Get Sewing and Save Some Trees


We use a lot of paper in our day to day, but it doesn’t have to be that way!


[Creative Commons photo by Eunice]

Americans go through 700 pounds of paper products per person on average every single year. That’s a lot of trees! On top of things like paper towels and tissues, billions of menstrual products end up in the bin. In 1988, a field study found that 6.5 billion tampons and 13.5 billion sanitary pads and their packaging end up in America’s waste stream annually. You’ve got a weapon to fight all this waste right in your craft room: your sewing machine or even a simple needle and thread! Here are a few ways you can stitch your way to less waste.

Whether you make just one or two of these changes or decide to tackle them all, good on you for working to reduce your contribution to the landfill!

How else can we sew our way to less waste?

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7 Comments

  1. As much as I would love to be on board with the cloth menstrual pads, I just can’t - it thoroughly grosses me out. My ‘green’ alternative is the Diva Cup. I find that it works just as well as a tampon with no waste.

    As far as sewing to have less waste, I’ve taken to refashioning clothes that don’t fit (like jeans that are too short, into a jean skirt) or patching holes . . . etc etc. If you don’t have to buy something new and you keep what you already have, you get less waste!!

  2. I sew up fabric bags for both groceries and produce. (I’m in the process of redoing the tutorials on my site- will even include some videos to help make it crystal clear.)

    And I think the best thing about how sewing can reduce waste is how you can fix tears in clothing as well as reuse fabrics like thrift store sheets and divert it all from the landfill.

  3. Menstrual cups for the win!!! Changed my life, did the Keeper. Diva Cup is the same thing.

  4. I like the cloth pads myself–tampons never worked for me, and I figure it can’t be any grosser than cloth diapers, right? (No kids myself, but I know a bunch of people who do and are getting into the cloth diaper thing.) I haven’t managed to convince myself to use handkerchiefs over tissues yet, but my family does use cloth napkins and cloth towels for most things–except for stuff like cooking bacon.

  5. We haven’t used paper napkins or paper towels in - gosh, 15 plus years. I just switched to cloth pads - so much comfyier. And a diaphragm makes a perfectly good menstrual cup, btw. (and your insurance might pay for it.)

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