TAG | environment
When it’s hot outside and you’re wearing a t-shirt with a good sized print on the front it can be really uncomfortable if it wasn’t printed with a waterbased discharge print also known as direct to garment printing. There are several advantages to having a shirt that is printed using discharge ink. Some of those advantages include:
The ink changes the color of the cotton that it comes in contact with, instead of putting a layer of paint on the shirt.
Discharge shirts look like chic designer shirts that are being sold in boutiques and high end shops.
Discharge shirts are literally cooler. Since the ink changes the color of the fabric, the shirt can breath easier and helps keep you cooler when it’s hot.
Discharge shirts are softer. No more stiff, sticky ink on the front or back of your shirt.
Discharge shirts are more eco friendly. Since the ink is water based, it’s better for the environment.
Discharge printing doesn’t crack, fade or wash off over time.
So, next time you’re out looking at some fresh new clothes, pay attention to who the image was put onto that piece of clothing. If the image on the shirt feels rough and kind of stiff, you can be sure that it wasn’t screen printed with discharge ink. With shirts that have been printed using discharge, the image on the shirt doesn’t feel like it’s on top of the fabric, it feels like it’s part of the fabric. If you’re wanting some custom screen printing done on some t-shirts let us know and we can help you out.
Our prices and quality can’t be beat!
Boutiques · Clothes · Crack · Custom Printing · Custom Screen Printing · Designer Shirts · Direct To Garment Printing · Discharge Printing · Eco Friendly · environment · Fabric · Friendly · paint · Printing · Screen · Screen Printed · T Shirt
There are two great points about turning your home eco friendly. The first is that you will be helping to make the world a better place because you will be reducing your carbon footprint. The lower that you get your levels of trash and the less resources that you consume, the better off the Earth will be for this. You are looking to make as small of an impact as you can upon the environment to make sure that you are going to leave it in tact for as long as you can. This is not the immediate benefit that you will receive from an eco friendly home, however, which is what inspires most people to start adopting greener practices. The amount of money that you can save from an eco friendly lifestyle is significant enough to help you make a change.
You could first look to a few different areas when you are hoping to figure out how you can make the biggest difference with your eco friendly home. The smallest changes which you can make can actually have some of the biggest impact. The simple decision to start using cloth towels instead of disposable paper towels can make a huge difference in the final amount of trash output which you have in a year. You should also change the type of cleaning products that you are using. Traditional cleaners, while they may be strong, can have detrimental effects on both the environment and your health because of the products found within. When you make your home eco friendly, however, you can start using safer products all of the time.
An eco friendly home will also want to look at the levels of energy consumption which they are experiencing. Appliances are one of the biggest drains on making your home eco friendly, although life as you know it will depend on these appliances. If you make the switch, however, to eco friendly energy efficient appliances, you can begin to start making less of a carbon footprint on the environment. The more steps that you take to cut back the level of your consumption, the easier it will ultimately be for you to do your part for the environment. On top of this, the fact that you are using less energy means that you will pay less for your bills every single month.
Ultimately, turning your home eco friendly will take a commitment on your part to always do what is needed to help reduce, reuse, and recycle. You are going to need to do everything you can to help cut back. You will be immediately rewarded by having an eco friendly home, however, as the money that you save will immediately start to present itself. Ultimately, your change is going to be one which has a direct impact on both the world and on your finances. The more confidence which you have in your actions, the better you will be able to implement them into every aspect of your life and help make the world better one day at a time.
An Eco friendly home is going to give you the ability to save money on your monthly bills. Visit HomeEcoFriendly website to discover exactly how you can turn your own Home eco friendly.
Amount Of Money · benefit · Carbon Footprint · Cleaning Products · Cloth Towels · Detrimental Effects · Disposable Paper Towels · Drains · Earth · Energy Consumption · Energy Efficient Appliances · environment · Friendly · Health · home · Lifestyle. · Money · Safer Products · save · Tact · Trash
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Saving the environment by using eco-friendly cleaning products
No comments · Posted by admin in Go Green
It is hard to imagine this however most of us often use very toxic chemicals to clean our homes. I bet if you were to look under your sink there would be a couple of hazardous cleaning products that you use in your day-to-day cleaning routine. Now let?s take a moment to think about this; we are polluting our homes with toxins-cleaning our children?s toys, the floors that our children and pets play on, the sinks our children use to wash in, the bathtubs we bath them in, all toxic. Not to mention the pollution that these toxins send into our environment. If we were to look at it that way, maybe we could put a stop to the use of those toxic chemicals.
There are a lot of eco-friendly cleaning products out there in the market. Even Canada has been promoting eco-friendly cleaning products that can improve energy efficiency, can also reduce hazardous by-products, and use recycled materials. Simple chemical free cleaning solutions can be found in your cupboards. You can use baking soda and vinegar, lemons, and even a little elbow of grease.
Because baking soda is a rough cleanser, it can dissolve dirt, mildew, grease, and wax. There are a lot of uses for baking soda that we don?t even know about. For example: you can turn it into a paste and it can remove dirt and grime. Mix 4 tablespoons of baking soda with 1-quart water and this can be used as a multi purpose cleaner; it can even remove odor from clothes, carpets, and refrigerators.
Vinegar is also a great disinfect and deodorizer. It can also be used as a multi- purpose cleaner and even as a fabric softener. Just mix equal parts vinegar and water in a spray bottle and you can clean anything and deodorize everything you wish.
Since lemons are acidic, they can actually work as a bleaching agent and has antibacterial properties to clean brass, copper, and even white clothes with stains. They are also a good deodorizer for sinks and clothes.
Steam is another great way to clean without chemicals. There are many great steamers on the market that are simple to use. You just add water, plug-in the steamer, let it heat-up and push the button. The steam will do all the work to clean and disinfect. Steam also kills germs such as salmonella and other bacteria. It?s safe and cost effective. The only investment is the actual steamer which can run you anywhere from $30-$150.
Choosing the right tools in cleaning your house is easy if you give importance to the environment you live in-both inside and outside of your home. If you still find that using these traditional methods don?t pass your standards, there are still a lot eco-friendly cleaning products out there that were made without chemicals. Just make sure you read the labels to ensure that the eco-friendly products you buy are in fact chemical free. Some companies can be sneaky! However, in the end natural is safer and will even let you save more money than the usual toxic products.
Sabrina Rocca
Author: “The Ultimate House Cleaning Checklist Book”
For more great cleaning tips, visit http://www.housecleaningchecklist.ca and sign up for your FREE speed-cleaning course.
Antibacterial Properties · Baking Soda And Vinegar · Bleaching Agent · Brass Copper · Chemical Free Cleaning · Cleaning · Cleaning Routine · Cleaning Solutions · Dirt And Grime · Eco Friendly Cleaning Products · ecofriendly · Energy Efficiency · environment · Fabric Softener · Friendly Cleaning Products · Little Elbow · products · Quart Water · Recycled Materials · Saving · Saving The Environment · Spray Bottle · Toxic Chemicals · Uses For Baking Soda · Using · Vinegar And Water
8
A Way of Life: Toxicity in Our Environment and Eco-friendly Products You Can Make
No comments · Posted by admin in Go Green
Because toxicity has become a way of life, and we must breath and eat, we are continuously exposed to pesticides and polluntants, some stored right under our kitchen sinks, says a report from the Silent Spring Institute in Newton, Mass., and the Harvard University School of Public Health.
The study was published last October in Environmental Science & Technology, Sedona, Ariz., naturopath doctor Teresa Dale, Ph.D. says “demonstrates that we are exposed daily to a wide array of chemicals that affect our hormone systems.” Chemicals like phthalates and alkyphenois may heighten the risk of hormone-linked diseases like breast cancer and testicular cancer.
To limit your exposure, “read labels carefully, use nontoxic cleaning products and avoid using indoor pesticides,” says Environmental Protection Agency spokesman Dave Dergan. There are nontoxic cleaning products and pesticides right in your kitchen. If you have baking soda, white vinegar, borax, and rubbing alcohol in your pantry and bathroom, you have the basic ingredients to make your own cleaning products and pesticides that don’t cost you an arm and a leg. I have included formulations for making your own products from these items and many more at the end of this article.
There are plenty of effective, earth-safe cleaners that you can buy or make. Using these alternatives will reduce the toxic burden in your house and environment. By switching to environmentally friendly cleaners protects your health and that of the community you live in while reducing air, water, and ground pollution.
I bet you are asking yourself, “So why isn’t everybody doing it?” There are very few people who actually read the labels of the products they purchase and even fewer who know the impact these chemicals can have on our bodies. Most people do not take the time or have the time to research the chemicals that go into these products.
Not all “green” products are created equal, some have simply added essential oils to make it smell like the formula has changed. “You need to read the labels carefully to check for irritating chemicals, such as chlorine, ammonia and artificial fragrances and dyes,” says Dharma Singh Khalsa, M.D., a preventive-medicine specialist in Tucson, Arizona. “Buy cleaners from health-food stores or retailers specializing in environmentally friendly products.”
“Eco-friendly cleaning and laundry products are the next frontier of environmentalism,” says Marci Zaroff, former publisher of Macrocosm and CEO of Under the Canopy, an organic fabric clothing company. “It’s an inexpensive, easy and effective way to protect our planet and commitment to life.”
Here are some options to get you started onto the path of “thinking green”:
* CITRUS OILl; sold in health-food stores and home improvement stores, fills rooms with the smell of oranges and is far more pleasing to your nose (unless you like the smell of hospitals).
To clean or polish wood floors, dilute 1 c. of citrus oil in one gallon of hot water, and mop with a sponge. For floors that are greasy, simply use a stronger solultion. You can also clean kitchen counters and tabletops with this solution. Citrus doesn’t strip the protective sealants. On porous surfaces like marble or granite, only use diluted oil and it should never be allowed to sit on a surface, always wipe it dry when finished.
* TEA TREE, THYME AND LAVENDER ESSENTIAL OILS: these have been proven to have more antiseptic in some studies than phenol, the most common chemical disinfectant. Many disinfectants contain chlorine, which reacts with organix matter in drinking water to produce potentially carcinogenic trihalomethane.
To make a natural disinfectant mix 20 drops of one of the above mentioned essential oils and 1 cup of water in a spray bottle. Apply and let sit for 15 min. or until dry.
* BAKING SODA: Baking soda (or bicarbonate of soda), an alkaline substance is used in fire extinguishers, antacids, and sparkling water.
You can use it to clean your tubs, sinks, countertops in the kitchen and bath. Combine 3/4 c. baking soda, 1/4 c. of borax and enough diswashing liquid to make a smooth paste or if you prefer a pleasant smell, add 1/4 t. lemon juice to the paste; pour down your sink drain to deorderize and to unclog your drains you put 1/2 cup of baking soda in drain and add a cup of vinegar, wait 30min. and pour hot water down drain. I use this method once a month on all the drains in the house to keep them clear.
*BORAX: Borax, like is’s close relative, boric acid, has relatively low toxicity levels, and is considered safe for general household use, but the powder can be harmful if ingested in sufficinet quantities by young children or pets. Keep it out of their reach.
Borax is toxic to plants, so in the yard be very careful when applying borax onto or near soil. It doesn’t take much to leach into the ground to kill off nearby plants and prevent furture growth.
But it is great for rubbing out heavy sink stains, even rust in your stainless steel or porcelain sinks. Make a paste of 1 cup of borax and 1/4 cup of lemon juice, put some of the paste on a cloth or sponge and rub it into the stain, then rinse with running warm water, the stain should wash away with the paste.
You can also remove mildew from uphostery and other fabric by soaking a sponge in a solution of 1/2 cup of borax dissolved in 2 cups of water, and rubbing it into the affected areas. Let it soak in for several hours until the stain disappears, then rinse well. To remove mildew from clothing, soak it in a solution of 2 cups of borax in 2 quarts of water.
Want a way to clean your toliet bowl and leave it spakeling whiite without those dangerous fumes? Use a stiff brush to scrub it using a solution of 1/2 cup of borax mixed with a gallon of water.
VINEGAR: Vinegar is known as nature’s most practical liquid and is so versatile that you can use it in the kitchen and bath, laundry and garden, housecleaning and car cleaning, even pet care and personal care.
Damp mopping with a mild vinegar solution is widely recommended as a way to clean wood and no-wax vinyl or laminate flooring. Be sure to check with the manufacturer of the flooring because even when diluted vinegar’s acidity can ruin some floor finishes, and too much water will damage most wooden floors. But if you want to try vinegar on your floors, use 1/2 cup white vinegar mixed in 1 gallon warm water. You may want to start with a trial application in an incomspicuous area. Before applying the solution, squeeze out the mop sthoroughly (or just use a spray bottle to moisten the mop head).
To liven up dull wood paneling, mix 2 cups warm water, 4 tablespoons white or cider vinegar, and 2 tablespoons olive oil in a container, give it a couple of shakes and apply with a clean cloth. Let it soak in for several minutes, then polish with a dry cloth.
To keep your computer, printer, and other home office gear clean and dust free, dampen a clean cloth in equal parts white viegar and water, sqeeze it out well and start wiping. Before you start, make sure that your equipment is shut off, and never use a spray bottle; you don’t want to get liquid on the circuis inside. Have a few cotton swabs on hand for getting into tight spaces (like between the keys of your keyboard).
To make a scratch on a wooden tabletop much less noticeable, mix some distilled or cider vinegar and iodine in a small jar and paint over the scratch with a small artist’s brush. Use more iodine for darker woods; more vinegar for lighter shades.
To remove white rings left by wet glasses on wood furniture, mix equal parts of vinegar and olive oil and apply it with a soft cloth while moving with the wood grain. Use another clean, soft cloth to shine it. To get white water rings off leather furniture, dab them with a sponge soaked in full-strength white vinegar.
For the great outdoors, vinegar can get rid of bugs and ants or you can use it as an insect repellent and clean you outdoor funiture and decks.
Pour equal parts white vinegar and water into a spray bottle and spray it on anthills and around areas where you see ants. Ants hate vinegar, and it won’t take long for them to move on. Also, you can spray picnic and children’s play areas to keep ants away. If you have lots of anthills, pour full strength vinegar over them.
Going camping or fishing? Here’s an old army trick to keep away ticks and mosquitoes: About three days before you leave, start taking 1 tablespoon cider vinegar three times a day. Continue throughout your outing and you just might return home without a bite.
Before resorting to bleach to remove mildew on your deck or your patio furniture, try these milder vinegar-based solutions.
*Keep full-strength white vinegar in a spray bottle and use it wherever you see mildew. The stain will wipe right off must surfaces, and the vinegar will keep it from coming back for a while.
*Remove mildew from wood decks and wood patio furniture by sponging them off with a solution of 1 cup ammonia, 1/2 cup white vinegar, and 1/4 cup baking soda in 1 gallon water. Use an old tootbrush to work the solution into tight spaces.
*To deodorize and inhibit mildew growth on outdoor plastic mesh furniture and patio umbrellas, mix 2 cups white vinegar and 2 tablespoons dishwashing liquid in a bucket of hot water. Use a soft brush to work it into the grooves of the plastic and for scrubbing seat pands and umbrella fabric. Rinse with cold water; then dry in the sun.
RUBBING ALCOHOL: Be sure to not confuse denatured alcohol with rubbing alcohol. Denatured alcohol to ethanol (drinking alcohol) to which poisonous and foul-tasting chemicals have been added to render it unfit for drinking. Often, the chemicals used in denatured alcohol are not ones you should put on your skin. Rubbing alcohol is made of chemicals that are safe for skin contact, most often it’s 70 percent isopropl alcohol and 30 percent water.
Ticks hate the taste of rubbing alcohol as much as they love the taste of your dog. Before you pull a tick off Fido, dab the critter with rubbing alcohol to make it loosen its grip. Then grab the tick as close to the dog’s skin as ou can and pull it straight out. Dab again with alcohol to disinfect the wound. This works on people too.
The problem with ice packs is they won’t conform to the shape of the injured body part. Make a slushy conformable pack by nixing 1 part rubbing alcohol with 3 parts water in a sel-closing plastic bag. The next time that sore knee acts up, wrap the bag of slush in a cloth and apply it to the area.
This is just the tip of iceberg of ways to use eco-friendly products that you can make yourself. I have used most of these recipes for the past 10 years. They cost next to nothing to make and the results are fabulous. I use olive oil and vinegar to clean my furniture and I don’t have to dust again for a month. The solution seems to repel dust, just mix the olive oil and vinegar like you would for a salad dressing.
Angela is the owner of Coastal Computerized Information Services located in Savannah, GA. http://www.ccis.web.officelive.com
Agency Spokesman · Baking Soda · Basic Ingredients · Breast Cancer · Eco Friendly Products · ecofriendly · environment · Environmental Protection Agency · Ground Pollution · Harvard University School · Harvard University School Of Public Health · Hormone Systems · Kitchen Sinks · Life · Naturopath Doctor · Newton Mass · Phthalates · products · Rubbing Alcohol · School Of Public Health · Sedona Ariz · Silent Spring Institute · Testicular Cancer · Toxicity · White Vinegar
If you want to make sure that you are reducing your impact on the environment, choosing to buy eco friendly appliances can be a great way to start. Unlike other eco friendly products they can have a positive effect not only on the environment but also on your monthly utility bills and this kind of visible and positive effect can make you want to continue to buy eco friendly items. It may have a potentially steamrolling effect that can end up with you establishing a very green home indeed.
You should not think that you need to completely switch over to eco friendly products and appliances all at once. If you try to buy eco friendly appliances all at once the expense can be huge. By choosing to buy eco friendly appliances as older, less efficient appliances burn or wear out you can wind up with lower energy costs and enjoy the refunds that many organizations give to people who are trying to be more environmentally responsible.
Eco friendly products tend to use less energy to operate. If it is something like a dishwasher or washing machine, when you buy an eco friendly model it will often use much less water to clean the items. When you buy eco friendly appliances they may have wash cycles that you can adjust the amount of items in it and how dirty those items are. This means that you still get great cleaning power even from eco friendly products even though they use less water and electricity.
When shopping for eco friendly products such as appliances you want to have a look for labels that tell the amount of power or water (or both) that the items will run on. Often, if you want to buy eco friendly appliances they will have a label on them that tells you they have been rated as being highly efficient. This means you will end up paying or less wasted energy over the life of the appliance.
If you want to buy eco friendly laundry equipment, you should look for front load washing machines. These use less water to operate. Many will have a high efficiency designation which means that they use much less laundry detergent than a standard washing machine. They have a different way of agitating clothes that can not only clean them more thoroughly but they will also help the clothes last longer because they are not being subjected to the same wear and tear that they would be in a front load washing machine.
When you make your purchases, be sure to research exactly what kinds of rebates you can get for choosing a more ecologically conscious product. It may be something as simple as not paying taxes on the purchase. There may be mail in rebates and certificates that can entitle you to get a portion of the purchase price back. If you get certificates and coupons from your utility companies, check with them as well since there may be rebate programs that they offer for cutting back on the energy that you are using.
If you need advice on how to start locating Eco friendly products as well as how to buy eco friendly items which are the most efficient, check out HomeEcoFriendly. This website has a lot of important information that you can use to have a greener and cleaner home all around.
Appliances · Buy Appliances · Cleaning Power · Dishwasher · Eco Friendly Products · Electricity · Energy Costs · environment · Environmentally Friendly · Friendly · Front Load Washing Machines · Labels · Laundry Equipment · Look · People · Shopping · Utility Bills · Wash Cycles · Washing Machine
Dr. Alan Greene has tips to raise a healthy baby in an environmentally friendly environment. He’ll give advice on topics ranging from what to eat while you’re pregnant to how to make your nursery green.
Alan Greene · baby · Dr Alan · Eco Friendly · ecofriendly · environment · Environmentally Friendly
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Eco-friendly stain remover that works and that is safe to the environment !!!
No comments · Posted by admin in Go Green
Video shows a friend and I dripping dark chocolate icecream all over her shirt and then we clean the dried set in stains off with Winning Colours Stain Remover a new product spreading out across the globe…I found this environmentally friendly cleaner and other eco-friendly products at: www.winningbrandscorporation.com
Chocolate Icecream · Dark Chocolate · Eco Friendly Products · ecofriendly · environment · Environmentally Friendly · Globe · remover · safe · stain · Stain Remover · Stains · Video Shows · works
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Arizona Custom Cabinet Company Cabinets by C & F Supports American Economy and Environment by Switching to All …
No comments · Posted by admin in Go Green
The ideal home expedition
Do you want a cutting-edge pad in the city, a country seat or maybe a seaside bolt hole? Our writers scour the nation to help you find the perfect house
Read more on Times Online
Arizona Custom Cabinet Company Cabinets by C & F Supports American Economy and Environment by Switching to All …
After careful consideration of the American and global circumstances, Cabinets by C & F has decided to sell only cabinets that are American made and eco-friendly. Cabinets by C & F is leading the way for kitchen remodeling to be both green and beautiful. (PRWeb May 29, 2010) Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/ArizonaKitchen/GreenCabinets/prweb4067214[[[SHIFTIN …
Read more on PRWeb
American · American Economy · Arizona · Arizona Custom · Beautiful · Bolt Hole · C Amp · Cabinet · Cabinets · Careful Consideration · Circumstances · Company · Country Seat · Custom · Custom Cabinet Company · Custom Cabinets · Cutting Edge · Economy · environment · Leading The Way · Prweb · Supports · Switching
From a recession to a measured resurgence, Telluride endures
If we learned anything about ourselves and about Telluride in 2009, it’s that we, and this town, endure. This last year was defined in simple economic terms for us, and we learned a lesson: Even our sno-globe town isn’t invincible. Our region made difficult financial decisions as revenues that once flowed ebbed. We braced against a recession and swallowed the passings of our friends. But for all …
Read more on Telluride Daily Planet
Teres McClen Takes Eco-Luxury to the Derby
The McClen Fashion Group—an innovative, luxury, fine-living brand heightening awareness through ethical practices, procedures, products and services with the lowest impact to the environment—will join noted celebrities, athletes and community leaders at Ferdinand’s Ball to help kick off the 2010 Kentucky Derby. The annual charity event benefits Old Friends, a rescue and rehabilitation farm …
Read more on PR.com
Celebrities · Charity Event · Community Leaders · Daily Planet · Derby · EcoLuxury · Economic Terms · environment · Ethical Practices · Fashion Group · Financial Decisions · Fine Living · Globe · Kentucky Derby · Luxury Living · McClen · Old Friends · Recession · resurgence · Takes · Telluride · Teres
From a recession to a measured resurgence, Telluride endures
If we learned anything about ourselves and about Telluride in 2009, it’s that we, and this town, endure. This last year was defined in simple economic terms for us, and we learned a lesson: Even our sno-globe town isn’t invincible. Our region made difficult financial decisions as revenues that once flowed ebbed. We braced against a recession and swallowed the passings of our friends. But for all …
Read more on Telluride Daily Planet
Wearing the World’s Future on Our Sleeves
FIRST things first: Sustainable is NOT the same as organic. True, they’re similar and share a common goal, but the difference lies in their provenance or origin. Organic refers to items that are agricultural or farm-based in nature: crops, food, etc. Sustainable is linked to the environment, and may be lab-based.
Read more on Philippine Daily Inquirer
Common Goal · Crops · Daily Planet · Economic Terms · environment · Financial Decisions · Friends · Future · Globe · Philippine Daily Inquirer · Philippine Inquirer · Provenance · Recession · resurgence · Sleeves · Telluride · Wearing · World’s
