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Every business should be thinking about their flywheel and the way that value is upcycled internally.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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In the permaculture economy, recycling isn't good enough. It's more about upcycling - because as resources cycle through the system, they should continue to add greater value to the system.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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If you'd like to gain a new understanding of upcycling and recycling, get into gardening.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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In nature, there is no such thing as waste. Every output is upcycled into new inputs of equal or greater value. This creates a cycle of productive utility, continuous growth and continuous expansion.
I like to invest in companies that follow natureβs example.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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If you wanna learn about upcycling, go meditate in a forest.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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Everything we need to know about upcycling, we can learn from fungi.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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Managing waste is a really bad goal. Only an inefficient system would aim to manage waste. A better goal is making waste non-existent by designing the system itself, through it's participants, to continually upcycle resources.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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The way mycelium produces enzymes to break down complex organic polymers into simpler compounds is a case study for how we can upcycle products and materials in our economy.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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It's important that we pair additive manufacturing with robust upcycling. It should be easy to turn items that were 3d printed right back into raw material to print something new.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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There are major economic opportunities in human waste. Instead of flushing it down the toilet as waste, we should find ways to upcycle it at scale into various systems as a resource that adds value and facilitates cyclicality.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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If we want better global supply chains, there are lots of other things that have to be made better first. We need to be better with equitably including small businesses into global logistics. We need to be better with upcycling, and feedback loops. We need to be better with implementing Blockchain technology. We need to be better with material ecology and designing products for longevity. And so much more.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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If we want a circular economy; a permaculture economy - we need to design decay into products and processes as opposed to disposability. Manufacturers should design materials and products to programmatically biodegrade back into an economic ecosystem. This will allow for more efficient upcycling and the cultivation of various business opportunities in the process.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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The construction industry doesn't have to be so resource intensive. If construction companies start using better materials like mushroom bricks or upcycled prefab bricks and better systems like additive manufacturing using locally sourced natural materials... Then a lot of progress will be made.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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Nature abhors waste. And so should we.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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It's unwise to waste resources, and it's also unwise to waste capacity. Every system should maximize utilization.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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One reason nature is efficient is because there is no waste. Everything produced creates value for others and is consumed by others on the basis of value. What one life may discard as not valuable is consumed by another life because of its valuable. And all things produced and consumed are continually upcycled, becoming more valuable each cycle. Perhaps itβs because nature has a capital-centric view of things; everything in nature is capital and produces capital which to varying degrees provides value to all other things in nature. Imagine if economies worked like this. Imagine if investment portfolios worked like this. Imagine if businesses worked like this. What a beautiful world it would be.
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Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
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Rosieβs heart swelled with pride. She had poured her heart, her soul, and her life savings into this venture. Rosie had spent hours painstakingly deliberating over every inch of the shop. Her past life as an interior designer meant she knew just how to make the shop into the welcoming time capsule that made her heart soar every time she stepped inside. There was a herringbone floor, finished with a walnut stain, which was complimented by the dark wallpaper adorning the walls, covered with floral blooms in muted pinks, blues, yellows, oranges, and whites. It was dramatic - the perfect backdrop to selling snippets of peopleβs lives. Velvet pink lampshades with tassels hanging from the ceiling flooded the shop with light. Rosie had displayed the vintage clothes, jewellery, shoes, bags, and accessories in several ways. From shelves made of driftwood, an up-cycled antique sideboard, and brass clothes rails.
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Elizabeth Holland (The Cornish Vintage Dress Shop)
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have a small container to collect cork corks, for taking to my grocery store, which upcycles them.
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Bea Johnson (Zero Waste Home: The Ultimate Guide to Simplifying Your Life by Reducing Your Waste (A Simple Guide to Sustainable Living))
William McDonough (The Upcycle: Beyond Sustainability--Designing for Abundance)
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Happily there are ways to keep costs down and sustainable kudos up β like Lofty Frocksβ vintage fabric library, or the growing numbers of free patterns and tutorials available to download from sites like Hobbycraft and so-sew-easy.com. You can always do a Sound of Music with an old pair of curtains (try charity shops), or follow the lead of blogger Kari Greaves, @east_london_style, who upcycles vintage finds into entirely new pieces, like a kind of glam high-fashion Dr Frankenstein.
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Lauren Bravo (How To Break Up With Fast Fashion: A guilt-free guide to changing the way you shop β for good)
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I read where they bring cadavers here from all over. One of the many things the city is good at: the upcycling of the dead.
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Nick Harkaway (Titanium Noir)
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When picking up the pieces of a shattered reality, love is an absolute vital place to start. It is the force that moves the soul through dimension, the permeating energy that flows in and through all that we are and will be.
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Tariq Trotter (The Upcycled Self: A Memoir on the Art of Becoming Who We Are)
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When picking up the pieces of a shattered reality, love is an absolute vital place to start. It is the force that moves the soul through dimensions, the permeating energy that flows in and through all that we are and will be.
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Tariq Trotter (The Upcycled Self: A Memoir on the Art of Becoming Who We Are)
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Remember the future you were told existed when you were a child, the one with suburbs in orbit and a rocket ship in every garage. Then picture the next future after that, and the next and the next until at last you come to a blue drifting infinity where children dabble their toes in the outer layers of suns and artists work in the medium of worlds. It is the endless playground of human life in which no possibility is unexpressed. Some choose to be like gods, others like creatures from storybooks, and some are just people, albeit indestructible by any common measure, and no one is sad. And now ask yourself what would happen when the children in that playground came of age and realised that they were still finite, still bounded by the final ending of things. Et in Arcadia ego. They went mad. And then one day they went sane again, and carried on as if nothing had happened. They stopped talking about it, and they seemed quite content. Iβm honestly not sure which of those moments was more appalling. But on the edge of everything there was a house, and in that house lived all the lost, forlorn, too-strange flotsam of that broken perfect world, and the people thereβemancipated criminal selves, poets and upcyclers, dreamers and recidivistsβthey simply could not forget. By accident, they ended up the knowers of a secret truth in plain sight, which no one else would acknowledge.
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Nick Harkaway (Gnomon)
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I chose Grandma Prisbrey, an old lady who built a village out of recycled garbage in the seventies before upcycling was cool, so I figured no one would care enough about my Californian to really pay attention to me.
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Victoria Piontek (Better With Butter)
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Our paths intertwine with so many people, but thereβs a meaningful gap between the real ones and those just passing through.
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Tariq Trotter (The Upcycled Self: A Memoir on the Art of Becoming Who We Are)
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The world now consumes about 80 billion new pieces of clothing every year. Ninety-five percent of discarded clothing can be recycled or upcycled. The amount of water used in apparel production each year is enough to fill 32 million Olympic-size swimming pools. Meanwhile, 1.1 billion people lack access to safe drinking water. A $25 T-shirt would be only $1.35 more expensive if the wages of the worker who made it were doubled. By extending the life of your clothing by an additional nine months, you can reduce your carbon, water, and waste footprints by 20 to 30 percent each. Clothing made from conventional polyester can take up to two hundred years to decompose in a landfill. Making a pair of jeans uses the same amount of water as flushing your toilet for three years. The average American woman wears just 20 percent of her wardrobe. The average annual clothing consumption per person in the US is sixty-five garments, according to the American Apparel & Footwear Association.
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Courtney Carver (Project 333: The Minimalist Fashion Challenge That Proves Less Really Is So Much More)
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Based on the parts of this... this scene that are not covered in refuse, and the drawings you have done for me, I know you are an artist with talent. Maybe I have old-fashioned views, but I simply don't understand why you would spend your time creating something like this." He shrugged his shoulders. "The sort of art I am used to seeing is more..."
I raised an eyebrow. "More what?"
He bit his lip, as though searching for the right words. "Pleasant to look at, I suppose." He shrugged again. "Scenes from nature. Little girls wearing filly white dresses and playing beside riverbanks. Bowls of fruit."
"This piece shows a beach and a lake," I pointed out. "It's a scene from nature."
"But it's covered in refuse."
I nodded. "My art combines objects I find with images I paint. Sometimes what I find and incorporate is literal trash. But I also feel that my art is more than just trash. It's meaningful. These pieces aren't just flat, lifeless images on canvas. They say something."
"Oh." He came even closer to the landscapes, kneeling so he could peer at them up close. "And what does your art... say?"
His nose was just a few inches from an old McDonald's Quarter Pounder wrapper I'd laminated to the canvas so it looked like it was rising out of Lake Michigan. I'd meant for it to represent capitalism's crushing stranglehold on the natural world. Also, it just sort of looked cool.
But I decided to give him a broader explanation.
"I want to create something memorable with my art. Something lasting. I want to give people who see my works an experience that won't fade away. Something that will stay with them long after they see it."
He frowned skeptically. "And you accomplish that by displaying ephemera others throw away?"
I was about to counter by telling him that even the prettiest painting in the fanciest museum faded from memory once the patrons went home. That by using things other people throw away, I took the ephemeral and make it permanent in a way no pretty watercolor ever could.
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Jenna Levine (My Roommate Is a Vampire (My Vampires, #1))
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Upcycled Self-Watering Planter
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Tim Needles (STEAM Power: Infusing Art Into Your STEM Curriculum)
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We can only describe actual performance goals that are realistic
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William McDonough (The Upcycle: Beyond Sustainability--Designing for Abundance)
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We humans have the ability to see beyond our species, and that ability confers a responsibility.
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William McDonough (The Upcycle: Beyond Sustainability--Designing for Abundance)
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one small decision has the power to make a real difference for the economy,
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William McDonough (The Upcycle: Beyond Sustainability--Designing for Abundance)
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Thomas Harmeier is a 28-year-old health enthusiast who enjoys bowling, planking and upcycling. He is caring and hard-working, but can also be a bit impatient.
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Thomas Harmeier
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The cycle in real estate illustrates and exemplifies the ways in which cyclical factors lead to and cause each other, as well as the tendency of cycles to go to extremes. Itβs not for nothing that they often say cynicallyβin tougher times, when optimistic generalizations can no longer be summoned forthβthat βonly the third owner makes money.β Not the developer who conceived and initiated the project. And not the banker who loaned the money for its construction and then repossessed the project from the developer in the down-cycle. But rather the investor who bought the property from the bank amid distress and then rode the up-cycle.
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Howard Marks (Mastering The Market Cycle: Getting the Odds on Your Side)