On pins and needles around your Valentine?   Channel that creative energy with this super sweet DIY project…

A Valentine’s Day pin cushion!  Brought to you by the RE-Stitch studio of FBR’s Alina Butnaru.

Sewing Level: Intermediate

Materials:

  • Fabric of choice (satin, velvet, cotton blends work great)
  • Sewing machine (one that embroiders, if you’ve got it!)
  • Pattern paper
  • Tissue paper (small piece)
  • Pencil
  • Pillow stuffing/filling
  • Cutting Mat
  • Ribbon  (wide enough to embroider)
  • Rotary Cutter
  • Fabric scissors
  • Pinking shears
  • Pins
  • Iron

 

1) Make your pattern piece.  Fold a piece of pattern paper in half, using the fold as your center line trace your desired heart shape and cut!  With a pencil, add 1/4″ to 3/8″ seam allowance.

2) Cut your fabric.  Fold or layer your fabric in order to cut 2 pieces at once.  Pin your pattern piece in place.  Using your cutting mat and rotary tool, cut around your pattern.

3) Embroider your ribbon.  Cut a piece of ribbon the width of your heart.  Pin your ribbon to a scrap piece of tissue paper.  If you have a sewing machine that can embroider, decide on a good font, a cute saying and go for it.  If not, create it yourself!  This is DIY after all… Rip off the excess tissue.

4) Press ribbon with an iron and cut to the desired size.  Using the pinking shears, give the ribbon a decorative edge before pinning in place to the top layer of your heart.

5) Sew ribbon.

6) Sew your heart.  Sew wrong sides together (NOT inside out, like most sewing projects).  Make sure to leave an opening for the filling.

7) Add filling.  Make sure it’s well stuffed so it can hold lots of pins!

8) Sew pillow closed.  Pick up where you left off before and finish closing the gap at the bottom of your heart.

9) With the pinking shears, cut around the seam allowance of your heart giving it a creative finished edge.

10) Use it and love it!  The perfect gift for a crafty Valentine or something practical and sweet for your own future projects.  Thanks Alina!

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Ta-Da! New from Dog Tag Designs

Last week we took a peek into the FBR studio of Resident Artist Tyagi SchwartzDog Tag Designs.  Check out his newly upcycled collection in the RE-Gallery!

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Tyagi upcycled this table from a mural that was donated to FBR, an old metal picture frame (super sturdy!) and construction materials we had lying around.  Tyagi brands all of his designs with a dog tag naming the date and location where each piece was created.  Way cool!

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Come One, Come All… The Super Fun Superfund Variety Show!

Tomorrow night, Sat. 2/11, 8PM.  $8 gets you in the door + a 10% coupon for a future FBR purchase.

Be there or be square… hope to see ya!

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For those of you who don’t already know, Blissful Bedrooms  is a charitable, not-for-profit organization composed entirely of volunteers who are dedicated to enhancing the quality of life of young individuals with disabilities.  Blissful Bedrooms’ volunteer team does a total make-over of their recipients’ bedrooms constructing – quite literally – the rooms of their dreams.  We just love the work that they do and are always happy to donate with materials and supplies.  Yesterday, Co-Founder Alex and Tom, a member of the Bedrooms team, stopped by the SHOP to pick up a few things for their latest event – a Valentine’s-themed art show and fundraiser at the Z Hotel in Long Island City.  They left happily with 30 yards of fabric, picture frames and some art supplies we know they’ll put to good use.  Looks like it’s going to be great!  Check out this flyer to attend…


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Spotlight: Derick Melander

FBR regularly donates to 9 local charities, one of which – Wearable Collections – has provided materials for local artist Derick Melander‘s incredible art installations.  In 2009, community volunteers helped the artist to create “Into The Fold“, a monumental sculpture from 3,615 pounds of second hand clothing, at Brooklyn’s Borough Hall.  Why 3,615 pounds?  That’s the amount of textile waste created by New Yorkers every 5 minutes.  Your work is inspiring Derick, we love it!  Check out a photo of another one of Derick’s pieces, “Silence”…

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Sneak Peak! @ Dog Tag Designs

Let’s take a peek at what’s coming together in the workshop of Resident Artist Tyagi Schwartz (Dog Tag Designs)…

We recently received a donation of giant! (10 ft x 8 ft) panels – part of an even-bigger graffiti mural.  From the striked set, Tyagi saw possibility and had the great idea to create tables from the beautiful – and unused – artwork.  Tyagi first selected sections from the mural and cut them into various table-top pieces.

Using – exclusively – materials donated to FBR (below, an upcycled picture frame and 2 x 4′s), Tyagi has been building from scratch or enhancing existing table structures to support his artistic table tops.  Check back for the finished pieces…they should be for sale in the RE-Gallery soon!

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E-Waste Warehouse in Gowanus

Welcome to the neighborhood!  The Lower East Side Ecology Center’s E-Waste Warehouse recently opened it’s doors in Gowanus (@ President and Nevins).  The Ecology Center’s electronic waste recycling program is a unique and innovative program allowing residents to dispose of working and non-working electronics in an environmentally responsible way. Any New York resident, small businesses (max. 50 employees) and non-profit organizations can drop off unwanted electronics for free.  If your equipment works, the E-Waste staff will try to give it a second life.  Whether your equipment gets reused or recycled, they guarantee data security (super great!).  

Film Biz Recycling, Build It Green (nearby on 9th St. near the Smith/9th train stop) and the LESEC’s E-Waste Warehouse are all awesome Reuse businesses in Gowanus.  These businesses divert waste from ending up in landfills, create a tax base for the community, keep our economy as local as possible and create green jobs for Brooklynites.  Keep up the good work!

 

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An oldie but a goodie… Annie Leonard’s “The Story of Stuff” is a 20-minute, fast-paced, fact-filled look at our production and consumption patterns. The Story of Stuff exposes the connections between a huge number of environmental and social issues and calls us together to create a more sustainable and just world. It’ll teach you something, it’ll make you laugh, and it just may change the way you look at all the stuff in your life forever.

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Housing Works Bookstore Cafe

 

 

On Friday we made a BIG! book donation – a whole truck-load, can you believe it?! – to Housing Works Bookstore Cafe in SoHo.  Housing Works is a not-for-profit healing community of people living with and affected by HIV/AIDS.  Through their advocacy offices, Housing Works fights for funding and legislation to ensure that all people living with HIV/AIDS have access to prevention information and other life-sustaining services.  Housing Works’ supportive services include housing, healthcare, meals and nutritional counseling, mental health and substance use treatment, job training, and legal assistance.  The Bookstore Cafe on Crosby Street hosts special programming events and is a great place to spend an afternoon or meet with friends.  All proceeds contribute towards the Housing Works mission.  We’re so glad these books are going to such a good home.  Thanks guys!

 

 

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“Made in NY” Visit!

On January 24th, FBR hosted Cycle 25 of the “Made in NY” Production Assistant Training Program!  ”Made in NY” was developed in partnership with the Mayor’s Office of Film, Television and Theatre and Brooklyn Workforce Innovations.  The program aims “to provide individuals from diverse communities with training for entry-level positions in film production and access to employers in New York City’s production industry, and to teach production assistants how to work collaboratively with local communities when they shoot on location throughout the five boroughs.”  In the past 6 years, “Made in NY” has graduated over 325 students with a job placement rate of 98%; 2 years after graduation, 70% of graduates continue to work in myriad aspects of the production industry.  Collectively, graduates have put their skills to good use and earned $6 million since in the programs’ inception.  ”Made in NY” is doing great work and we appreciate their dedication to educating the future of production.  When Cycle 25 came to visit FBR, our Founder and President Eva Radke shared some great insight with students about the resources FBR provides, keeping  productions green and finding ways to reuse.  We had a great time and we hope you guys did too…thanks so much for the touching thank you notes – you guys are awesome!  Hope to see you again soon!

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WHATS HAPPENING – THE SUPER FUN SUPERFUND VARIETY SHOW

WHAT’S HAPPENING is Film Biz Recycling’s way of sharing ubersupercool  goings-on.

The Super Fun Superfund Variety Show

We FBRers are very lucky folks. Not only because we dedicate our days actualizing our mission, but because we’re constantly surrounded by amazing supporters. From visual artists, musicians, theater folks, to the avant garde soul yet to be defined by a genre. With company like that, coupled by the fact that we are surrounded by props, materials, and ephemera galore, it seemed more than a perfect fit for Film Biz Recycling to play host to what is bound to be one of Gowanus’ most creative, fun, and mind bending nights!

via Pinterest

The Jist:

Repurposing one of the Gowanus’s hidden treasures–the beautiful Film Biz Recycling Prop Shop–for a night of unbelievable variety arts entertainment, from circus to sideshow to avant garde and beyond! Hosted by ukulele sensations Josh Bisker of Cobra Gold and Ellia Bisker of Sweet Soubrette, and featuring a fabulous lineup of stars:

The Performers:

- Tanya Solomon, making with the magic!
- Billy Dee Bedlam, clowning!
- Mike Dobson and Book Kennison, making with the funny!
- Joel Jeske of Parallel Exit, knockin’ ‘em dead!
- Justin Walter, with a crazy synth trumpet piece!
- Magic Brian, magically doing that thing he magically does!
- Leroi Prince, a gender-bendy elfsploitation number!
- Adam Kuchler, dazzling and awing!
- Spine Art, screening a riveting video short!
- Maria Sonevytski, playing songs to enliven!
- Miss Ekatarina, bending in a fabulous contortion!

…also look out for songs and mayhem from Cobra Gold and Sweet Soubrette, a raffle for fabulous prizes from Film Biz Recycling’s treasure box, and coupons for attendees towards future FBR purchases!

The When & Where:

Saturday, December 10, 2011
8:30pm until 10:30pm
$8 Cover Includes 10% Off Coupon for Future Film Biz Visit!
Located at the Film Biz Prop Shop at
540 President St, Brooklyn NY 11215 [map]

The Cost:

$8
*Plus a 10% off coupon for future FBR purchases at The Prop Shop.

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WHAT’S HAPPENING – GCC’S WINTER FESTIVAL

WHAT’S HAPPENING is Film Biz Recycling’s way of sharing ubersupercool  goings-on.

 

This Saturday, December, 3rd, Gowanus Canal Conservancy will be thowing down an uber fun and massively important fundraiser, the Winter Festival . Undoubtably, this is the place to be, and we’re not just saying that because we’re friends.  Enjoy local food, drink and music knowing all proceeds directly benefit the Gowanus Canal Conservancy programs including Clean & Green Volunteer Program, Compost Program and Rain Garden projects.

The night will be filled with treats including a delicious three-course dinners from local favorite Lot 2, local beer, DJ sets by Tim Love Lee, and live concerts by Ambassadors, Savoir Adore and The Suzan! And of course the night wouldn’t be complete without a silent auction featuring paintings by local artist Ella Yang, a tour of the cooking TV show “Chopped”, dinner for two at Print Restaurant, a magnum reserve of cider from Beer Table, dinner for two at Lot 2, an ornamental tree via Pleasant Run Nursery (brought to your house and planted!!) – and my personal favorite: a Sausage Making classes hosted by Brooklyn Cured!
The fundraiser will take place from 6 p.m. to 12 p.m. in Build It Green’s new space on Ninth Street, between the canal and Second Avenue.

Get your tickets
, and support all the goodness that surrounds the Gowanus Canal!
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MAD PROPS: HOLIDAY TABLEWARE

Mad Props: a weekly post featuring a rescued prop looking to find its next home. Love it as it is, or explore the many ways of making it new again.

This week:  Tableware

The holiday season can be a stressful one – family, thinking about how to fit them around your apartment sized “dining room” table, and of course, what to cook – or prepare. While we may not have all the answers to make this season as smooth as sweet potato puree, here are some ideas to help you present your holiday dinners in sustainable style.

via Jane on Pinterest

The FBR PROP SHOP is always brimming with dishes – from the aesthetically stunning, to what we would politely call, interesting. Though you may not find yourself needing more plates, chances are you’ve never thought the amazing things they can become.

CAKE STAND ANYONE?

via Jane on Pinterest

 

What you’ll need:
- plates, teacups, saucers
- super glue or Gorilla glue

Steps:
1) Find old, vintage miss matched plates tea cups, and saucers.

via Jane on Pinterest

2) Arrange them together on top of each other till you get the desired plate stand you like. Then glue them all together using super glue or gorilla glue.

3) Use books to press the items you are gluing together to help the glue bond better.

4) Then you’re done! This plate stand works great for cup cakes, cookies or those vegan hor d’oeuvres that the whole family will love.

To Adopt-This-Prop and get your upcycling on, visit Film Biz Recyclings Prop Shop.

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FBR DONATION STORY: ‘TIS THE SEASON

A weekly expression of appreciation for a partnered charity or in-kind-donor and how we collectively use our powers for good in turning would-be waste into treasure.

This week:  Commercials, commercials, commercials!

Thanks to Madison Avenue, Gowanus will have a bountiful holiday season.

Along with many other claim to fames, New York City is the mecca of advertising agencies. From the massive Madison Avenue Mad Men to the uber cool boutique style agency, each is tasked to sell, sell, sell! And with the season of buy, buy, buy soon approaching, clients everywhere are spending their sizeable advertising budgets on holiday-themed 30 second TV commercials. ‘Tis the season when countless directors exclaim, “that’s a wrap”, and the fate of all the stuff on a commercial set is determined.

In the past week, FBR has welcomed trucks loaded with set materials, props, furniture, and clothing straight from these commercial sets. The agencies, clients, and production companies that chose to send their trucks to FBR makes a huge difference in pollution prevention and enhances our community. Here at FBR we hope to impart the massive impact of their decision. From this past week’s donations alone, we’ll be redistributing brand new bedding to a women’s shelter, animal products to our local animal rescue – and especially heartwarming, brand new toys to children currently living in housing shelters.

Brand new train set soon headed to a deserving child.

If you’re an art director, editor, set designer, prop stylist, copywriter, project manager, producer, PA, creative director, account director, account supervisor, director, intern, or president in the ad world, and want to make sure your client’s goods are used for good, give a shout: info@filmbizrecycling.org

Production a wrap? Send your truck to FBR!

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WHAT’S HAPPENING – THE ZERO FILM FESTIVAL

WHAT’S HAPPENING is Film Biz Recycling’s way of sharing ubersupercool  goings-on.

DIY, budgets of $0, community support, and re-thinking once standard ways of creating films is core to everything FBR so you can imagine our faces when we heard about the Zero Film Festival. Premiering in New York on November 11-13th, the 4th Annual Zero Film Festival celebrates self-financed cinema. The festival is complete with feature lengths, documentaries, shorts, experimentals that fulfill Zero Film Festival’s mission to support under-represented filmmakers and screen the world’s best self-financed films for cinema lovers everywhere. ZFF focuses on community, inclusivity and good times on planet Earth.

ZFF, a New York based non-for-profit organization remarks on the festival: “In the age where the majority of festivals are Hollywood marketing campaigns, and even “indie” and “underground” festivals screen financed films, we exist to offer something different. Each year Zero holds events in New York, Los Angeles, London and Toronto, providing exposure in key cities for authentically independent filmmakers.”

Find out more about this super cool effort here and enjoy a little preview of  i’m not here premiering on the 12th at 7pm at 56 Water Street in DUMBO.

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A $0 BUDGET + UPCYCLING = A FBR FUNDRAISER

In keeping with our mission to re-purpose and redistribute items for an extended life, we have challenged ourselves to produce our first fundraiser with a $0 budget.

Check out how we transformed a donation of books from a film production and upcycled them into 150 auction paddles. Could you imagine these books dumped in a landfill?!

**Fear not… these paddles are still 100% readable without damage to their spines or pages.

Lights, Camera, Auction tickets available here.

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EVA RADKE: QUEEN OF REUSE

Just recently Green Media Solutions  stopped by Film Biz Recycling and spoke with FBR founder and executive director, Eva Radke – who they appropriately dubbed, The Queen of Reuse.  Check out their nice write up and find out why.

Eva Radke: Queen of Reuse
By Kasey Lum | October 31, 2011

Green Media Solutions talks with Film Biz Recycling founder Eva Radke about her multi-pronged approach to greening the film biz, and beyond…

What do YOU do with set materials, props and supplies once a production has wrapped?

Eva Radke, a former art department coordinator, often agonized over what she could do to help prevent barely-used production items from being dumped into landfills. After seeing too many great props and materials going to waste, Radke decided she had to do something to remedy the film industry’s consumptive habits. “The burden of throwing everything away was really starting to weigh heavily on me and I thought, ‘I’m not doing anything positive, and I don’t understand why it has to be this way.’ I just had to stop doing it.”

In 2008, Radke created Film Biz Recycling (FBR), a nonprofit organization she describes as a “creative reuse center.” At its Gowanus warehouse in Brooklyn, NY, donations from film, TV, theater, commercial and other media productions are collected and sorted. 40% of those items become inventory for sale or rent at the prop shop—everything else goes to charity.

“Our number one mission is to give it away,” says Radke. “We’re not just taking free stuff and selling it. People need to know that this is a social mission as well as a way of keeping things out of dumpsters.”

The organization currently partners with eight charities that collect donated materials. FBR sorts materials onsite, and distributes the bounty based on “what’s best and who’s going to find the most value out of them,” explains Radke. Since 2008, the nonprofit has collected and repurposed more than 200 tons of donated production items.

At the 11,000 square foot warehouse, film production teams, DIY-ers, and thrifty individuals can find anything from books and clothing to electronics and signs, and even a faux electric chair—all for a fraction of the original price and with the added cool-factor that comes with the item’s past life. “Everything here was picked out by decorators and designers in the film industry,” says Radke. “This isn’t curated by us. These are items that have been used on sets beforehand and can take on a new life somewhere else.”

There is never really a limit to what FBR is willing to take in, Radke emphasizes. “We basically take everything except particleboard, and legally we can’t take dirty mattresses. We take dirty or stained clothing because we have a textile recycling section.” The shop maintains a “tiny clothing boutique,” says Radke, but 90 percent of wearable clothing goes to men’s and women’s shelters. “We even take half-cans of paint because we can mix it with another half and make it a full color.”

Creativity in repurposing materials seems to be the key to the organization’s success. “As we’ve developed, we’re reusing these materials to teach people things. We’re organizing workshops right now, and that depends on our materials. If we get in great amounts of yarn, guess what? That means community knitting workshops!” says Radke.

But there’s more to be learned from Film Biz Recycling than knitting. Via Made in NY, a program sponsored by the Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting, FBR hosts workshops and informative volunteerism that coach those entering the workforce on sustainable practices. “That’s an amazing step the city is taking,” says Radke. “They’re saying that anyone who wants to enter the industry has to have an ability to understand sustainability.”

Film Biz Recycling even runs an art gallery and exhibition space, “RE-Gallery,” featuring work from local artists that work with “found objects” otherwise destined for landfills. “We are allowing an arts community to prosper, to show their work, have a creative outlet and to make money. If you’ve created something and found a way of repurposing something, our gallery is yours at no charge.”

And if you need a place to create it, FBR has you covered there too. The warehouse boasts a communal workspace equipped with office supplies, a long table and open space to work in. For no charge, production teams can have meetings, artists can work and individuals can plan their next production.

“Anyone in this industry who wants to see what we do can come here and I can show them our process,” says Radke. “The change we’re asking for is simpler and more beneficial for every single individual.”

 

Source article

 

 


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LIGHTS, CAMERA, AUCTION

Lights, Camera, Auction
A real-deal live auction benefiting Film Biz Recycling
Constructed by Krrb
Wrangled by Jessi Arrington

Bid on rescued props, wardrobe, and furnishings hot off the sets of NYC productions and destined for the landfill. All auction lots have been rescued by Film Biz Recycling, and now – superstars including Swiss Miss; Maxwell Gillingham-Ryan of Apartment Therapy; Oliver Jeffers; and Andrew Wagner ofKrrb have joined in the mission by curating their own collections .

November 3, 2011
7 – 8PM Free Beer, Dollar Tacos, Live Music, Auction Preview

 

$10 admission, RSVP only.

Get your tickets here!

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WHAT’S HAPPENING? Art In Odd Places 2011: RITUAL

This weekend is your last chance to catch Art in Odd Places, an annual festival of visual and performance art in public spaces. Appropriately titled Art in Odd Places 2011: RITUAL, this year all performers have incorporated ideas of ceremony, habituation, myth, obsession, superstition and liturgy into their works.

Now in its 7th year, the festival has grown in its participants and spectators. Furthering this year’s appeal is the addition of artist Edith Raw. To call Edith an artist is an understatement. Be it as performance artist, visual artist, poet, dancer, maker, thinker, guru of sustainability & re-use, her work is intuitively created.

For the festival, Edith performs Human Rites. Garbed in a combination of re-purposed textiles and lids from (consumed) canned foods, she thoughtfully moves her body in such a way that she creates Guaguanco, an Afro-Cuban rhythm. (Historically rooted in oral histories of Benin). While Edith may call herself an “interruptive spectacle in a costume made of tin can lids” her work certainly draws attention to the relationship between the desire to preserve history and the waste which currently threatens the future.

It would be an impossibility to experience Ritual, without Edith Raw.

It would be an impossibility for Film Biz Recycling to be without Edith, who is an integral leader of our Re-Use Team.

HUMAN RITES, by Edith Raw

WHEN:
Saturday October 8, 1-4pm
Sunday October 9, 1-4pm

WHERE:
14th Street, Manhattan, NYC.
Begins at Avenue D, continues to West Side Highway and returns back again.

DETAILS:
www.artinoddplaces.org

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WHAT’S HAPPENING? NATIONAL FOOD DAY

Film Biz Recycling will be supporting National Food Day on October 24, 2011 with the launch of a week-long food drive and fund drive benefiting CHIPS soup kitchen Brooklyn’s own healthy-food-guru, Alexandra Jamison will be at FBR to kick off this effort.

Alexandra Jamieson is the mastermind behind www.DeliciousVitality.com andwww.weekinaweekend.com. She’s been on Oprah, The Final Word, 30 Days, CNN, and also played an integral part in the award-winning documentary Super Size Me. In her three books, Vegan Cooking For Dummies, Living Vegan For Dummies and The Great American Detox Diet, Alex offers remarkably sane – and tasty – advice on how to detox, live healthfully and feel fantastic. Alex is the perfect person to share the importance of National Food Day which aims to expand access to healthy food, alleviate hunger and reduce diet-related disease by promoting safe, healthy food.

KICK OFF:
Alex will be at FBR sharing her words of healthy eating on Monday, October 24th, 3:30 – 6:30PM

FUND DRIVE:
In an effort to help CHIPS soup kitchen re-build after a fire, FBR will be collecting money immediately and indefinitely. (Due to the fire, CHIPS is currently unable to accept food donations).

FOOD DRIVE: - Beginning National Food Day, Monday, October 24th through Sunday, October 30th, FBR will be collecting wholesome, non-perishable foods benefiting Rock & Wrap It Up, an anti-poverty think tank.

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DESIGN CHALLENGE

Our rescued props, materials and supplies, your design!

Calling all designers:

The search is on for environmentally conscious design students to create sustainable furniture for the GreenHomeNYC’s garden lounge space premiering this fall at the The NEW New York event. Students are granted access to a wealth of free materials from us (Film Biz Recycling), as well as Build it Green. Even more, students will receive support from our panel of jurors as well as press from various architecture and design sites & blogs, most notably Inhabitat!

Start thinking, start designing, and spread the word. More information and details about the submission process can be found on http://greendesignchallenge.tumblr.com/

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FBR VALUED PARTNER: WEARABLE COLLECTIONS

A weekly post presenting a nod of our appreciation in the direction of a featured partner, charity or donation and a sneak peek at the process of how we collectively use our powers for good in turning would-be waste into treasure.

This week:

Wearable Collections

We’ve received a HUGE donation of shoes (thanks!) and now we’re turning to our friends at Wearable Collections who know best what to do next. Some of the volunteers here loved all the high heels and kicks but alas, it’s best not to get attached. 

Here at Film Biz Recycling, we’re all about creating socially responsible and sustainable solutions for media industry waste that would otherwise go the way of the landfill. It’s a proud feeling to be the home for props, fostering their beauty and returning them to the hands of creative people.

In this case, as much as we love to see all of these beautiful shoes in our Prop Shop, it’s much better to see them off with one of our great partners and charities, like Wearable Collections! 

We can’t wait to fill this white van with shoes!

Wearable Collections Van

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MAD PROPS: TENNIS RACQUET

Mad Props: a weekly post featuring a rescued prop looking to find its next home. Love it as it is, or explore the many ways of making it new again.

Ah, the tennis racquet. The beautiful Summer mornings you remember spending together, inseparable on the court during your college years. That satisfying, percussive “clop” of the ball hitting against the tightly threaded net in its lacquered wooden frame, you’ll never forget. 

 

EMBROIDERY ANYONE?

What you would need:
- various colors of embroidery thread
- wooden badminton/tennis racquet
- embroidery needle
- marker

Step 1: Decide on your design and sketch it out.  Then use a permanent marker to mark your design onto the racquet.

Step 2: Cut a yard or so of embroidery thread.

Step 3: Tie the thread into a knot on the racquet.  Leave a two inch tail of thread so that you can tie the other end off when you are finished wrapping.

Step 4: Continue wrapping thread onto the racquet until the area of your design is completely filled in.  Change colors of thread as often as you like.  A needle isn’t completely necessary, but it made the job go more quickly.

Embroidered Tennis Racquet

To Adopt-This-Prop or another, visit Film Biz Recyclings Prop Shop.

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GOWAN-US

This Sunday:
Check out the latest rescued props, housewares and DIY materials at Film Biz Recycling and then mosey on over to the dance party next to the Gowanus Canal.

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ITSY BITSY TEENY WEENY *GREEN* BIKINI

Linda Loudermilk created quite a splash during Miami’s Fashion Week upon revealing her revealing and eco-conscious swimsuit line. Made from plant starch, this sexy suit biodegrades itself within 180 days. With this 100% compostable swimwear, no one will ever know that you summer at the Isle of Coney.

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