jeeze, julia!


Playgrounds made from trees!
February 7, 2010, 8:16 pm
Filed under: being environmentally conscious, crafting

My friend Lyndsay sent me a link today that she found about natural playgrounds made from human redirection of tree growth. Basically, it is encouraging the creative manipulation of saplings in order for them to grow in strange shapes! View the article she sent me here.

The idea stems from Plantware, a group devoted to creating Earthly constructions. Ladders, spirals, & in this case, playgrounds will be made from the bending & contorting of saplings. This doesn’t hurt the tree at all, but it does allow human imagination expansion, & is a thrilling way to bond with the natural world.

A playground made in this manner would…

- Give children real trees to play with. So many kids grow up in the city & are denied this right.

- Offer functional reforestation in a world where more trees are cut down than planted.

- Be constructed 95% from air, sunlight & rain. No gasoline-burning chainsaws, trucks, ships or waste. So cheap!

- Be self-repairing, earthquake safe, oxygen producing, & [would] provide a habitat for wildlife.

What a novel idea! Now go play in the woods — you can do this yourself for free!

Image from Plantware.org



Puppy Bowl 2010
February 7, 2010, 7:39 pm
Filed under: kitties

I won’t pretend to like sports. I did not have any intention of watching the SuperBowl today so it really was fine that I worked. However, I am pretty disappointed that I missed Puppy Bowl VI! I mean, really. Bunny cheerleaders & a kitty half-time show? What’s better than that? Next year I’m watching this…



Upcycled Bows
February 7, 2010, 6:48 pm
Filed under: being environmentally conscious, crafting

I’m loving this — Etsy artist x3Inspireme has found a way to turn all of those trashy teen mags into something oh so much more: reusable decorative bows for wrapping! Now if only she’d take all of my old magazines…

Photo by x3InspireMe

Save yourself from spending money on gift bows that will just be made immediately into waste! Get some here!



Facebook Fan Page
February 7, 2010, 12:03 am
Filed under: being socially conscious, crafting, knitting, painting

Although I do realize it is rather presumptuous to make my own “Fan Page”, I sought an internet space where I could keep people updated on the current happenings in my shop. I do love to post photos & things in here (& will continue to do so), but there are a lot of people in my life who don’t read or know about my blog. It seems like these days everyone is on Facebook, & so, that appears to be the most appropriate venue. Thus, the birth of the Jeeze, Julia facebook page came about. If you have seen & liked the things I’ve posted before then feel free to “become a fan” by clicking the link to visit my site. You can also have a look at a lot of my creations by clicking the “My Portfolio” category on the left of your page (I believe)!

Have a lovely night!



Meat Free Mondays
February 4, 2010, 2:49 pm
Filed under: Music, being environmentally conscious, good eats

Meat Free Mondays is a concept thought up by Paul McCartney & his family in response to our global climate change crisis. If you’re wondering what the heck eating meat has to do with Global Warming here it is in his own words:

“Ok, here’s the story on Meat Free Monday. In 2006, the United Nations issued a report which stated that the livestock industry as a whole was responsible for more greenhouse gas emissions than the whole of the transport sector put together.

I found this interesting particularly because people at the UN are not a vegetarian society and therefore, could not be accused of bias. They pointed out the following facts:

  • The Livestock industry produces gases that are extremely dangerous for the future of our environment.
  • The two main gases, methane and nitrous oxide, are considered to be more harmful than CO2 (methane is 21 times more powerful than CO2 and nitrous oxide is 310 times more powerful than CO2) so the data suggests that this is causing a highly dangerous situation for ourselves and, more importantly, for future generations.
  • Methane also remains in the atmosphere for 9 to 15 years; nitrous oxide remains in the atmosphere for 114 years, on average, and is 296 times more potent than CO2 – the gases released today will continue to be active in degrading the climate decades from now.
  • Livestock production is land intensive: a recent report by Greenpeace on land use in the largest meat producing state in Brazil found that livestock (cattle) production was responsible for vastly more deforestation than soya.
  • A third of all cereal crops, and well over 90% of soya, goes into animal feed, not food for humans. Eating less meat will free up a lot of agricultural land which can revert to growing trees and other vegetation, which, in turn, will absorb more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
  • Livestock production is water intensive: it accounts for around 8% of global human water use. The estimated 634 gallons of fresh water required to produce one 5.2 ounce (150g) beef burger would be enough for a four-hour shower. For comparison, the same quantity of tofu requires 143 gallons of water to produce.
  • Livestock production is the largest source of water pollutants, principally animal wastes, antibiotics, hormones, chemicals from tanneries, fertilizers and pesticides used for feed crops, and sediments from eroded pastures.
  • The meat industry is set to double its production by 2050 so even if they manage to lower emissions by 50%, as they have promised to, we will still be in the same position.

With this in mind, my family and I launched Meat Free Monday in the UK, an idea which has been gaining support from people like Tom Parker-Bowles who, after a lifetime of denigrating vegetarians, recently wrote in his Daily Mail column, “I wince at the memory of my boorish antics” and who pronounced himself “intrigued” by MFM: “There’s no doubting the plain common sense of the message…Meat Free Monday is something to really savour”. Another supporter is Al Gore who stated that initiatives like Meat Free Monday “represent a responsible and welcome component of a comprehensive strategy for reducing global warming pollution and simultaneously improving human health.”

Even a number of schools have already done this in the UK with great success. The town of Ghent in Belgium has a meat free day and, amazingly, Sao Paulo has one even though Brazil is a large exporter of meat. In Sweden, the government is now labeling food to give the consumer the opportunity to understand the dangers of indiscriminate food consumption and there are many more examples appearing online.

The point is that so many people these days are looking for ways to “do their bit” for the environment. We recycle – something we never would have dreamt of doing in the past. Many people now drive hybrid cars but most people understand that we cannot leave this important issue to the politicians of the world. Recently, at the Copenhagen Conference for Climate Change, this issue was not even on the agenda and so I believe it is once again left to us, the people, to do it ourselves.

It’s amazingly easy to take one day in your week, Monday or any other day, and not eat meat. When you think about it, there are so many great alternatives, for instance, in Italian cooking, so many of the dishes are vegetarian already and Thai and Chinese cuisine are the same. All it means is that you have to think a bit about what you’ll eat that day but, in actual fact, far from being a chore, it’s a fun challenge.

Having been a vegetarian for over 30 years, I find it very simple and in fact, tasty and most enjoyable.

So there it is! Next Monday – don’t eat meat and do your bit to save this beautiful planet of ours. For more information, ideas and lots of meat free recipes, go to the official Meat Free Monday website.

Thanks Goopsters! Thanks Gwyneth!

Rock on ya’ll!

Paul

Stella, Paul and Mary McCartney, founders of the Meat Free Monday campaign.

For readers in the United States, the US based Meatless Monday campaign also has a website full of helpful hints and recipes to get you on your way.”

So there you have it. Meat Free Mondays. This is one small step that I think we could all manage, after all, Gandhi didn’t eat anything at all on Mondays.



A Baker’s Doesn’t
February 3, 2010, 9:11 pm
Filed under: good eats

Okay, you guys. I wrote about my friend Chanel’s blog the other day, & tonight I’m going to mention the blog of another little lady I have met. Sarah Desmarais is a friend of Ryan’s from college, but she recently moved all the way from our humble old New Hampshire down to Florida & undertook the challenging personal task of writing a food blog! In said blog she set out to spend 13 months exploring the art of cooking & publishing 13 worthy recipes in each of those months. On month 4 now, she has certainly proven her intention, & I invite you all along for the ride! The beautiful photos accompanying each entry will have your mouth watering in no time & you’ll surely feel inspired in your own kitchen after reading about hers every couple of days. Here are some of my favourites so far:

* Marshmallows (Vegetarian ones! Gosh, I’ve missed marshmallows!)

* Granola

* Avocado Scramble (For breakfast, yum!)

* Hummus

* Spicy Hot Chocolate (Who knew?)

* Apple Butter

* Roasted Veggie Cheesy Orzo

* Key Lime Pie

* Zucchini Banana Bread

* Butternut Squash & Carrot Soup (Perfect for New England winter days!)

Now go raid your cabinets — that’s where I’m off to!



Project complete!

Ah, that feeling! I love the excitement that surrounds the completion of a project. Last night I finished the second piece I made for my friend Chanel. I’ve already posted a few photos of the taupe circular knit that I was working on. Now, prepare yourselves for a series of pictures of the final project.

I love this piece because of the versatility it offers. My “Do-What-You-Want” Circular knit could be a dress, high-waisted skirt, cowl, scarf, hood, or whatever else your imagination invents. For Chanel I added some buttons & made some straps so she could add them if she wanted to, but the straps wouldn’t be required if they didn’t fit her outfit perfectly. I love how many options there are with this piece & I was so excited when someone else requested one tonight! I’ll be starting on this same project for another fine lady, Dani, next week after I complete it for my friend Katye (so many requests! I couldn’t be happier about it!). Here are the photos from Chanel’s taupe knit:

I’ll make one for you, if you’d like! Just leave a comment below or convo me on my Etsy shop!

Another recent development: I have started a fan page for my shop on facebook (somewhat presumptuous, I know). I began getting facebook friend requests from Etsy users & decided that this would be a better way to connect with them without accepting strangers as my friends online. You can become a fan here if you like the things I make.



Frock Talk by Chanel Smith
January 31, 2010, 7:39 pm
Filed under: Style

My mission today is to give all of you fashionistas a heads up! You simply need to check out my friend Chanel’s fashion blog! With experience in journalism & life lived in London, I cannot more highly recommend anyone to you when it comes to subject of style. She’s got it down. So whether you have an interest in fashion, or you need a little inspiration, she’s the one to see. And, the most recent update at Frock Talk is a guide to this season’s up & coming trends. Who better to take fashion advice from than Chanel? Check it out!



Book Review: Still Life With Oysters and Lemon: On Objects and Intimacy by Mark Doty
January 29, 2010, 1:06 am
Filed under: painting, reading

My appetite swelled, upon commencement of this piece — my appetite for food, at first, then for literature, & eventually, for creation itself. It is an expression of the parallels between the passions of a painter & a poet. Both must materialize emotion & appreciation into something more tangible. We must transform the invisible into visible, & shed a light that allows the rest of the world to see what is illuminated previously only to us, but has always been here, right in front of the eyes of whomever is willing to look. It is our individual struggle to translate for others what has given itself to us.

It is also an ode to our own materiality. To the fact that we, just like a painting, or just like the half-drunk glass of wine in the painting, are just some other thing in this world. We all, collected together, along with our belongings, our homes, & everything in them (right down to jars of coins, or a suitcase that was once left behind by god knows who) are “heavy as history”, & we are no different than any of the rest of it. There are things in our rooms that lay so close to us every day. They wait for us to come home, lay still, wait for us to leave, they don’t move unless we move them. They’ve heard our conversations, watched us cry, seen us naked. And they’re here, waiting, laying, naked, too. Do we see them? Day by day we go places, we see the ground we pace, the papers at work, but when we come home we see not the most intimate things around us. What about the mirror I inherited from my great-grandmother? It stands (stood, now) in my bathroom, it’s seen many generations of me, but have I ever really looked at it? I’ve looked in it, through it, but not at it. The only time we have is now.

Not only the subject matter was enlightening, I also truly enjoyed Doty’s voice: loving & appreciative, thankful & respectful. He finds affection for every thing, & knows that they all — each painting, cabinet, door — have had a long life before he came around to observe them. He wonders, he looks into the souls of the things so many of us ignore (intentionally, or, perhaps, not intentionally at all). & he shows that this is what a real artist is — an appreciator, a spectator. We aren’t so much creating as recreating, so more people can understand the things that we do.



More plastic talk
January 27, 2010, 1:12 pm
Filed under: being environmentally conscious

I wrote the other day about how plastic doesn’t easily biodegrade (by easily, I mean it will take thousands of years for each plastic bag, straw, & abandoned toy to do so). And today my attention was brought toward another wordpress article on the same topic. Here you can find an article by the user “PlasticIsRubbish” which delves a little deeper into the explanation of degradation. It’s not boring scientist talk [sorry, Danielle ;) ], but it is a better explanation than I provided last week, so if your ears were perked by that entry I think you should stop by this person’s article to read more on the topic. Pam, the writer of the blog, also mentions tons of ways to change your daily habits so as to be more sensitive to our Earth’s needs in the list of changes she has made. These include cornstarch based disposable cutlery (“disposable” plastic cutlery is probably  one of America’s biggest offenses on the green scale), reusable water bottles (another huge offense — even when they’re recycled), and toothbrushes!

She also started to talk a bit about how these tiny little fragments of plastic still effect us even though they’re so small that we can’t see them. We may think that it’s okay that these pieces are still plastic because at least they’re getting smaller so they won’t have as much of an effect…but sadly, it’s just the opposite. The smaller these pieces of plastic get, the more of a problem they become. This relates to our food chain. We humans are basically the top of the food chain. That means that pretty much everything else is food for us even if it’s indirectly. We eat certain animals, who eat smaller animals, who each eat even smaller animals, & it goes all the way down to the plankton & micro-organisms in the ocean and on land. Plastic is now breaking up into such tiny pieces that it is being consumed by these creatures as well as by us & all of the other animals in between. Basically, we eat plastic every day & don’t even know it. Now, most creatures’ bodies can’t break down the plastic in their digestive systems, so for the most part it just comes right back out the other end. However, if there is enough of it the plastic will instead work like a dam, clogging up our systems until we die. Humans kind of luck out here because we have such extensive medical opportunities, so if this were to happen to us we’d most likely operate & have the problem fixed, but I’ve personally seen it happen to an animal before (my childhood pet Fluffy the hamster died because he chewed through the plastic bars in his cage), & it is very much a heartbreaking occurrence. Now think about that happening to all of the creatures along the line to our dinner tables. This is the direction in which we are heading.

If micro-organisms die then the animals that eat them will starve, & so on, & so forth.