Reuse Reuse Tips
Reusing your things can help you to unleash your creativity, save money, and help to protect the environment. Here, we give you some tips to help you to get started
Recycling is a great way to mitigate our impact on the environment, but reusing things is even better:
- You can save money by avoiding having to buy expensive replacements.
- You can create exciting things, like unique pieces of furniture.
- There are environmental benefits, not just because the item isn’t thrown into landfill, but because the use of raw resources that would have gone into making a replacement can be avoided.
Reusing items as they are
Lots of items can be used more than once. We have a page dedicated to furniture reuse | Lesswaste, and another for reusable nappies | Lesswaste.
Reusable bags are a great example of reuse that stops unnecessary waste, and they’re widely available in a variety of shops and supermarkets. Old clothes can be repaired or customised to give them a new lease of life, and spare buttons can be kept safely in an old jar for when they’re needed.
It may be cheaper to repair things rather than replace them. For example, shoes can often be re-healed, and machinery or electrical equipment can sometimes be fixed. We run a range of classes, providing you with skills, through Adult Education | Leicestershire County Council.
Reusing items as something else
Once an item is no longer needed, you may be able to use it for another purpose. There are no limits to the possibilities. Some examples include, shredding old newspapers for use as animal bedding, and cutting up old clothes to use as rags around the house. Old jars make great paint pots, or can be put to use to help to keep brushes clean or even used for jam making.
Share and borrow
Rather than buying something to use only once, you could share or borrow instead. All sorts of things can be rented, including tools and DVDs. You could arrange a book swap between friends, and pass on children’s clothes. Informal sharing / borrowing amongst friends and neighbours can be taken to the next step with the creation of tool libraries. The Library of Things offers support and guidance on establishing a more formal network in your community.
Pass it on to someone else
If you can’t make any more use of your things, then perhaps someone else can. There are lots of ways that you can sell or give away unwanted things. Consider donating to the local charity shop, or selling at a car boot sale. There are also lots of great resources online that allow you to give away or sell your things to people who want them, such as Freegle, Freecycle, Gumtree, Vinted and Ebay.
There are lots of ways to donate items to charity. You can get support with finding a charity willing to accept what you have to offer, through the Charity Retail Association | support. They also provide guidance on how to make a donation to your local charity Charity Retail Association | Donating to charity They have an app you can download for donating and reselling of fashion and clothing: Loop | Digital wardrobe.
Dunelm, the home furnishings retailer, are also running an in-store Takeback scheme for home textiles, including clothing (and items that are ripped or torn). All items must be clean and dry, bagged and dropped off at a participating store (Thurmaston store is participating but this scheme isn’t available at the Loughborough Store). Items will be given a thorough inspection and sorted according to whether they can be reused, rehomed or recycled.
In addition, they are running an online Takeback scheme, in partnership with The Salvation Army. This is for all home textiles, clothing, shoes and accessories, including reusable and non-reusable items. The scheme is free to use and enables you to send them a parcel (or two) of textiles. Reusable items should be suitable to be bought and used for their intended purpose straight away, whereas non-reusable items might be worn out, damaged, marked, etc but can still be recycled.
Dunelm also run a furniture recycling scheme to help rehome your old furniture, in partnership with British Heart Foundation and Clearabee, and an electrical take-back scheme when you buy new.
Further information for all these schemes can be found at Take-back-scheme |Dunelm.com. Other take-back schemes may be available, please see our disclaimer for further information.
Textiles can also be taken to the Recycling and Household waste sites for reuse and recycling. See: Leicestershire County Council |Find a recycling and household waste site. Or taken to a variety of clothing and textile recycling points. To find a textile recycling point near you, visit: Recycle Now |clothing-textiles.
In a similar way, it’s important to keep shoes, boots, and other footwear in use for as long as possible, too. Sometimes they can be taken to a shoe repairer to be re-heeled or re-soled when worn down, or re-glued when the sole has come loose. This is often better value than throwing them out to buy something new. Leather handbags can often be repaired, too. You might be able to give or take footwear to a Swishing event, see below, or give them to a local charity shop. Some shops are doing their best to enable shoes and footwear to be reused or recycled, such as Schuh, who are currently offering £5 off a new pair of shoes if you take a pair of unwanted or outgrown shoes. See Schuh.co.uk |Sell-your-Soles for more details.
However, if your footwear is damaged beyond repair, they can’t be reused or recycled, and will need to be put in the bin.
Give or Take events
Give or Take events are a fun way for people to exchange things they no longer need. Having successfully organised a number of these events in the past, we’ve developed a free guide to help you to organise your own: Give or Take Toolkit | Lesswaste
Swishing or clothes swap events
If you’d like to keep the focus on clothing, fabrics and fashion, we’ve also got a toolkit for organising your own swishing events: Swishing Toolkit| Lesswaste.
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