Category: Eco Fashion & Beauty

  • Review: Surface Hair Care (Vegan, Organic, Gluten-Free)

    Review: Surface Hair Care (Vegan, Organic, Gluten-Free)

    portrait

    “I hope your hair curls naturally, does it?”

    “Yes, darling, with a little help from others.”

    Oscar Wilde, ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’

     

    I have spent my life trying to coax curls from my classically Asian stick-straight baby-fine hair. I have used curlers. I have used curling irons. I have had perms, salon-inflicted and self-inflicted and spouse-inflicted, all bad. By the end of the day I always had stick-straight Asian hair. Only now, with frizz.

    And then completely out of the blue a few months back, a decade after I’d stopped really caring about my hair at all: waves.

    I am now the proud bearer of naturally wavy hair.

    I don’t know if it’s hormones (I also now have the acne one associates with being 16; personally, I’d rather have the hips I had then) or the cumulative effect of all the hair coloring I’ve done over the years or just a very effectively multi-tasking haircut, but I’ll take it. And I’ve become somewhat obsessed with how I can encourage the most curl with the least amount of effort.

    I may be vain, but I am also lazy.

    vegan haircareGiven a choice of products to review from Surface Hair Health Art, I went with Taffy Whip— a sculpting cream that texturizes for curly or straight effect.

    Now, I have used it to straighten my hair, now that I think about it (meaning I worked it in my hair and then blew it dry by aiming the dryer down the hair shaft. I don’t have the patience for things like straight irons, or hairbrushes) and it did result in nice straight, unfrizzy hair. But I don’t find straight hair interesting so I’m moving on.

    Please see Exhibit A: above featured photo. (Yes, the dog is photobombing us and yes, I still have braces.) My hair is usually just like Cassie’s, only frizzy and usually striped with Manic Panic red. I’m overdue for a salon visit.

    But on Thanksgiving I had nice curly hair. And all I did was put a dime-sized amount of Taffy Whip on my hands, rub them together, and scrunch it into my hair. It dried about 95% of the way naturally, I repeated the dime-size process again, then hit my hair with the hair dryer on low for about 2 minutes to finish drying. And yippee skippee: bouncy, soft curls that stuck around until the end of the day, withstanding the repeated blasts of heat and humidity from turkey-basting and sweet potato baking.

    Also, it smells nice. Not so much like taffy, as it is like hard candy when it’s cooking. That’s a really fine distinction. Let’s say it smells sweet but very light and not at all offensive (my sensitivity to fragrance being well-documented at this point).

    About the Surface product line:

    • Vegan. Organic. Gluten-free.
    • Cruelty-free, never tested on animals.
    • No Sodium Laurel Sulfate. No Sodium Laureth Sulfate. No parabens. No petrochemicals. No added dyes. And no animal or wheat protein.
    • Made with sustainably harvested ingredients and certified organic botanicals.
    • Environmentally friendly packaging (according to the website. No real details given).
    • Portion of profits go to sponsor a child through World Vision.

    Does gluten-free make a difference when it’s going on your skin as opposed to into your stomach? I honestly don’t know, but I’m thinking that if you avoid gluten, avoiding it everywhere makes a heck of a lot of sense. Please feel free to agree or disagree in the comments. I have no horse in that race.

    In short: great hair product that doesn’t knock you over with fragrance and does exactly what it claims to do, without any toxic ingredients! I know, I can barely believe it myself.

    Surface makes hair product lines dedicated to strengthening, hydrating, awakening (for scalp health & thinning hair), styling, and protein smoothing. It looks to be sold only in salons, you can search for a retail location near you here.

    Now, tell me how pretty my curly hair is. Go on.

    I’ve been waiting 35 years to hear it 🙂

    Disclosure: This review was made possible by Mom Spark Media. Thoughts are my own. Hair is my own. No compensation was received other than product to try out for review purposes.

     

  • Compostable Pumas, Clothes Made from Milk, More: Fashion Friday

    Compostable Pumas, Clothes Made from Milk, More: Fashion Friday

    grade school fashion

    One should either be a work of art, or wear a work of art.
    -Oscar Wilde

    Found some interesting headlines about eco-fashion this week: enjoy!

    (Photo is of Cass in a hand-me-down dress with headband made of recycled materials. Friendship bracelet from Kelly at Design Crush. The purse was a present from Danielle Liss. This is how she dresses to go grocery shopping.)

     

    Puma’s New Tack on Sustainable Consumption:
    Compostable Clothes

    “In the biological cycle, I can make shoes and shirts that are compostable so I can shred them and bury them in the back garden. We are working on products that meet these two criteria.”

    Why is this not already a thing? In any case, I love my Pumas and I’m happy to love them even more.

     

    Anke Domaske, German Fashion Designer, Creates Environmentally Friendly Clothing Made From Milk

    After two years of trial and error, working with a research lab, Domaske and her team of six finally landed on a process of reducing milk to a protein powder that is then boiled and pressed into strands that can be woven into a fabric… She uses only organic milk that cannot be consumed because it has failed Germany’s strict quality standards.

    And? AND?!  Two pounds of fabric can be produced using only 2 liters (a half gallon) of water. Two pounds of cotton? OVER 10,000 LITERS OF WATER.

    This is full of the awesomesauce. And by awesomesauce I mean milk. It does a body good… inside and out.

     

    T-Shirt Remix:
    Recycling America’s Used Clothes for Social Impact

    “Our consumption is so rampant that we are dumping 95 percent of our clothes in the developing world,” Lohr says. The clothes we buy here in the U.S. and barely use—like that bar mitzvah party-favor tee—end up in thrift stores, which sell their excess in bulk to third-world distributors, supplying a global chain of used goods.

    The good folks at Project Repat are raising money to launch the No More New project: paying workers in Kenya a fair wage to rework our cast-off clothes into bags and scarves. They’ll retail for $30, and include a donation to a nonprofit. (The pilot plan just involved restamping old shirts and reselling them for $25. They sold 500, raising enough money to build a solar-powered computer lab in Kenya and put five girls through school for one year in Tanzania. HOW HARD DOES THAT ROCK.) You can be a part of this innovative project and help back the funding by donating $1 or more.

     

    Over-Consumption Invokes the Six Items or Less Experiment

    Surveys show that most women own seven pairs of jeans but wear only four regularly and buy approximate 50 percent more shoes than they need.

    ‘Tis the season for feeling kinda gross and crappy about rampant commercialism and the GIMMEs. Could you go for a month only wearing six items from your closet? Chances are, you trend toward your favorite few anyway. There is an official 6 Items project underway, but you might want to try it just for fun. (Underoos, socks & shoes, bathing suits, accessories, workout gear, uniforms, coats and sleepwear don’t count towards your six, and you’re allowed multiples of the exact same item, which makes this SO EASY for me). It’s like the Uniform Project but less intense… using clothes you already have and are comfortable with.

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    Thus concludes this week’s episode of Eco Fashion Friday.

    Stay tuned until the next time I remember that I like to do this on Fridays.

    If you liked this, leave me a comment! Maybe that will help me remember. 🙂

     

  • Earthies Footwear: Review & Giveaway

    Earthies Footwear: Review & Giveaway

    jasko earthies

    How tall am I?

    Honey, with hair, heels and attitude

    I’m through this damned roof.

    -RuPaul

    I really, really like shoes.

    Buying anything is sort of an ordeal with me. I research. I weigh needs, whether we have the money right now, whether we might need that money later. I weigh company ethics, the materials used, the footprints. With food I weigh origin, nutrition, packaging, whether anyone is likely to really eat it.

    I believe in paying the money for good shoes. Unhappy feet make for unhappy lives.

    But? I tend to take FOREVER to choose shoes. I’m super picky. They need to be badass. They have to be tough enough to inspire me to walk the goddess walk. They have to be built to last, because I only buy one pair a year. They have to be comfortable enough for me to take long walks in, to be on my feet all day in, to skip down the street in, Laverne & Shirley style. And they have to fit right, which is super hard with my flappy frog feet (long, narrow, skinny ankles, wider at the toe).

    TRIVIA MOMENT: I have also been known to buy beautiful shoes and display them on a shelf like artwork because I can’t wear them. Not in recent years. But I’ve done it. More than once. I can’t wear an uncomfortable shoe. But I can admire it.

    Earthies shoes are that rare marriage of stylish and comfortable. For realz. I did have to try on a few different sizes and styles to get a perfect fit, as they are generously sized for width— not overly so, but enough that in open-toed crisscross heels I was sliding around a bit. The pair I settled on are the Jasko ankle booties pictured above, and they give me a lovely height in the wideleg jeans I bought and hadn’t got around to hemming yet:

     

    jasko earthies

     

    What I love about a nice stacked tall heel is the swagger. I love clomping around in a good sturdy heel, and I love that these are laid-back enough to wear with my jeans, yet elegant enough to wear with a dress. Double prizes!

    Usually a day in my heels leaves me whimpering and with screaming calves. Not so with these bad boys. These are like hardcore orthopedic comfort. Like walking on attitude-inspiring, prescribed arch supporting pillows.

    What differentiates an Earthies® style from a conventional heeled offering is a unique “wellness” footbed. The footbed includes a cupped heel, enhanced arch support and a cradled toe box – each of which are designed to work in concert to help distribute weight more evenly across the foot and body. The result? A collection of trend-right silhouettes from sassy pumps to faux fur-lined booties that deliver comfort in the most unexpectedly wonderful way.

    earthies giveaway
    I'm totally wearing a dress here, but my photographer failed to include it

    Earthies are part of the Earth, Inc. brand— an on-trend extension of their shoes and clothing lines that strive to use materials and design processes that are gentle on the environment.

    The negative heel and wellness footbed debuted in 1970, and were designed to improve posture, reduce joint stress and open breathing passages by mimicking the yoga ‘Mountain’ pose. That’s sort of awesome, no?

    The selection runs from casual to fashion-y to athletic to vegan to men’s styles, and I see about 15 pair that I really really like.

    And you know they won’t wind up sitting on a shelf. These are shoes for living in.

    Wanna win a pair of Earthies?

    I thought you might.

    Just follow the directions below (if you’re reading this in RSS or email you might have to come visit the actual page. It’s nice here!).

    And just a thought, you should totally like the Earthies fan page on the Facebook. Because I’m not the only one running a giveaway, people. Keep an eye on that wall and keep trying to win these suckers!

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