Archive for December, 2009

What To Do With All That Wrapping Paper!

Friday, December 25th, 2009

With all the wrapping paper left behind after holiday gifts have been opened, now is the perfect time to practice the three Rs of producing less waste – reduce, reuse and recycle. Instead of shoving it all into garbage bags and dumping it, here are some creative ways to reuse and recycle it and reduce your eco-footprint at the same time.

NOTE: To remove wrinkles, carefully iron the paper on the “wrong” side using LOW heat – spritz with a little water, if necessary. Remember to first remove any tape and smooth the paper out on a flat surface using your hands. Cut off any torn edges so you’re left with a square or rectangular piece.

  • Crumple it up and stuff it in hats or purses to help them keep their shape.
  • Wrap it around a bouquet of flowers you’re taking to someone special.
  • Shred it to use as ‘fluff’ or pretty packing material in gift bags/boxes for future gifts.
  • Shred and use it in place of bubble wrap or styrofoam packing peanuts.
  • Cover a corkboard with it and hang it up for a festive, decorative place to leave messages and to-do lists.
  • Go online and learn how to make origami shapes and animals with it!
  • Cut a piece to size and slide it in the clear, front sleeve of a three-ring binder to create a decorative look.
  • Cut it into small pieces and leave them by the telephone. Use the white side to write down messages.
  • Measure your drawers, cabinets and closets. Cut the paper to fit and insert for simple, pretty shelf paper and draw liners.
  • If it isn’t torn or too wrinkled, keep it to wrap future presents. Reuse paper taken from large gifts to wrap smaller gifts.
  • Use it to decoupage pieces of furniture or flower pots or cardboard or wooden shapes to make decorations or ornaments for next year.
  • Cover your kids’ textbooks – if you haven’t already – or recover if the old ones look like they’ve seen better days.
  • Use it to make gift tags.
  • Place a favorite piece underneath a sheet of glass on your desk, nightstand or coffee table to add color/pattern to the room.
  • Mat photographs with it.
  • Glue it onto a sturdy box for reusable gift packaging.
  • Use small scraps to line greeting card envelopes. Trace the outside flap shape onto the paper and cut out. Leave it just short enough to clear the glue seal on the envelope flap.
  • Use it for kids art projects, i.e. make paper dolls and dolls’ clothes.
  • Make decorative snowflakes to hang up or to attach to blank cards to create this year’s thank you notes and next year’s holiday greetings.
  • Make a collage out of various pieces and create new, unique wrapping paper.
  • Frame your favorite pieces, hang them up and enjoy!
  • Use it to wrap and protect your holiday decorations when storing them away for next year.
  • Cover paper magazine or pencil holders with it.
  • Use it for scrapbooking backgrounds.
  • Use large pieces of it to cover shoeboxes and create pretty storage containers for Christmas ornaments and other items.
  • Use it in paper mache projects.
  • Cover small gift boxes with it.
  • Make bookmarks out of it.
  • Use it to make sewing patterns. Just draw the pattern pieces on the blank side and cut out.
  • Add pattern and color to your office by covering a few select books on your bookshelves with it.
  • Use it to line your cat’s litter box. It’s better than tossing it out!

Say Hello To Your New BFF…

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

Here’s what InStyle Magazine had to say in their November 2009 issue about My Style Fashion Assistant, an app for Apple’s iPhone and iPod Touch.

“Macworld.com’s App Guide reviews more than 73,000 iPhone apps now available to download on iTunes. We’ve combed through them to find the best ones for shopping, saving and amping up your style.

We love this app, which acts as your very own stylist. It keeps track of what you have, what you wear, what you want, and it allows you to mix and match it all. It even helps you plan for trips – it’s the ultimate fashion organizer!”

Features include:

* Take Pictures Of Your Clothing, Shoes, Accessories & Bags
* Add Items To Your Closet Or Personal Fitting Room
* Mix-&-Match Items With The Revolutionary 3-Panel Slider
* Create Outfits For Every Occasion
* Window Shop Online
* Item & Outfit Calendars
* Get Fashion Feedback From Friends
* Take Your Wardrobe With You Everywhere
* Organize Outfits In Specific Lifestyle Categories
* Plan For That Upcoming Trip, Event Or Special Occasion
* Get Expert Fashion Tips
* Receive Savings From My Style Retail Partners

If you’ve ever stood in front of your jam-packed closets wondering what to wear or bought the same item multiple times because you couldn’t find the original one, this app is for you. Save money and reduce the clutter in your closets by making the most out of your wardrobe with My Style Fashion Assistant. You’ll never had to say “I don’t have anything to wear!” again.

Charitable Gift Giving

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

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Choosing the right gift for loved ones, friends and associates can often be a tricky business so some gift givers choose to make a charitable donation in the recipient’s name instead of opting for a more traditional gift.

Focusing on the recipient’s interests, passions, lifestyle and what would be meaningful to them is the key to a successful giving experience. Consider children, as well as adults, when you’re thinking about charitable gift giving. Giving children a small amount of cash and letting them choose which cause they want to support is a wonderful way to encourage them to become philanthropic adults.

Here are just a few of the many organizations that are worthy of consideration:

  • UNICEF – Works for children’s rights, their survival, development and protection by providing them with vaccinations, food, education and much more.
  • Kiva – Allows you to make a loan to a low-income entrepreneur across the globe for as little as $25 and help them to start their own business.
  • Heifer International – Gives hungry, poor families livestock and training, providing a source of food rather than short-term relief. Recipient families are required to share their animals’ offspring with others, creating an expanding network of hope, dignity and self-reliance.
  • National Park Foundation – Helps educate Americans about the their National Parks.
  • National Foster Parent Association – Helps foster parents and children through advocacy, services and scholarships.
  • Trickle Up – Offers grants, not loans, to women and people with disabilities in Africa, Latin America and Asia living on less than $1 to help them launch their own microenterprises, while providing business training and savings support to build assets.
  • Smile Train – Provides cleft lip and cleft palate surgery to children in need, as well as providing cleft-related training to doctors.
  • Reading is Fundamental – Books, literacy campaigns, and reading to children.
  • Habitat for Humanity – Builds houses for needy families.
  • Big Brother Big Sister – Provides mentors to all children who need caring adult role models/special friends.
  • Sierra Club – Promotes conservation efforts aimed at protecting communities, wild places and the planet itself.
  • Doctors Without Borders – Doctors and nurses volunteer to provide urgent medical care to victims of war and disaster regardless of race, religion, or politics.
  • ORBIS International – Focuses on the prevention of blindness and the treatment of blinding eye diseases in developing countries.
  • National Center for Tobacco-free Kids – Helps reduce the number of children who will start smoking.
  • Rainforest Alliance – Dedicated to the conservation of the planet’s vital tropical forests.
  • Children for Children – Promotes community involvement and social responsibility in children from all backgrounds, beginning at a young age.
  • What I Did Not Buy – An online community where people choose “not to buy” and can see the impact of that re-directed money on poor people in developing nations.

I would recommend that you use Charity Navigator to help you to evaluate charities before you donate to them. If you’re not sure which charity would be most meaningful to your recipients, let them choose for themselves by giving them a gift card like the ones offered by Just Give, Global Giving and Charity Navigator.

Giving to charities is a clutter-free, feel-good, do-good way to honor the person in whose name the gift is made, and, really, how many people do you know who need more “stuff?

Comedian George Carlin On “Stuff”

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

george-carlin

At this time of year – as the shopping, buying, acquiring frenzy heats up – I think it’s particularly appropriate to listen to the late, great comedian George Carlin’s classic stand-up routine telling us the hard but humorous truth about all the “stuff” in our homes and lives. This clip is from his 1986 appearance at Comic Relief, an annual charitable event. George, thanks for the laughs and the reminder that the true meaning of life is not – and never will be – found in “stuff”.

WARNING: If you’re easily offended by off-color language or you’re at work and others can overhear your computer, you may not want to click on this link.

RetailMeNot.com – The Coupon/Discount Website

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

RetailMeNot logo

If you don’t already know about RetailMeNot.com, trust me, you’ll want to. RetailMeNot provides 400,000 online and printable discounts for 100,000 retailers and manufacturers; more than all the other top coupon sites combined. I have personally used them and been very pleased by the money that I’ve saved. Here’s a sampling of the companies they offer discounts for:

  • Barnes and Noble
  • Amazon
  • J. C. Penney
  • Papa John’s Pizza
  • Victoria’s Secret
  • L. L. Bean
  • Toys r Us
  • Babies R Us
  • Bloomingdale’s
  • The Limited
  • Drugstore.com
  • Kohl’s
  • Target
  • Gap
  • Urban Outfitters
  • 1-800-Flowers.com
  • Old Navy
  • Macy’s
  • Walmart
  • Pizza Hut
  • Sears
  • Bath and Body Works
  • Best Buy
  • Domino’s Pizza
  • Go Daddy
  • Turbo Tax
  • Walgreen’s
  • Zale’s
  • Saks Fifth Avenue
  • Home Depot
  • Blockbuster

Need I say more?


The 21st Annual New York Cares Coat Drive

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

NYCCD09banner

Did you know that 90% of homeless adults need a new, warm coat each winter because they have no place to keep one during the warmer months of the year? In addition, thousands of other New Yorkers are forced to choose between buying a winter coat and putting food on the table or meeting other basic survival needs. No one should have to make that kind of choice.

New York Cares helps those less fortunate by collecting nearly 70,000 gently used winter coats each December and distributing them to thousands of men, women and children who would otherwise be cold. Please donate a coat, host a coat collection or make a financial donation to this very worthy charity. Your support provides them with the resources to collect and distribute coats now and supports volunteer programs that will continue to impact the city all year long.

Clear Your Closets For Charity This Holiday Season

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

handIf you’re looking for a more meaningful holiday season this year, consider donating your unused possessions to charity. It’s easy to lose sight of the true meaning of the holiday season when everywhere you look you – and your kids – are being bombarded by ads to buy, buy, buy! Donating to worthy charities or organizations of your choice allows you to do something good for others and rid yourself of clutter at the same time. If that isn’t the classic win/win situation, I don’t know what is.

Donating is a wonderful opportunity to teach your children about sharing with others less fortunate than they are. Involving them in the decision making about which charities to donate to will make them more invested and enthusiastic about it. Now is a good time to help them understand why less is more and no one can play with 10 race car sets or wear 50 tee shirts! Be sure you explain to very young children that you are not giving away all of their toys or clothes, just the ones they don’t use anymore or no longer need. You know your kids best. If you think they can handle it emotionally, let them help to decide what stays and what goes. Adolescents can turnover clothes they’ve outgrown and most teenagers will be more than happy to get rid of last year’s anything!

Mom and Dad, you need to do your part, too. Check your kitchens and pantries for unused canned goods and other non-perishables and donate them to local organizations in need. Purge your own closets and be ruthless about it! Almost every storage area in your home probably has items that could be donated and not even missed. Check for little used or unused blankets, sheets and towels in your linen closet, little used or unused kitchen utensils, etc.

A word of caution about donations is in order at this point. Volunteers spend hours sorting through donated items to determine what can be used and what can’t. Anything that isn’t usable – stained, torn, or otherwise damaged – ends up being discarded and that costs the organization time and money, turning a benevolent act on your part into a problem. Please do NOT donate items of no value. Here’s a good rule of thumb to guide you: only donate items that you wouldn’t be embarrassed to give to a friend or family member face to face.

Here is a partial list of the kinds of organizations and charities that are frequently in needs of donations:

  • churches
  • women’s shelters
  • veterinary clinics
  • homeless shelters
  • soup kitchens
  • libraries
  • nursing homes
  • hospitals
  • humane societies
  • historical societies
  • schools
  • Big Brother/Big Sister organizations
  • scout troops
  • arts organizations

For more information, please visit Resources/Place to Donate .

Create a new tradition this year of charitable giving during the holidays and make them a time for sharing not only gifts, but your heart as well.