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Right As Rain: haute eco fashion – transformative threads


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We’ve uncovered a line of shirts made with TLC that are quite special … silk threads germinate and become designer eco t-shirts via Umbria, the green heart of Italy – a country renowned for its warm people, wonderful food and natural beauty … and now home to a unique line of sustainable eco luxe threads, Right As Rain, which just debuted online today.

Right As Rain creates one-of-kind tees, literally from the ground up, on their remote farm in Italy. The organic silk yarns are sourced in northern Italy, and the shirts are produced locally in Città della Pieve in Umbria. It is in these gently rolling hills where the shirts are – strange as it may sound – actually planted and eventually harvested. When I first read the press release I thought it was bizarre … I had to make contact with one of the partners to get my head around this new approach to a naturally-dyed, home-grown look.

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the backstory: 31-year-old designer Francesco Mugnaini and 41-year-old Scottish organic farmer Sebastian Runde melded interests and expertise to figure out how to “grow shirts.” As Runde tells us:

RAR4.jpg“At the beginning was the idea to grow shirts, focus on a different aesthetic – that of nature itself. We experimented with different yarns: cotton, hemp, wool – however, only the best quality organic silk gave satisfactory results.

We designed the shirts first and had them produced locally here in town – a little hill town of 7000 inhabitants. I myself and the farm are however really out in the sticks.

Once finished, the shirts are planted in the ground and depending on the season, are ripe for harvest after two to three months.

Now we harvested 250 shirts, of which some were “matured” to go up for sale. However, the number of shirts depended on our funds more than production capacity, as the silk and also the craftsmanship is rather costly.

The shirts can be hand washed in cold water with natural soap. Each shirt comes in an eco-friendly box, accompanied by a little booklet of the shirts history and care instructions.”

As you can see, Mugnaini and Runde design and cultivate one of a kind sustainable threads based on what might be considered a cradle-to-grave-to-body creative approach … they can be yours for $425/each. find @ right-as-rain.com.

Related: Umbria - via LonelyPlanet.

 

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Monday, March 21, 2011

alternative recycled fashion: Bone Skull steampunk cuff


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Are you a super villain … a survivor …or perhaps a little of both? This uniquely edgy wrist cuff from UCSA Designs (The Uncle Crissy’s School of Art) is an amalgamation of disparate and eccentric parts.

The antique watch motor that forms the skull’s base has gears still firmly attached and is bolted, not glued, to the cuff – which is made from a recycled faux-leather brown belt. Hanging from the watch motor is a single coyote fang said to have been donated by its owners (?) when the animal died of natural causes. The designer is adamant that “NO ANIMALS WERE HARMED TO MAKE THIS ITEM.” The fang is attached by a small vintage chain which runs through and loops around the watch gear. All very funky.

The bracelet fits a medium wrist, and has a snap closure. $60 @ ucsa’s cargoh.com shop

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zeroHouse: off-grid, sustainable prefab design


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The architectural design firm, Specht Harpman (Scott Specht and Louise Harpman), created the plans for zeroHouse a couple of years ago. Since that time the attractiveness of the home’s self-sustaining, off-grid design has only grown in appeal.

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The basic concept is that of a small-footprint, prefab home that’s easily and quickly constructed in almost any locale (no foundation), and comfortable for up to 4 adults.

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Some specs: the 650 sq.ft. zeroHouse is designed for small footprint, off-grid living. The prefab design features a photovoltaic array consisting of 40 high-efficiency solar panels capable of generating 7000 peak watts. Electricity is stored in 36 interlinked sealed lead-acid batteries. Lighting of the tiny home consists of a system of fully-concealed dimmable LED light strips with an average lifespan of 100,000 hours under continuous use.

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The home’s water storage and processing system consists of four, 550-gallon primary storage tanks, elevated for passive pressurization. Captured water is purified via UV and reverse osmosis processing, and the home’s waste goes into an auto-composter that produces odor-free, high-grade compost.

All very green indeed.

Related: previously on altCon(more eco architecture)

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monday’s eco news roundup


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