What does sustainability mean to you? Most people are aware that sustainability is important, but may struggle to decide how to incorporate sustainable practices into their lives. This week Team Booko has brought together lots of ideas on how to get started. Many of these ideas only require small changes – such as ditching plastic straws, or walking instead of driving short distances. Others are fun and creative, encouraging us to try making / cooking / upcycling. These books also show that sustainability are interlinked with mindfulness and decluttering – meaning that it is not only good for our environment, but good for our health and our wallets too!
A Life Less Throwaway: the Lost Art of Buying for Life by Tara Button
Tara Button was a work-hard, spend-hard advertising executive when she realised that her shopping habits – meant to make her happy – was having the opposite effect. So she started to fight back against the current culture of planned obsolescence – the idea that products should have a limited (ie short) lifespan – and instead, started a movement that celebrates products that are made to last. A Life Less Throwaway explains the concept of “mindful curation”, with plenty of tips and strategies to help us only buy things that fit the purpose, that we love and that can last a lifetime.
Simple Acts to Save our Planet: 500 Ways to Make a Difference by Michelle Neff
If you want to live in a more sustainable and environmentally responsible way, but don’t know where to start, then this book is for you. Michelle Neff has created a bumper book of “Simple Acts of Kindess” for our planet. Many of the ideas look at how to reduce waste, bolster animal and insect populations and lower energy consumption. These Simple Acts show us that even the tiniest change to our lifestyle – such as BYO coffee cups and shopping bags, and buying items with minimal packaging – can have a lasting positive impact on the environment. What’s more, many of these ideas – such as eating less processed food, and using meat and veg scraps to make stock – can also benefit our own health.
Upcycle: Turn Everyday Objects into Home Decor by Sonia Lucano
Upcycle is a fun, contemporary project book that shows you how to turn some everyday items into home furnishings. Sonia Lucarno has chosen starting materials that are available cheaply or for free, such as old dishes, glass jars, bedsheets and wooden pallets. Learn how to turn cotton sheets into a tote bag, wooden pallet into a coffee table, or glass jars into terrariums. There are detailed instructions including lists of materials. Start salvaging these bits and pieces from the waste stream and turn them into chic, functional pieces for your home.
Perfect Imperfect: the Beauty of Accident, Age & Patina by Karen McCartney, Sharyn Cairns and Glen Proebstel
Perfect Imperfect is a sumptuous coffee table book with a subtle environmental message – by celebrating the beauty of age and imperfection (some may call it “character”), it encourages us to purchase thoughtfully rather than frequently, to value curation rather than consumption. Perfect Imperfect puts a modern spin on the age-old Japanese aesthetic of wabi-sabi, bringing together contemporary design with well-worn objects. The stunning interiors feature a mix of comfort, design and thoughtful beauty, and are selected from homes, hotels, shops and studios around the world.
Low Tox Life: a Handbook for a Healthy You and a Happy Planet by Alexx Stuart
Alexx Stuart has distilled the learnings from her own quest for a Low Tox Life into a guide to help you live with better health and less stress. Alexx Stuart was fighting chronic inflammation when she realised that our hyper-industrialised society was contributing to her ill-health. She started to pay closer attention to product labels, and reducing the use of synthetic fragrances, disposable plastics and processed foods, and has seen a dramatic improvement in her physical and mental health. Organised into four intuitive sections of Body, Home Food and Mind, Low Tox Life is a guide that encourages us to make more informed choices about the food we eat, and the things we surround ourselves with – and highlights that better choices can benefit both ourselves and our environment.
100 Things to Recycle and Make by Fiona Hayes
It’s never too young to help children understand the importance of sustainability, and what better way to do it than through a fun activity such as crafting. Fiona Hayes, author of the popular Crafty Makes series, has chosen 100 of her favourite projects for crafting with recycled materials. Ideas range from the decorative to the practical, including toys, stationery, decorations and storage. The projects are helpfully arranged by the main starting material, eg cardboard tubes, egg cartons, paper plates and materials from nature, and include step-by-step instructions. 100 Things to Recycle and Make is a great sourcebook for anyone who spends time with children!