Events and happenings events-and-happenings : Tag Archive

You are stalking tag 'Events and happenings'

Live Earth concerts – Save our Selves says Gore

Politicians love to use rock’n’roll to spread their message of peace and unity across the planet. They know it‘s a sure fire way to get the ‘apathetic’ youngsters of today interested in a cause (and let’s face it, slogan t-shirts are in!).

Al Gore has been whipping up an eco storm all over the world with his series of lectures on climate change and his movie ‘An Inconvenient Truth’. It was only a matter of time before his bio diesel powered bandwagon would come up with the idea of a Live Aid type concert to spread his message. Except, as usual with the Americans, this concert has to be bigger and better than anything that’s ever gone before. And so he gives you…Live Earth.

Its a series of concerts which will take part on all seven continents, bringing together over 150 big bands, and which will be beamed live for 24hrs to an estimated audience of over 2 billion people worldwide.

A recent press conference, which featured stars like Cameron Diaz and Pharrell Williams announced the concerts, which will also be broadcast live on the internet in conjunction with MSN. It also marked the creation of a new alliance called ‘Save our Selves – The Campaign for a Climate in Crisis’ which, in the words of it’s chairman Al Gore, has been designed to “trigger a global movement to combat our climate crisis”. Gore’s enlisted the help of Kevin Wall, an Emmy Award winning producer who was, amongst other things, the Executive Producer for Live 8

And incase you’re questioning the eco credentials of a series of rock concerts in large venues which will be using an indecent amount of electricity and probably creating a small eco climate of their own fear not! Live Earth will be implementing a new standard called the ‘Green Event’ that will become a model for carbon neutral rock and pop concerts and other live events, such as sports, in the future. All the venues are being created to have a minimal environmental impact and will be show grounds for the latest state of the art energy efficiency, sustainable facilities and on site power generation.

Bands who have signed up to the concerts already include the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Foo Fighters, Bloc Party, Duran Duran, Paolo Nutini, Snow Patrol and many others (what no Bono?!). Tickets are yet to be released but you can sign up for alerts at Live Earth.org

Related : Tuesday blog roundup : Inconvenient Truth 2 et al | Yay or Nay : Should Al Gore give it away?

ECO-CHIC Fashion & Ethics show in Oxford 16 March

While an eco fashion show raising money for Comic Relief in an Oxford nightclub may not sound as glamorous as front row seats at Marc Jacob’s first London Fashion Week show, the Ethical Fashion Forum did their damndest to make sure it was as close to the real thing as possible.

The show started nearly an hour later than expected – although guests were mollified with a range of canapes – and there was enough chaos front of house to keep any fashionista happy. Separating the Oxford venture from the world of high fashion was the homely touches: coltish students practicing their model walks along a line of white tape on the floor, proud parents arguing over the operation of their digital cameras, and groups of boys wolf-whistling at every sashay.

The clothes themselves were an interesting mix of vintage and eco-designer, and while it was good to be reminded that eco includes vintage – reusing is better than recycling, people – it seemed bizarre to waste catwalk space on clothing from Oxfam’s vintage selection (at least 15 outfits) when the original eco designers only showed four or five pieces each. The vintage point would have been as well made by the shoes and accessories the models carried as by the endless stream of achingly trendy outfits artfully assembled from racks of old clothes.

Suchi’s showing was one of the more modern sections of the show, filled with textured fabrics, crochet, and ethnic prints. Particularly stunning were a crochet top with bell sleeves, and a Grecian-style crochet dress.

The Sari Dress Project 2006 was the next line featured, and as the name suggests leant heavily on the use of sari fabrics in their designs. Most of the clothes shown were tops, and while the sari detailing worked beautifully in the strappy tops – some had corset lacing at the back, others were made entirely from sari fabric while others had strips as accents – a notable failure was a one-shoulder top that looked like a cushion. It was so hideous that it broke the camera, as that frame came out black.

Then came the designs from Amira, which seemed from the selection on display to be fairly samey – lots of belted shirt dresses in Aloha prints (that’s Hawaiian shirt fabric, fact fans) and a printed A-line sundress with spaghetti straps. More beachwear than anything else, and even then only on the world’s most touristy beaches.

Emma Design showed next, and while the designs may not be to everyone’s taste her collection stood out as it was the only one to use eco fabrics and practices to make modern designs that showed any awareness of the fashion zeitgeist. While it wasn’t the high-end clothing of Fashion Weeks around the world, it was the geek chic look seen on the streets of Britain – high halterneck tops in Argyle prints, wool bandeaux tops with mid-length skirts, strapless A-line babydoll dresses, and tunic tops that looked like sleeveless cardigans. All very Ugly Betty – in the good sense.

Other exhibitors included the vintage department of Oxfam’s first shop, based in Oxford’s Broad Street; Debbie Little, who makes clothes from recycled parachutes in true Blitz fashion; Amira Harris, who designs garments using organic Indian cotton; and Judith Condor-Vidal, from Trading for Development.

Sustainable living courses with the low-impact living initiative

I try to live sustainably. I shop locally, don’t drive, go for environmentally-friendly and fairtrade choices when I can – just like most of the people reading this probably do.

But I know that I don’t actually have any living skills. If there was a natural (or man-made) disaster, I’d be lucky if I could cobble myself together a basic shelter, let alone sort out a radio or any food and fuel. Without companies or more knowledgeable people to make things for me, I’d be completely stuck.

That’s one of the reasons I was interested to hear about the low-impact living initiative. The group aim to help people lower the impact of their everyday lives, and run regular courses, as well as selling books and manufacturing products via their website.

Their one-day courses cover crafts such as rag-making and keeping chickens, while over the course of a weekend you can learn about skills such as low-impact smallholding and how to make biodiesel.

Courses run throughout the year, and you book online, with discounts for students and people who are out of work or on a low wage.

Related posts: Ecological footprint conference at Cardiff University | Go MAD at sustainable living show


all womens talk

ss_blog_claim=d524309852b8852820d99b7b31e4878c