetting the green flashing ones, what are they for? You don’t have to be anti-technology to be simple, but you do need to question your need for every appliance. My thoughts are that a cooker/range, washing machine, iron and a refrigerator are pretty important, and essential for most people; after that it very much depends on your family unit. Dishwashers may seem extravagant, but if you have four or more people in your family, then they may save you energy and water, you need to do some calculations. Microwave ovens likewise may prove energy saving and certainly time saving for processing food. Vacuum cleaners may, or may not be essential depending on your floorcovering, if you decide to do without one it is possible, in most places to hire them for a day’s spring-cleaning once or twice a year as necessary. As for clothes dryers they are particularly expensive to run and totally unnecessary if you have an outside space for drying (I used to dry all clothing naturally living on the very rainy Welsh Borders, but now I live in Sweden I do use a dryer in the depth of winter). The important thing is to consider carefully your need for any appliance, if the calculations show that it will help you, or if you have a disability and it will make life easier, and then go ahead. The purchase of appliances needs your attention to issues such as energy consumption, noise and complexity, my experience is that the fewer flashing lights and buttons the more reliable the appliance. You may of course choose to do without almost any appliance, especially if you live alone when the local launderette or laundry will solve your clothes washing problems. When it comes to replacing electrical appliances always consider weather downgrading, in size or power, is a viable option, families tend to get smaller as children ‘leave the nest’ so appliances should get smaller too.

Storage

The Shakers have lessons for us here too, everything must have a place, and if it does not then it cannot be put away. It sounds simple, but many of us have things in our homes for which we have no real place. If we leave things sitting where they are, in the hall or beside the sofa, then after a few days we fail to notice them and to us they become invisible, but to others they look like mess! Try at all costs to avoid storing things in ugly containers; a pile of toys may look a mess, but a plastic box of toys also looks pretty awful! Invest in simple baskets and wooden chests, new or second hand. These will be more expensive that the ubiquitous plastic box, but will have years of use and can change function when you want them to. Always run a basket for things that need mending, a basket for socks that need sorting and a basket for laundry pegs, once these items have a home they will stop piling up in odd corners of the house. Laundry bins are vital and, if you have the room keep one in or near the kitchen for used table linen, tea-towels, and those odd items of dirty laundry that seem to come home daily in school bags.

Unless you need items on a daily basis, store them away where they can be found, but not where you need immediate access to them. Very small items like, drawing pins, and buttons and tubes of glue can be happily sored in screw to jars that once contained peanut butter or the like, then they can be kept safely in a draw or on a shelf.

An appearance of tidiness is impossible to achieve if draws and cupboards are left open, the rule to teach children is to put ‘whatever’ in the draw or cupboard and close it! When leaving a room put dining chairs under tables, put things that go away, away and never go upstairs or downstairs without checking to see if some object or item needs to make the journey with you.

Technology may help with storage, an mp3 player can store thousands of CDs and only takes up a very small space, and if you have no more room for books a Kindle or other e-book reader can save you ever having to build a new bookcase! Likewise if you have large numbers of family photographs you might consider scanning them into your computer. This technology can induce simplicity and reduce clutter, so think carefully if you want to adopt it. If you are keeping files electronically always take care that your files are backed up on a ‘cloud’ to prevent loss. Many free ‘cloud’ storage systems are available so do some homework.


Lighting

Make the most use of natural lighting in your home as possible; above other things it’s free! Draw back curtains in daytime and keep window glass clean on both sides avoid blocking any window light with objects. In colder months draw all curtains around the house as darkness falls to help prevent heat loss. For electrical lighting use low energy bulbs in all areas except where you need the brighter light of a halogen bulb for activities like reading and needlework. Battery powered LED lamps offer some very good solutions to the problems of lights for dark cupboards and for getting around the house in the middle of the night without disturbing the whole family. For family meals, try candles or butane gas lamps for a more relaxed atmosphere. Get your family in the habit of turning off lighting when not needed. For outside lighting, avoid lamps that light up the neighbourhood for no good reason, security lights are particularly irritating, if you need lights outside carry a flashlight or get some solar powered lighting that costs next nothing to run.


Some have decided to do away with electrical lighting altogether and rely on other methods of lighting their homes; this is fine, but do consider that, just like mains electricity, oil and gas lamps burn fossil fuel. Perhaps a more environmentally aware solution to the problem is to keep the electric lights but use wind or solar power to generate your own electricity.


Cleaning

Some things have to be done and cleaning is one of them, like most things that contribute to a simple life it is better to look upon cleaning as something that is part of your life and not something that has to be got out of the way so that you can get on with your life. Simple décor will help keep cleaning jobs in proportion, wooden floors need sweeping and washing, painted walls need occasional washing and windows need regular cleaning on both sides of the glass. Cooking ranges and refrigerators need very regular attention as do wood burning stoves. Sinks and toilets baths and showers need to be kept spotless and dusting needs to be done. Some other jobs will crop up once a year ‘spring cleaning’ is traditional but, you may want to spread annual cleaning chores throughout the year to avoid spending all spring indoors! It is possible that you can clean your own chimney; you will need rods and brushes and the investment in them, and the storage of them could mean that this is one job that you prefer to use a professional for.


As for cleaning products, stick to very few; ordinary floor cleaner will clean most household surfaces and can even by diluted to refill spay ‘bench cleaner’ bottles. Wood is best cleaned with soap solution and then treated with ‘wood oil’ or polish. As for paintwork on doorframes and window ledges, soap solution and a scrubbing brush works fine. Use only ‘pump action, sprayers and avoid aerosols altogether. Old style ‘natural products’ like washing soda, vinegar, methylated spirit and beeswax polish are invaluable and every bit as good, if not better, than over-perfumed and expensive braded items. After some time of being scrubbed with washing soda or soap; painted surfaces develop a faded and slightly worn appearance, it looks just fine carry on!


Outside Space


The space that you have outside your house will be increasingly important as your life becomes more simple. It is surprising how many jobs can be done outside if you have the will, fresh air is a joy so don’t miss an opportunity to take advantage of it. Both growing food and the eating of food, in the summer months takes place here. Again if your present house is lacking in outside space you need to give some serious thought to moving house. As for eating outside a table big enough for all you family is ideal. Cooking outside need not involve expensive equipment a charcoal barbeque stove made of recycled bricks and old refrigerator shelves works fine.

Your Moving Space

Since the middle of the twentieth century the idea that has shaped our society is that people must be mobile, not only mobile for work, but mobile for leisure. The almost universal ownership of cars has defined us in terms of freedom of mobility, freedom to work away from home, and freedom to travel for leisure, but car ownership has also defined them in terms of social status. If you live in a city do question if you need any car, public transport can only get better if more people chose it. A salutary lesson is to sit down and calculate the real cost of motoring; cost of car (total cost divided by years of use less resale price), MOT, maintenance, insurance, ‘road tax’ fuel, carwash, parking etc. Take away from this figure the amount that a season ticket for transport to and from work, and other trips, will cost you and you will then have a figure of how much it costs you to drive! Giving up your car may seem like a giant step, but it can be a liberating step.


If you live outside large cities then you may find that public transport is just not good enough and that you need to have a car, rural readers will certainly be in this group. The question for you is how many cars your family needs, if only one of you is working away from home, then perhaps only one of you needs a car? Certainly, chose a car that is no bigger than your needs, what is more wasteful that a large ‘four-wheel drive’ vehicle delivering one person to work each day.


Think carefully about your transport needs and decide if a very small car will do, given that you can hire a larger car by the day if such a need arises. Consider also if you can ‘care share with others in your neighbourhood or your workplace, the savings can be considerable.

Many groups in North America, like the Amish and Old Order Mennonites, have chosen not to own or use cars, but they are free to use taxis, trains and boats when the need arises (aircraft are generally never used). A move to ‘horse and buggy’ can only be a pipedream to most of us, but we can consider the Amish principal of living very close to where we work to avoid the need for long, and expensive journeys.



[c] Ray Lovegrove 2016, 2022

See Also;

Reject Technology?

A Simple Place

What you Own

Radically Change how you Live

Radically Change how you Dress




What you Own


Removing clutter

An important aspect of simplicity inside your house has to be lack of clutter. To de-clutter a house may take a long time, but is worth the effort and, once you have opened up some space you will reap the benefits. Many people get attached to objects, but many others are reluctant to get rid of things because they paid good money for them in the first place, this is a mindset that you have to get away from, if you paid a lot of money for something that now has to go then that is it? Avoid selling things, it causes more problems than it solves, the easy way to get rid of unwanted things is to give them to charity, small items can be donated to charity shops or community jumble sales and bigger items of furniture and electrical goods can often be removed from your house and redistributed to needy families. Above all, don’t throw things away if they can be recycled or reused by others, waste is never a simple solution to any problem, it just moves the problem elsewhere.



What to get rid of

Two years is a long time, if you have things that you have not used for two years, then chances are you can do without them. All those things that ‘might come in handy one day’ probably won’t, get rid of them. If you have more than the necessary number of items in your house, three televisions, two toasters, fifteen egg cups etc. then reduce the number to reflect your needs. If you have things in your house that were given to you as gifts and you don’t need or like them, then give them away. If you have collections of things that were once a prospective hobby decide if this was a passing fad, if it was then give them away. If you ‘attract’ items like ball-point pens, coat hangers, notebooks or keys that no longer fit any lock, then give it all away. If your children have grown out of equipment, toys and games give them away, don’t do this behind your children’s back, and involve them fully in the de-cluttering process. If you are friendly with a family with children just a bit younger than yours, then why not pass clothing and other items to them.

Recycling

For anybody truly wishing to lead a simple life, given our knowledge of finite world resources and pollution, you have a duty to recycle whatever you can. Don’t throw anything away that can possibly be recycled. Your local authority will have the means to collect together for recycling, paper, glass, plastic and metal they will also make safe and recycle used batteries and broken light bulbs. Most authorities also do a splendid job on taking electrical equipment and stripping out the recyclable materials. Charities collect any number of objects and materials including clothing, shoes, curtains, books, CDs, DVDs and spectacles, some also take used postage stamps and ‘brick-a-brack'. (You may consider CDs and DVDs redundant technology, but many still collect them.)

Don’t assume that what you give away has to be in good condition, charity shops generally ‘sell on’ unusable clothing to make industrial cleaning cloths or even blankets. Make sure that your house has recycling bins on each floor and make sure that everyone in the family uses them, sorting the recycling gives useful lessons to younger members of the family.



Reusing

Get in the habit of reusing objects and materials in useful ways, used jars and bottles can be used for bottling (called canning in North America) your produce, containers can be used for storage and waste wood can be used for burning in wood-burning stoves (if you don’t have one give your wood to someone who has). Unwanted CDs and DVDs, especially those given away as promotional material, can be used to help scare birds away from your growing crops. Worn jeans can be turned into shorts in seconds by using a pair of scissors and the removed legs can be stuffed and made into draft excluders for the gaps under closed doors. Knitters will be able to unpick unwanted garments and remake them into something more appropriate. The Amish use old shirts, dresses and petticoats to make those astounding quilts, if you can use a sewing machine, or can sew well by hand, you can make good use of much unwanted clothing.




(C) Ray Lovegrove 2016 , 2022


 See Also;

Reject Technology?

A Simple Place

Radically Change how you Live

Radically Change how you Dress

 


 


Glass Jars

For much of I my life I have been involved with a wonderful, and for most of us mysterious substance; glass. I should explain that before my life as a homesteader, I was a chemist and worked first in pharmaceutical chemistry and then as a chemistry teacher. Cabinets full of glassware were my playground and I never lost my love and respect for retorts, conical flasks, delivery tubes and bell jars.

Even before them my childhood was filled with what we call in the UK 'jam-jars' (and what I presume are called 'jelly jars' in North America) filling my bedroom with tadpoles, caterpillars, germinating seeds and slowly growing crystals.



My love of glass jars continues to this day and I spend much time in the summer and autumn, quickly filling them with preserves, pickles and bottled fruit; then, over the winter and spring they are slowly brought out, and their contents appreciatively consumed. You can freeze produce, it's true, but nothing looks so beautiful, or tastes so good, as home 'canned' produce. You can, of course, buy jars for the home preserving of produce, but my simple home policy of 'recycle, reuse, repair and reduce', leads me to reclaim used jars and reuse them time and time again. In fact, it is cheaper in the UK to buy a jar of Polish pickles, eat the pickles, then wash and use the jar, than it is to buy an empty jar!



My rules for jar reuse are simple;

·        Only use those jars which have labels stuck on with water soluble paste. Reject all jars in the store if the labels are stuck on with 'science fiction gum', it is too difficult to remove these gummed on labels, but you might have some luck by filling the jar with warm water, leaving for a few minutes then peeling slowly from one corner. Most jars with heavily gummed labels can only be sent to the glass recycling bin. If possible determine the way the label is stuck on before buying the product, wrinkly labels are generally pasted on and are the easiest to remove by soaking.



·       Even if you cannot reuse the jar always save the lid. Lids, as a rule don’t have as long a useful life as the jars themselves and it is always useful to have spares.

·        Keep a store of empty washed jars. Keeping them with the lids on prevents dirt and dust getting in and stops spiders making a home in them. You need to wash the jars before you store them and again before they are sterilised for use.

·       Always gently lever off jar lids, if you pierce them with a small hole they will be of no further use to you.

·        Never buy gummy labels to put on your own produce jars, always use paste which is easier to clean off for next time. You can make a paste from flour and water (adding some salt acts as a preservative), or buy decorator wallpaper paste and mix a spoonful with water. Keep your made-up paste in a jar.



How to use your Jars

 Buy dried goods in recyclable paper, polythene or ‘cellophane’ bags and empty them into appropriately sized screw top glass jars. Don’t use a jar too small or you will be left with half a packet that won't fit! Label your jars and store them out of direct sunlight. Use them for preserving your produce, jams/jellies, chutneys, pickles canned/bottled fruits etc. Salads can be made directly into a jar, with a little dressing, and placed in the refrigerator for later in the day, packed lunches or picnics.

 


More Uses

Jars make excellent vases (in fact, I like them better than vases). A jar with a candle in is a perfect table decoration, outside or in! Drinking from a jam jar always makes the drink, taste more ‘rebellious’ Cloches made from jars are excellent and the weight of the jar makes them fairly windproof. In my garden I raise runner beans, French beans and sunflowers in this way.


(C) http://www.seasonalgardening.co.uk


 You can keep some frog-spawn or tadpoles for a few days to give your children, and yourself, the joy of watching them grow. Choose somewhere cool and out of direct sunlight and then put them back in the pond. You can take some from the pond every few days to watch their development.


(C) John Stokes http://fineartamerica.com/featured/jar-of-tadpoles-john-stokes.html


"My earliest childhood memory is watching the sunlight through a jar of amber full of wasps."


Amanda Harlech

(C) Ray Lovegrove 2015, 2021