Showing posts with label Home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Home. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

New Moms Rejoice. This web site was made for You in mind!

In today’s unpredictable economy, everyone needs to save money and no one needs to more than moms, who find themselves endlessly buying clothes, toys, and strollers that their children quickly outgrow, lose interest in, or just plain can’t use. Enter handmedowns.com, the ultimate resource for moms to buy, sell, give away for free or donate their gently used items. On handmedowns.com parents can save money, make money and recycle all at the same time! Users can upload their listings directly onto handmedowns.com. Listings are FREE and receive priority on the site. There are categories for everything from infant swings to toddler clothing to nannies looking for work and there's even a link to a government recall site to help avoid any unsafe items from getting posted!
Handmedowns.com’s CEO and founder, Norah Weinstein, who is a lawyer and founded The Hollywood Reporter, ESQ., is a mom who was frustrated with searching online for much needed items for her now 14-month-old daughter. She told Curby “The classified sites that were out there had some great listings, but were simply not designed with a parent in mind. The baby/child catch all categories are not the priority for those sites. Moms are too busy to sift through thousands of listings to find the products they need, especially those in good condition for their children. Our goal for handmedowns.com is to raise the bar for children’s classifieds and create a more family-friendly atmosphere.” For info click on image. We love the site Norah. Great Job! ~ Curby



Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Monday, November 10, 2008

Curby, What do we do with our old Mattress: Part Two

So if you want to find a better solution for disposal of your old mattress, it's well worth going on line to see what's happening in your local community as far as recycling drives. These are often seasonal so especially check during the spring and fall months. Many non profits use the opportunity to raise awareness of their organization to the public and often receive free press or tv news coverage out of the deal. These nonprofits will work with recyclers who know what to do with your old mattresses. The foam is easily sold to companies that make carpet underlayment. The wood frames are chipped up and used as a biomass fuel source. Two other resources from the mattresses cotton and steel—require more research. However why not use your imagination and get together with others who have the same problem? Architecture for Humanity and Rubicon National Social Innovations invite entrants to create innovative ways of converting used mattresses into useful products. The competition aims to encourage entrants to form groups capable of creating a consumer product or instructions detailing how to turn an old mattress into a consumer product. Who knows, your old mattress could bring you fame and fortune for the effort but failing that at least the enviroment will love you for it! For details go to http://rubiconnsi.blogspot.com/ and good luck. ~ Curby

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Friday, November 7, 2008

Curby, what we do with our old Mattresses?

Our friend James over at http://www.yipit.com/ posed us with a quandary about what New Yorkers can do about how to dispose of their old mattresses in an Eco friendly way. We broke our answer up into two parts. Here is Part One:
"Hello James, We are glad to help and would appreciate the plug! You pose two interesting questions on this topic but you should be reminded that during this era of failing banking intuitions you'll probably find many people have a new kind of relationship with their old mattresses and have opted to keep them..........as safe deposit boxes!
The used mattress is the kind of item that is not socially acceptable to pass on to others in the on-line classifieds market (although many people try to) and if you decide to leave it out on the street you can open your building up to fines which could total in the hundreds or even thousands of dollars if it poses an obstruction to pedestrians. Also the sight of a lumbering, mystery stained mattress, propped up against your building wall may not endear you with the neighbors. The reality is that the way you dispose of an item like a used mattress is likely reflected in where you live. For instance our neighbors on Park Ave do not have this problem because they are able to make arrangements with an interior designer who makes the problem of disposal magically disappear but if you reside anyway else in the city it's a given that most of NYC's mattresses are heading to a land fill via the sanitation department!
The problem posed to the environment is that much of the material of a mattress is man made, non bio degradable fabric, most often made in china and it will languish in the landfill for decades. We are told for instance that the steel springs of a mattress are the landfill manager's curse. The springy metal won't crush and it bounces bounces back, getting stuck in the bulldozers tank tracks but overall, the mattress takes up a lot of precious space.
Its because of this that many communities are no longer accepting used mattresses in landfills, or are charging large fees for disposal. Mattress disposal programs are operating in California, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oregon and South Carolina, and new programs are being planned for other areas of the United States including New York: Part Two, Next Monday.