A short book about reducing your carbon footprint by creating an ethical wardrobe. I have to give a presentation on this in February and this was a great place to start for basics.
A short book about reducing your carbon footprint by creating an ethical wardrobe. I have to give a presentation on this in February and this was a great place to start for basics.
Here‘s my review for this book I finished reading. This book is not in the Litsy database.
#kindleunlimited
Another gorgeous kid‘s book to add to my collection and a cute story about coming out of your shell and reaching your full potential.
Thank you @PageShifter and @TheSpineView!
1. Depends! I rarely change into a completely different outfit during the day but I typically wear comfortable trousers at home and will put something less embarrassing on when I go outside. And then, I'll add/remove layers, jumpers, warm socks, etc. as needed.
2. Tagged book is a retelling in modern times of the Paris Commune, which started with seamstresses. MC organises sewing workshops.
#Two4Tuesday
2/5⭐ Not enough pics, confusing/muddled instructions, more complicated than necessary, projects named after random cities with no apparent connection.
2.5/5⭐ The instructions seem thorough and include diagrams. However, almost all of the projects look obviously DIY. Many just don't look nice at all, sometimes because of baffling materials like bubbled bath mats. I like the idea behind reusing suit coats and such but the executions don't impress me.
.5/5⭐ There are no photos of the finished projects, just highly stylized illustrations. The instructions are laughably bare minimum. Many of the designs look hideous/impractical and/or just include random cutouts as if that makes a style.
2.5/5⭐ I'm not too impressed with these basic projects. There's a lot of repetition, like making flowers to put in various applications. Most of the projects could be made with any fabric/yarn, so the t-shirt doesn't really seem to be highlighted.