By: Nebal Snan
Photography: Nebal Snan

Rachael Delano, programs administrator at Kind Krafts, suggests making gifts.

Rachael Delano (BA’18), programs administrator at Kind Krafts, holds free workshops teaching participants how to make repurposed and sustainable gifts to reduce cost and environmental impact.


DIY gifts

Kind Krafts, a non-profit organization based in Halifax, holds free workshops that teach participants how to make crafts from repurposed or sustainable materials, like donated wool for mittens and biodegradable hemp for bracelets. The crafts are usually donated back to the organization, which, in turn, sells them and donates the proceeds for a cause.

Delano, who studied sustainability at Dalhousie University, says making crafts for gifts not only helps the environment, but also makes the gift more “heartfelt.”

“You don’t have to be an artist,” she says. “There are a lot of things that are easy and accessible for people to make.”

Use recyclable packaging

Instead of using non-recyclable wrapping paper and ribbons, Delano suggests using old newspaper and holding it in place with biodegradable twine.

“It relieves a financial burden, because you can use free copies of newspapers instead of buying wrapping paper,” says Delano.

[Joanna Bull, volunteer co-ordinator at the Ecology Action Centre,] has more ideas for sustainable wrapping gifts:

  • Old calendars or brown recyclable paper,
  • Cloth bags made from sustainable or recycled materials,
  • Reusable gift boxes,
  • Wrapping the present with a scarf.

Repurpose, then recycle

The choices you make when you receive gifts can also reduce waste. If a gift replaces an old item, recycle the item instead of throwing it away.

If the item is made of plastic, it may not get recycled in Canada. According to Environment and Climate Change Canada, less than 11 per cent of plastics are recycled in the country.

“It’s really disheartening to find that a lot of that stuff is ending up in the landfill anyway,” says Bull.

Delano says people should repurpose items they don’t need.

“It’s staying in your life in a different way or staying in someone else’s life,” she says.

Old items can also be used to make something new, like turning an old vinyl record into a record bowl. The bowl can be used as a pen holder or a planter.

Items can also be donated. There are several organizations in the Halifax Regional Municipality that accept donations for used items. Bull lists a few:

Bull says thinking carefully about gifting choices will ensure “we’re not unwittingly contributing to the continuing disaster of waste … while we’re trying to have a good time.”


For the full original article visit The Signal.