Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Big Sale! 50% Off Ethical Jewelry at Jaszy’s! |
I'm totally blushing..."Jaszy’s aesthetic is simple, elegant and organically inspired. It elevates ‘green jewelry’ from boho status to urban sophistication." Thanks Fashion, Evolved!
Big Sale! 50% Off Ethical Jewelry at Jaszy’s! |
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Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Jaszy's Jewelry will be at Grand Opening of Butterfly Effect!
Owner and eco-beauty expert Shayna Teicher offers insight into the complexities of choosing authentic, good for you beauty care. I have personally had the benefit of Shayna's expertise for the past three years and know that she will offer the same sensitive and patient care to her customers.
The Butterfly Effect officially opens for business at 10 a.m., this Friday October 2. Grand opening festivities will begin at 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., and will include champagne, decadent nibbles, fabulous mini spa treatments and other services. RSVP here.
Butterfly Effect, 451 N. Orange Avenue, Sarasota Florida 34236, (941) 552-6728, www.livebutterflyeffect.com (website coming soon!).
Saturday, September 26, 2009
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Friday, September 18, 2009
Call to Arms!!
Feel free to vote once everyday until the contest ends 11/30/09.
Thank you!!
Click http://www.greenwala.com/greenwala_contests/all/7-What-s-Your-Story/entries/all/469-Eco-conscious-Jaszy-s-Jewelry
Supported cause is Trees for the Future.
Greenwala is a very cool Green Social Network where you can connect and get involved with other "greenies" and eco-friendly companies.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Linda Loudermilk Atelier Day Event
Eco- luxurious designer Linda Loudermilk is opening her Hollywood Salon to friends, family and fans for Atelier Day every Thursday!
The new Spring Collection is ready for previews and pre-orders. The Fall Collection is also available for ordering and is in select boutiques now. Visit www.lindaloudermilk.com.
Email atelierday@lindaloudermilk.com to schedule an appointment and for more information.
The collection includes items for men, women, children, spa, home and jewelry.
Linda is radical, refined and revolutionary in the green world! You might even get a chance to meet her!
Visionary couture and eco-designer Linda Loudermilk has been named by “W” Magazine as one of the top 20 innovators to watch. Coined as the “Vivienne Westwood of eco” by Elle Magazine, Loudermilk has spearheaded the creation of a new, luxury eco™ lifestyle, blowing old concepts of environmental living out of the water. Through her revolutionary designs and radical spirit, Loudermilk has redefined sustainability as something alluringly sexy, fun and edgy.
Source: Leah Marsh
Loudermilk Lifestyle Development & Sales
New Jewelry Designs in Autumn Colors
Take a look, let me know what you think. What's your favorite autumn color?
Monday, September 14, 2009
Subscribe to EcoFashion World for a Chance to Win Jaszy Earrings!!
Subscribe to EcoFashion World and receive the hottest eco-fashion news!
Enter your email here to receive up-to-date designer news and product selections via the Eco Fashion World newsletter.
I am just so excited that the current Prize for a randomly chosen subscriber is my Jaszy Fair Trade Tagua and Black Onyx Earrings!!
Winner will be chosen September 18, 2009.
Don't miss all the cool eco-fashion news from EcoFashion World and a chance to win Jaszy earrings!!
Monday, September 7, 2009
Vote for Jaszy's Jewelry at Greenwala!!
I've just entered their "What's Your Story?" contest to identify stories about the most amazing eco-friendly, environmentally-conscious companies, products and services on the planet. You know, like Jaszy's Jewelry!!
The story that gets the most votes will win a $500 Amex Gift card — and a featured article about the company, product or service on the Greenwala blog.
Contest ends 11/30/09, please take a look and vote for me! Thank you!!
Click http://www.greenwala.com/greenwala_contests/all/7-What-s-Your-Story/entries/all/469-Eco-conscious-Jaszy-s-Jewelry
Supported cause is Trees for the Future.
Greenwala is a For Profit Philanthropic company focused on harnessing the power of a community to create opportunity for people to "Go Green" and improve their lives.
Friday, September 4, 2009
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Summer Clearance Sale!!
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Computer gremlins and other mishaps
I've been overrun by technical mishaps for the last few days and I don't appreciate it one bit! Amazing how much we have become dependent upon computers and other little gadgets, I say "we" because I know you know what I'm talking about. I got so frustrated that I started having visions of trying to flush my laptop down the toilet! Not at all environmentally friendly I know, but it did give me a moment of glee.
So, the new fall designs will be online just as soon as I drain the computer.
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Eco Chic Weekly – August 21, 2009
Eco Chic Weekly compiles the best of the best in green fashion and beauty blogging each week. Please feel free to copy and use this post on your blog with a link back to Fashion, Evolved.
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Spotlight on McFarland Designs
Making environmentally conscious decisions can be daunting when there are so many variables to consider, be it the food we eat, clothing we wear, or the cleaning products in our homes. An area not to be overlooked is the jewelry accessories we adorn ourselves with.
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Thursday, August 13, 2009
How I Became A Jewelry Designer
If you can imagine, I was a nerd. I think that’s what they still call kids who prefer reading books and studying over cheerleading. I was also very determined. At 15, when I was told that I could not get a school sponsored summer job, I went up against the “man” and argued that my 3.8 GPA should outweigh my age.
Wouldn’t you know it? They placed me as a part-time clerk with the District Attorney’s Office. I fell in love instantly. From that point on law and the legal system consumed my thoughts. In college I majored in Criminal Justice with aspirations to become a prosecutor. After taking a law seminar course focusing on criminal intent and Psychology, I added another layer to the mix, declaring Psychology as a minor. Oh, now I was really in love!
From there I determined that my talents would be best served as a Criminal Psychologist with the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) and set that as my goal. A year after graduation, I joined the Army and was stationed in the Military Police Corp. I met my first husband David while stationed in Korea. To make a long story short, my time in the military was not exactly rewarding, and after a few stressful years serving, we both decided that it was time for me to let go.
In 1999, I left the Army and moved with my husband to North Carolina. I had lost my taste for practicing law and no longer dreamed of following in the fictional footsteps of Clarise in the movie Silence of the Lambs. For a long time, I was content with focusing on building a family and settling down, or so I thought. Before long I was bored.
In an attempt to entertain myself, I took to reading craft magazines and DIY books. One article that caught my attention was about a simple stretchy bracelet made with beads. I thought to myself, “Hey, I can probably make that!” So off to the local craft store I went and voila, instant gratification! I started subscriptions with every jewelry making magazine I could find and spent hours at the library pouring over books, researching gemstones and other beads. I soon progressed from simple stringing to making jewelry with wire. I would make jewelry gifts for friends and family, so proud of my early crude creations.
At some point, my dearest friends demanded that I take money for the jewelry gifts I gave them. Plus, David kept telling me I should at least consider getting back the money I invested to make the jewelry in order to finance making more. What a brilliant idea! I suppose that started the wheels of entrepreneurship turning. Unfortunately, just as I was becoming so fulfilled by my new endeavor of blending gemstones, my marriage was on the rocks.
With my husband soon to retire from the Army, we decided that new surroundings would be a turnaround for us. We’d spent vacations in Florida visiting his parents, so a move south seemed like a natural thing to do. Even though David earned a pension from the Army, he took a job as a government security consultant which required him to travel quite a bit. Often he was only home one week out of the month. I become solely responsible for finding a new place to live, in a new state, in a new city.
It didn’t take very long to settle on a city not far from where his parents lived. Once settled in, I again started making jewelry to fill my loneliness. I quickly made lots of friends by hosting jewelry parties at my house and homes of my new friends. They liked my jewelry and started giving me orders. I was happy that I’d again found a creative outlet much like when I was writing poetry.
Later with a little moxie under my belt, I approached a small upscale boutique. I walked in with about ten sets of necklaces and matching earrings. The owner purchased practically everything I had and gave me an order for more! From there I went to the next city, then the next city, and so on until I had jewelry in four cities in southwest Florida!
In 2005 David and I separated. We divorced a year later. I decided to move to a larger city that promised more business opportunities for my budding jewelry business. Sarasota, FL is a bit more environmentally focused than many other cities, and it was here that I began to take a closer look at my own environmental responsibilities. Soon after, I started to research how I could become more environmentally friendly in my jewelry designs.
In the summer of 2006, just as I thought I was getting my life back on track, I was visiting one of my wholesale clients and dear friend one afternoon and was blindsided by a pair of gorgeous blue eyes. Steve and I connected instantly and found that we had many things in common, one being our desire to live more eco-conscious lives and to allow our personal environmental choices to mirror our business practices. We married in the fall of 2007.
Though my life has taken many twists and turns, I feel like for the first time ever I am living my full life. I have the love and support of an amazing man, artistic and creative expression through making jewelry, and opportunities to educate others about the profound importance of environmental stewardship. There is no way I could have foreseen or even guessed that my life would come to be at this place but I am glad that this is how I became a jewelry designer!
Update: This post was later published at More.com, click here to view.
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
I'm not there...yet.
When I started making jewelry back in 2002, I did not consider its environmental implications, not because I didn't care, it just wasn't on my radar. Being environmentally friendly wasn't a top priority in my life in general. I mean sure, I recycled newspaper, magazines, and stuff like that...mostly. Purchasing freshwater pearl, gemstone and glass beads became my obsession and I frequented buying shows in NY and Arizona often. The point is that I started to do my homework and educate myself about the dirty side of jewelry and its affect on the environment. It was then that I decided to make some responsible changes. Of course by then I also had enough inventory to open my own bead emporium!
Last year I made the decision to rebrand Jaszy's Jewelry as eco-conscious jewelry designs. Realizing that tossing out my "non-green" bead stash would not necessarily be environmentally friendly, I decided that I would try to incorporate at least one eco-friendly and/or Fair Trade component into every jewelry design I made. This is what I will do until I can completely phase out the "other" stuff. I also support a local chapter of Girls, Inc. by donating jewelry making supplies for their DIY craft programs. Of course items that I need to replenish are certain to come from companies that have environmental and ethical standards like obtaining recycled Sterling Silver from Hoover and Strong, a refiner with over 95 years experience in environmentally responsible refining, ethically sourced gemstones from Columbia Gem House, and Fair Trade Tagua from One World Projects. In addition, I try to donate to organizations that are at the forefront of the environmental movement, like Green America, Greenpeace and NativeEnergy. Effectively, I’m doing what I can with the resources that I have.
One day very soon creating environmentally conscious jewelry won’t be an option, it will be the standard. No one will have to question whether or not someone or the environment was harmed by its creation. When that day comes I would very much like to be considered right alongside of companies like Green Diva, but for now I’ll happily follow in their environmentally friendly footprints.
Sunday, August 2, 2009
There went my sanity...
Surprisingly though, serenity returned to me at a time I least expected it to. I had a profound, and somewhat cerebral moment while chatting with a new friend over dinner. We were discussing our career choices, she is a freelance writer and an amazing playwright, of course what conversation regarding careers would be complete without the topic of stress. I was telling her how frustrated I felt that most people don’t consider just how much work goes into what I do. I started to explain to her that my jewelry is more than pretty little pieces coming together, but it’s also about educating people and about sharing. You see, I feel a need to help people understand that we can be more responsible in our fashion choices. This does not require a complete wardrobe overhaul, but a "green friendly" piece here and there does make a difference.
And sharing...by far I am not the most talented jewelry designer. The web, Etsy and others are jam packed with skilled and talented artists, and like them I tell a story with my jewelry designs. The colors speak to me, the colors dictate how they should come together. I am incapable of sketching before I make a piece; I can barely draw a straight line to say the least. I never really know what the finished piece will look like until it’s complete, it’s a very organic process. Often a silhouette wafts through my mind as the colors of a palette dance in rhythm with its movement. The natural world, be it the bloom of a hibiscus flower or a place I’ve visited like the bluest depths of Trunk Bay in St. Thomas, or the essence of a friend, or a state of being…all these things inspire my designs.
You see, amidst the stress I remembered why I design jewelry, why I often stay up until the very wee hours of the morning dancing in the rhythm of design, it is because I am passionate about the process…research, education, design, inventory, web master or any one of the many hats I wear…I absolutely love making jewelry!
Update: This article was published at More.com, click here to view.
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Investigative Reporting: When is a "Pearl" not a Pearl?
Thanks to JewelryBizGuru for bringing this article and resource to my attention. I was a bit surprised by it but ultimately glad that I read it.
I'm still investigating the environmental and ecological implications of harvesting freshwater pearls, perhaps Mr. Roskin will write about that at some point. In the meantime, his article When is a "Pearl" not a Pearl? is a very interesting read.
Hitting the proverbial "WALL"!
Not to mention, if you're someone who follows fashion trends as I occasionally do, you'll see that not much changed from the last fall/winter season. I'm thinking I might just, just...break down the "box" and be all unconventional and maybe go with bright colors for winter! Wouldn't that be awesome?! It really comes down to what the little beads tell me to do, honestly they rule my world.
Sunday, June 28, 2009
Jaszy ecommerce site!
A huge question is...How important is it to see jewelry on an actual person? Or are general product pics sufficient?
I really appreciate your thoughts and ideas!!
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Shout out in Eco Fahion World!!
eco fashion world's goal is "to keep you green, gorgeous and growing with a comprehensive ecofashion finder of the greatest brands, shops and resources around the globe."
Look to eco fashion world for all the latest ecofashion news and reviews, designer q&a's, store profiles, launch updates, and interviews.
Thank you eco fashion world!
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Spotlight on: Fair Trade Tagua Seeds (Ivory-nut Palm)
Image via Wikipedia
Taguanut, also known as corozo nut, is the seed of the Phytelephas macrocarpa, a low South American palm. They are most abundant in the Amazon Basin of Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru. Ivory-nut palms are dioecious, with the female palms bearing clusters of large, brown fruits, the size of grapefruits or melons. Each fruit is studded with numerous woody, pointed horns and contains four or more large seeds.The ivory palm endosperm or “tagua” have a similar density and color of elephant ivory, and have often been used as a substitute for making netsuke, scrimshaw and inlay work on furniture and boxes, beads, buttons, figurines, jewelry, and can be dyed. More recently, palm ivory has been used in the production of bagpipes.
Vegetable ivory (tagua) furthers important environmental and socioeconomic goals by stimulating the local economies, provides an alternative to cutting down rainforests for farming, and prevents elephants from being killed for the ivory in their tusks. This is a natural rain forest product that can generate five times the artisan income than banana plantations or cattle ranches. In one year a tagua palm produces the same amount of "ivory" as one female elephant. Tagua nuts are harvested by hand after the ripe fruit has detached without harming the tree.
You can find Fair Trade tagua in many Jaszy’s Jewelry designs accented with gemstones, sterling silver and gold metals.
Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tagua
http://waynesword.palomar.edu/pljan99.htm
http://www.3malliance.org/index.php?id=32
For more in-depth information, see blog post http://milenagalapagos.wordpress.com/2007/11/23/ecuadorian-tagua-nuts/
Update: This article was later published on More.com. Click here to view.
Friday, June 12, 2009
Jaszy's Jewelry on Channel 8 News with Gayle Guyardo!
Take a gander at my interview with Gayle Guyardo!
Monday, June 8, 2009
What is "Fair Trade"?
Let me preface this post by saying that I am not an environmentalist, although I've been known to hug a few trees...What I am is a naturalist with a general focus on humanitarianism...(long word). In short, I love nature and on most days I love people. I also love designing jewelry. What does all that have to do with "Fair Trade"? For me, striving to combine my love for nature, people and jewelry led me to question how I could ensure that my endeavors would make a difference.
Fair trade is a system of exchange that seeks to create greater equity and partnership in international trading system by paying fair wages in local context, supporting participatory workplaces, ensuring environmental sustainability, supplying financial and technical support, offering public accountability, respecting cultural identity, building direct and long-term relationships, and educating consumers.
By approaching development as a whole process (rather than just a fair price), fair trade organizations cultivate partnerships with their suppliers and contribute to the development of communities. Fair trade is not about charity; it uses a fairer system of exchange to empower producers and to create sustainable, positive change, http://www.fairtradefederation.org.
I believe that by seeking out vendors who adhere to Fair Trade standards, purchasing Fair Trade and ethically sourced materials, and contributing to organizations who spearhead and support these efforts I am able to create and share my passion with a clear conscience.
be well, be positive, be present...
Jaszy
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Celebrate Mom!
What better way to celebrate Mom and honor Mother Earth than with a gift of eco-conscious jewelry!!
All jewelry now 40% Off and if that isn't enough to tempt you...for a limited time enjoy a free gift with your purchase!
Necklaces, earrings and bracelets made with Fair Trade Gems, reclaimed Sterling Silver, Fair Trade Tagua and more!
Visit http://www.jaszyjewelry.etsy.com.
For all she does, Mom deserves a special gift...give her one that gives back! A percentage of all sales benefit The Nature Conservatory.
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Earthday 2009!!
This Earth Day will mark the beginning of The Green Generation Campaign which will also be the focus of the 40th Anniversary of Earth Day in 2010. With negotiations for a new global climate agreement coming up in December.
For more info on how to join The Green Generation Campaign and to find an Earth Day event in your area, visit http://www.earthday.net/ea
More than 1 billion people participate in Earth Day activities, making it the largest secular civic event in the world.