Showing posts with label unpaper products. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unpaper products. Show all posts

What is Family Cloth?

Family Cloth is the replacing of traditional toilet paper with cloth alternatives. 

What?!? 

Yep, instead of using up a roll of toilet paper a day (like is possible in our household of eight), you can wipe with cloth.

Why on Earth would I use cloth?
*  It's reusable.
*  It's comfy and doesn't leave annoying lint.
*  It stands up to serious wiping!
*  You can use it wet or dry.
*  It saves trees.
*  It's purty!

(wipes set by Holden's Landing)
Midnight Wipe & Mit Set - Holden's Landing
Here's how it works in my family.  It's not a topic most people are willing to discuss, but here goes. 

I'm honestly the only one in my family that is willing to use cloth full time.  My husband is not willing, and for what he uses toilet paper for, I'm fine with that!  My kids will use cloth if I remind them, or if we're out of paper.  And I'm a little worried they will forget and flush it.  Been there, done that.

Here are the not-so-gory details:

We keep our cloth diaper pail in the bathroom.  I use cloth wipes on my baby, so it wasn't a huge stretch for me to switch to family cloth.  I keep a basket of cheap terry baby washcloths (most of which I found on clearance at Target!) on the bathroom counter.  I use mine dry, and then just throw it in the pail.  Some people will use a special container, an old ice cream bucket with a lid, a hanging wetbag, etc.  There are many options.

(Yes, this is my actual diaper pail!)
blog 001

One concern is the smell.  To be honest, it's not terribly noticeable.  If you wash them every other day or so, there's not much time for an odor to form.  If you keep them in a lidded container, or a zippered wetbag, there should be no smell at all, if washed often enough.

(wetbag by Sweet Slings, LLC)
DSC07786
How do you to wash them?  If you don't use cloth diapers but are interested in family cloth, you can just toss them into the washer from whatever container you are using, wash them with a load of towels on hot, and you are done!  If you do use cloth diapers, it's easy to just dump them in with the diapers and wash together.  You can be very discreet, by keeping them in a pretty basket on the back of the toilet, or under the sink.  For a wet wipe option, you can keep a squirt bottle of plain water next to the toilet, as well, and you are ready to go. 

(Here's my set-up -- easy peasy)
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If you are concerned about the environment, there's really not much more impact in using cloth that in just washing your regular laundry.  Say you use 10 wipes a day for a week, that's still less than a load of laundry, and you would likely throw them in with other laundry every other day or so, anyway.  As for money savings, we go through a good 6-7 rolls of tp a week (at $1 a roll, that adds up) and now we are down to 4 or so.  I hope to keep chipping away at my family's reserve to use cloth more, because that's $2-3 dollars a week we are saving so far, which equals over a hundred dollars a year!  If we switched over entirely, we could save literally $350 a year just in toilet paper that will be flushed into our sewers, anyway. 

There are so many cloth alternatives, too!   Flannel, Terry, and Organic bamboo velour are popular choices, but you can use any absorbent cloth.  100% cotton is good, and washes very nicely.  Flannel is great and is cheap, and once it's been cut and washed a few times, it doesn't unravel too much.  You could easily serge or sew two peices together for extra strength.  My wipes are a mixture of terry baby cloths, flannel and OBV.  Very comfy and soft, and pretty in my little basket!

For a quick and easy baby cloth wipes solution recipe (that also works great for the rest of us) you can use:

1 1/2 cups of water
mix in a squirt of baby shampoo
a drop or two of your favorite essential oil (I use tea tree oil)
pour over a pile of folded wipes in a wipes container.  I use an old plastic one I got with some disposable wipes, and it's the perfect size for a stack of the terry or flannel cloths folded in half. 

We have noticed a big drop in toilet paper usage since I've been using cloth.  I have used fewer disposable baby wipes, as well, and I feel very good about that. Even if I'm the only one in my family that makes the choice to use cloth, every little bit helps!


contributed by Shannon of Gillyweeds

Featured Artisan: Joyful Earth

Joyful Earth is known for her wonderful selection of beautifully artistic, yet perfectly useful unpaper products.  Let's meet Robin, the artisan behind Joyful Earth!

My goal with Joyful Earth is to create sustainable, functional, fun and unique items for your home. From kitchen cloths, to baby and child items, to reusable snack bags, to tea accessories and more. I hope to help my customers find joy in the everyday items used in their homes, while ensuring ecological responsibility in my creations.

How has your business evolved since you first started selling?
(What got you started as a WAHM?/How long have you been in business)
I first started selling in 2005 under the name Tush Cloth Diapers. I loved being a diaper sewing WAHM but after my youngest child potty learned, I started to lose interest in diaper making and selling. In the summer of 2009, I took a break from Tush to delve into other reusable products for the home. Joyful Earth was met with immediate enthusiasm from my customer base and I've been growing and evolving the Joyful Earth line of products since then. In fall of 2009, Tush closed permanently as I decided to focus my energy on growing Joyful Earth. 


What is your favorite product to make?
My favorite products to make are the Tea on the Go sets. Inspired by an idea Lisa, of Healing Pixie gave me - I created this product to allow the loose tea lover to have their favorite teas on hand wherever they went. I love shopping for fabrics, mixing fabrics and creating unique pieces for my customers.

You make a lot of green products - what has been your journey into being green? 
I've always been green. I remember way back in high school sitting in a room filled with bags and bags of paper to be sorted and recycled. A group of friends and I had started a "green club" in our school (this was back in 1990 before being green was fashionable) and we took on the massive task of recycling the waste paper in our high school. The paper had to be sorted into colour and white paper, and we'd spend hours chatting and sorting. I'm not sure we ever got through all of the sorting, but the memories are still with me today.
When I had babies, it was natural that I decided to cloth diaper them. We had a disastrous time cloth diapering our eldest because I had not yet discovered the online cloth diapering community. When we had our second, I discovered Hyena Cart and soon after began sewing diapers for my daughter and eventually for sale. The rest is history so to speak.

What does a typical day look like for you? 
A typical day involves a lot of balance! We wake up at about 6am and I brew that essential pot of coffee. As the kids play or watch tv, I check in on my email, facebook and browse the online forums I belong to. Then we eat breakfast and I madly rush to get the eldest two out the door. On a good day, the youngest naps while the middle child is in preschool. I use this time to package orders and do a bit of sewing. Close to lunch we head out to the school to pick up the middle child and then back home for lunch and a bit of housework. My partner comes home at 1:00 and I get busy sewing for the rest of the afternoon. Generally, my husband will do most of the supper prep as I finish up photos and listings. I also have an out of the home job that I go to 2 days per week. Saturday and Sunday are a mix of activities, working out and sewing. It sounds like I am very busy, but really its a nice relaxed routine that we all enjoy! 



What inspires you?
I wish I could say that I am inspired by nature or something more artistic, but it's just every day life that inspires me. The idea for Joyful Earth came while I was shopping for groceries and yet again forgot to bring my reusable grocery bags. I felt that if I had something beautiful and functional, I'd be more inclined to remember to bring them. 



What is your most favorite thing you've ever made? 

Its really hard to narrow this down to just ONE thing. I've created some amazing dye work for diapers and unpaper products and some of tea wallets I've made have been really difficult to part with. If I were to narrow this down to one piece, it would likely have to be the Heather Ross Mendocino mermaids shower curtain hanging in my bathroom! So rarely do I find time to create things for our home, I am especially proud of this piece.

Thank you, Robin, for sharing your world with us!  

Stock up on Joyful Earth's unpaper products for your home at 
http://joyfulearth.etsy.com
http://joyfulearth.ca 



and be sure to join the Joyful Earth fanpage for a change to win a custom mini tea on the go set - you pick fabrics! http://facebook.com/joyfulearth