Archive for July, 2006

The green office

Ok, it’s time I come clean about my innate geekiness: I loved school. I love research.

My favorite part of college was the research paper process. What’s not to love: going to the library, surrounding myself with piles of books, taking notes, highlighting, organizing, and then putting it all together. I loved it all, and I still do!

I plan to write a series of articles for the website about why BCB focuses on sustainable and organic fibers and the effect other fibers (and industry practices) have on the environment. However, in preparation for that series I got sidelined with the Ben & Jerry’s book and got to thinking about corporate responsibility. BCB is hardly corporate, yet I still feel I have a responsibility to integrate our values into every aspect of the business.

So the first (and easiest to change) aspect: the office. Ways BCB is commited to an eco-friendly office:

  • Recycled or post-consumer paper
  • soy ink
  • recycling ink cartridges
  • recycling batteries
  • brewing organic, fair trade coffees and chowing down on fair trade chocolates (this is the fuel of this start-up, baby, so it counts!)

places to find eco-friendly office supplies:

Green Earth

  • Recycled and post-consumer papers
  • Soy crayons
  • All kinds of paper products (journals, printer paper, calanders!)

Dolphin Blue

  • lots of info about the environmental effect of common office goods (toner cartridges, paper)
  • Links to more office stuff (floors, blinds, printers, gifts, everything!)

I’d appreciate any more suggestions or links!

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I’ve been busy dyeing yarns for Knittique

and still researching ways to make the office more green. My findings tomorrow!

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The Blonde Chicken gets philosophical

Who knew two ice cream guys could provoke so much inner searching?

Ben & Jerry

I’ve been reading Ben & Jerry’s Double Dip, which has me thinking that Blonde Chicken

Boutique can have a postive impact, in more ways than just offering sustainable, earth-friendly yarns. While I’m working all this out internally, I’ll start with why I chose to make my business about sustainability and fair-trade.

When I first started planning and researching the business plan, I already had the name (see this) and had done enough research to decide on selling handpainted yarn. I searched for wholesale suppliers of undyed yarn and I found it was very difficult to get an account without making a huge order. More than that, as I researched fibers and suppliers, I learned that I didn’t agree with a lot of common business practices of both large production farmers and yarn manufacturing. The more I looked into it, the more disturbed I became.

It’s one thing to buy yarn with my own money, within my (very small) budget. It’s another altogether to order hundreds of dollars of yarn and try to market it to others. I felt that I and, by proxy, my business had a responsibility to make sure the money customers spent at Blonde Chicken Boutique was being used for something good, something healthy for the world, for the fiber animals and for the industry (and those who labor in it). I could not propogate the injustices (and inhumanity) I had found out about on such a large scale. I had to find alternative sources, or forget the idea altogether.

It was at this point in the planning that I said “Woah.” This is big.

And it was. Looking for ethical, earth-friendly yarn suppliers made the start-up process even more difficult. In order to start providing ethical yarns, I lowered my expectations of how many yarns I would start out with, feeling that the value of the few would outweigh any doubts about lack of selection. I’m sure that being dedicated to being a socially-conscious business is the best course of action. In fact, it’s the only way I could operate.

So there we have it: I opened Blonde Chicken Boutique with two sustainable, bio-degradable, fair-trade produced yarns and 1 organic animal fiber yarn that supports a co-op of indigenous people. But it doesn’t end there.

There’s so much more to making the business more eco-friendly: office practices (ink, paper, recycling), dyeing (some dyes emit harmful toxins into the water supply), packaging (tags, bags, mailing)–all things I hadn’t really thought about until this book.

I think I’ll go have a pint (of ice cream) while I do some more reading!

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Hip to be green

I have been doing lots of research on what “organic” really is (I’m writing an article for the website)and in what ways I can make the business run more “green”. In my research, I came across an excellent podcast!

More Hip than Hippie is, as they say, “A cool approach to the eco-friendly lifestyle”. A very interesting listen, the women are chatty and well-prepared (like great morning radio banter). I’ve learned a lot and gotten some great links for more research. My favorite so far:

Eco-friendly travel

Eco-friendly office

The MOST awesome thing about podcasts that teach something new is that I can learn and knit! As much as I love to read, if I’m on a knitting deadline or have a lot of dyeing to do (like today!), podcasts (and books on tape) are perfect.

There are lots of podcasts out there, do you have a favorite?

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I *heart* the Sampler

It arrived today!

The coupons, Alter magazine and the discounts!

Buttons and goodies

To see who contributed to the Sampler and found out how to get one of your own,go here.

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Ladies and Gentleman, start your shopping!

Blonde Chicken Boutique is open for business!

Enjoy!

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Ready to Roll


Within a day, the shop should be open and we’ll be on our way!

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