Monday, October 31, 2011
Lindsey (and Chloe!) are featured on Beso.com again...
Check our Lindsey's latest recommendations here.
*Click here for Lindsey's 10 Best Things She Registered For.
Friday, October 28, 2011
How to wash Uggs & a Shearling Chanel Bag
With the change of seasons obviously comes the change of
wardrobe and accessories. We always
recommend washing these items - especially if they weren’t washed prior to
storage…oops! Lindsey had to clean her
shearling Chanel Bag from general wear and dirt, but why stop there?
So we also decided to test out washing a pair
of Uggs - we think you’ll be impressed with the results!
We all have a pair of well-loved and worn Uggs and last year’s snow storms did a number on these…
Pre-treat with Stain Solution. For tougher stains found on more
durable items use our Dish Brush to scrub.
Place boots in a mesh washing bag and launder with Wool
& Cashmere Shampoo.
For machine settings…we had to do an extra rinse and spin
cycle.
Stuff with paper towels to dry, you can also place near a
heater to speed up the drying process, just be cautious!
Viola…good as new!
Next up, is Lindsey’s Shearling Chanel Bag...that's right, you don't always need to take your Chanel items to the dry-cleaners!
This bag had the typical general dirt stains and wear.
Pre-treat with Stain Solution and gently work into the
fabric. Protect with our Mesh Washing Bag and launder with our
Wool & Cashmere Shampoo.
The settings you’ll need:
When complete, take your bag out and lay flat to dry.
Steam to finish and it's as good as new!
The Laundress featured on The New York Times
Personal Eco-Concierges Ease Transition to Green
Carrie Starner-Keenan, an eco-concierge, showed green cleaning
products...(yes, that's a Laundress Detergent!)...at a client’s home.
They will run your errands by bicycle, recommend a spa that gives vegan manicures or buy organic clothes for you and your dog. They will even book you a dream vacation and buy the appropriate carbon offsets.
Green living is just so much easier when you have your own personal environmental concierge.
“The problem with going green is that people think it takes so much work, so much effort, so much conscious decision-making,” said Letitia Burrell, president of Eco-Concierge NYC, a year-old business in Manhattan that tries to make it easy for people to rid their homes of toxins, hire sustainable-cuisine chefs and find organic dry cleaners.
Memberships range from $175 a month to $3,500 a year, depending on the level of service. Or you can opt for à la carte service at $25 to $50 an hour.
It is a niche business, but a clever one. At least a half-dozen services of this type have sprung up around the country in recent years, both to help time-starved consumers manage their lives and to assuage the guilt of those who worry that they are letting the planet down.
“There are people who come to us gung-ho and they want to make a sweeping lifestyle change,” said P. Richelle White, who left a corporate advertising job four years ago to start Herb’n Maid, a green cleaning and concierge service in St. Louis. “These are busy professionals who don’t have the time to do the research themselves about different products and services.” Ms. White charges $39 for the first hour and $29 an hour subsequently; she was considering introducing monthly subscriptions.
Personal concierge services originated in hotels but made the leap to people’s homes in the last decade or so, said Katharine C. Giovanni, who runs an industry trade group, the International Concierge and Lifestyle Management Association.
“The green idea, that’s really taking off,” Ms. Giovanni said. And in a bad economy, she said, a concierge service is an “excellent home-based business to start up for people who have been liberated from their companies.”
Clients generally come to eco-concierges for a specific reason, say, to help rid their apartment of clutter or set up a pristine nursery for a new baby, and then gradually get excited about other possibilities.
Tracy Stamper, a fitness instructor in St. Louis, hired Herb’n Maid a few years ago for green cleaning after products used by a conventional service aggravated her husband’s asthma. That set her on a slippery green slope. Ms. White referred her to a hairstylist, within walking distance, who would color her hair with natural dyes. Instead of using Drano to unclog bathtubs, Herb’n Maid gave her a less harsh product.
Then Ms. Stamper’s husband bought a solar-powered fan for the attic; the neighbors wanted one, too. Next up for the Stampers may be switching to organic clothing made with no chemical dyes or pesticides.
“My husband and I both look for ways to up the ante,” Ms. Stamper said.
The concierge companies say they vet the vendors they work with, sending out questionnaires, checking on eco-certification status and meeting with them directly. Amy Mayfield, who runs Eco-Modern Concierge in Houston, said she was “pretty hard core” about minimizing her own carbon footprint and was constantly researching the best ways to go about it.
She runs her clients’ light errands on a Vespa scooter, takes cloth grocery bags to do their shopping and takes their leftover food to homeless shelters. When she is hired for pet care, the treats are vegan and homemade and the toys are made from recycled materials.
Do such small steps add up to a larger difference? Some climate experts say not really, explaining that only nations and industries have the collective might to dial back global warming.
“The changes necessary are so large and profound that they are beyond the reach of individual action,” Gernot Wagner, an economist at the Environmental Defense Fund, wrote in a recent New York Times Op-Ed article.
Eco-concierges see it their way — that every contribution counts.
“We want to take baby steps with our clients, so it’s not, ‘Oh, I have to change everything in the house,’ ” said Leeann Brzozowski, the owner of QiLiving in Manhattan.
There are no guilt trips. Ms. Brzozowski recommends buying carbon offsets, using low-emission cars, and drinking organic coffee in reusable mugs — but clients are free to do as they please.
One steady customer is Adrienne Smith, who runs a tour bus company, Harlem Hip-Hop Tours, from her home on the Upper West Side. Under Ms. Brzozowski’s tutelage, Ms. Smith redecorated her apartment with nontoxic paint, replaced her vinyl shower curtain with linen and switched to more expensive recycled paper for her printer.
But last December, when she asked Ms. Brzozowski to plan her birthday party, Ms. Smith knew what she wanted: a not-so-green affair with 50 to 80 people at a hot club with an open bar and a hip-hop deejay.
“She doesn’t bombard you with, ‘You have to do something green,’ ” Ms. Smith said of her concierge.
For those who successfully court the wealthy, there is money to be made. Carrie Starner-Keenan, a concierge in San Francisco who used to work in estate management, said her clients tended to be people with huge properties.
“I’m currently on the way to a client with three homes, one of them a 10,000-square-foot beach house,” she said in an interview from her car. “I’m changing all the pesticides and cleaning products, changing all the light bulbs, setting up systems and manuals for the staff.” Her hourly rate starts at $75.
She even put her instruction manuals on computer disks for future household help.
“To be perfectly honest with you, it’s their staff that is working with making the changes and having to transition into different cleaning products,” Ms. Starner-Keenan said. “The top 2 percent of wealth, they’re not going to have to make the sacrifice.”
Because their services are labor-intensive, the concierges say, they do not take on too many customers at a time. Ms. Burrell of Eco-Concierge said she had about 10 clients who were monthly subscribers, four of whom paid for “elite” memberships. “We can’t spread ourselves too thin,” she said.
Pauletta Brooks, a jewelry designer in Chelsea, bought two hours of Ms. Burrell’s time and used it to help set up a storefront on Etsy.com to sell her work.
“I was pleased with the help I got,” she said, “but I don’t quite get the ‘eco’ part of it. You’re not really saving energy, because you’re just paying someone else to use that energy for you.”
Green living is just so much easier when you have your own personal environmental concierge.
“The problem with going green is that people think it takes so much work, so much effort, so much conscious decision-making,” said Letitia Burrell, president of Eco-Concierge NYC, a year-old business in Manhattan that tries to make it easy for people to rid their homes of toxins, hire sustainable-cuisine chefs and find organic dry cleaners.
Memberships range from $175 a month to $3,500 a year, depending on the level of service. Or you can opt for à la carte service at $25 to $50 an hour.
It is a niche business, but a clever one. At least a half-dozen services of this type have sprung up around the country in recent years, both to help time-starved consumers manage their lives and to assuage the guilt of those who worry that they are letting the planet down.
“There are people who come to us gung-ho and they want to make a sweeping lifestyle change,” said P. Richelle White, who left a corporate advertising job four years ago to start Herb’n Maid, a green cleaning and concierge service in St. Louis. “These are busy professionals who don’t have the time to do the research themselves about different products and services.” Ms. White charges $39 for the first hour and $29 an hour subsequently; she was considering introducing monthly subscriptions.
Personal concierge services originated in hotels but made the leap to people’s homes in the last decade or so, said Katharine C. Giovanni, who runs an industry trade group, the International Concierge and Lifestyle Management Association.
“The green idea, that’s really taking off,” Ms. Giovanni said. And in a bad economy, she said, a concierge service is an “excellent home-based business to start up for people who have been liberated from their companies.”
Clients generally come to eco-concierges for a specific reason, say, to help rid their apartment of clutter or set up a pristine nursery for a new baby, and then gradually get excited about other possibilities.
Tracy Stamper, a fitness instructor in St. Louis, hired Herb’n Maid a few years ago for green cleaning after products used by a conventional service aggravated her husband’s asthma. That set her on a slippery green slope. Ms. White referred her to a hairstylist, within walking distance, who would color her hair with natural dyes. Instead of using Drano to unclog bathtubs, Herb’n Maid gave her a less harsh product.
Then Ms. Stamper’s husband bought a solar-powered fan for the attic; the neighbors wanted one, too. Next up for the Stampers may be switching to organic clothing made with no chemical dyes or pesticides.
“My husband and I both look for ways to up the ante,” Ms. Stamper said.
The concierge companies say they vet the vendors they work with, sending out questionnaires, checking on eco-certification status and meeting with them directly. Amy Mayfield, who runs Eco-Modern Concierge in Houston, said she was “pretty hard core” about minimizing her own carbon footprint and was constantly researching the best ways to go about it.
She runs her clients’ light errands on a Vespa scooter, takes cloth grocery bags to do their shopping and takes their leftover food to homeless shelters. When she is hired for pet care, the treats are vegan and homemade and the toys are made from recycled materials.
Do such small steps add up to a larger difference? Some climate experts say not really, explaining that only nations and industries have the collective might to dial back global warming.
“The changes necessary are so large and profound that they are beyond the reach of individual action,” Gernot Wagner, an economist at the Environmental Defense Fund, wrote in a recent New York Times Op-Ed article.
Eco-concierges see it their way — that every contribution counts.
“We want to take baby steps with our clients, so it’s not, ‘Oh, I have to change everything in the house,’ ” said Leeann Brzozowski, the owner of QiLiving in Manhattan.
There are no guilt trips. Ms. Brzozowski recommends buying carbon offsets, using low-emission cars, and drinking organic coffee in reusable mugs — but clients are free to do as they please.
One steady customer is Adrienne Smith, who runs a tour bus company, Harlem Hip-Hop Tours, from her home on the Upper West Side. Under Ms. Brzozowski’s tutelage, Ms. Smith redecorated her apartment with nontoxic paint, replaced her vinyl shower curtain with linen and switched to more expensive recycled paper for her printer.
But last December, when she asked Ms. Brzozowski to plan her birthday party, Ms. Smith knew what she wanted: a not-so-green affair with 50 to 80 people at a hot club with an open bar and a hip-hop deejay.
“She doesn’t bombard you with, ‘You have to do something green,’ ” Ms. Smith said of her concierge.
For those who successfully court the wealthy, there is money to be made. Carrie Starner-Keenan, a concierge in San Francisco who used to work in estate management, said her clients tended to be people with huge properties.
“I’m currently on the way to a client with three homes, one of them a 10,000-square-foot beach house,” she said in an interview from her car. “I’m changing all the pesticides and cleaning products, changing all the light bulbs, setting up systems and manuals for the staff.” Her hourly rate starts at $75.
She even put her instruction manuals on computer disks for future household help.
“To be perfectly honest with you, it’s their staff that is working with making the changes and having to transition into different cleaning products,” Ms. Starner-Keenan said. “The top 2 percent of wealth, they’re not going to have to make the sacrifice.”
Because their services are labor-intensive, the concierges say, they do not take on too many customers at a time. Ms. Burrell of Eco-Concierge said she had about 10 clients who were monthly subscribers, four of whom paid for “elite” memberships. “We can’t spread ourselves too thin,” she said.
Pauletta Brooks, a jewelry designer in Chelsea, bought two hours of Ms. Burrell’s time and used it to help set up a storefront on Etsy.com to sell her work.
“I was pleased with the help I got,” she said, “but I don’t quite get the ‘eco’ part of it. You’re not really saving energy, because you’re just paying someone else to use that energy for you.”
Monday, October 17, 2011
The Laundress' first shop in shop in Europe
A dream laundry room in a dream store!
Everyone should have a laundry room that looks like The Laundress shop in shop.
A historical store, visionary and exclusive retailer for some of the most
coveted and exclusive European brands, Mazzolari in Milan has taken The
Laundress collection to a whole new level!
While you feel you are in the most
sophisticated laundry room - the entire Fabric Care and Home Cleaning collection
can be had here.
As complete pharmacy junkies, Lindsey
and Gwen could spend hours in this store - from sniffing to scouring every item
in this “perfumery.”
ABOUT PROFUMERIA
MAZZOLARI
Profumeria Mazzolari is the historical
luxury perfumery located in downtown Milan.
Founded in 1888, it started as a barber shop specialized in creating cologne and aftershaves. The passion for this world has been passed on for generations including the current owner Augusto. It was Agusto Mazzolari who expanded the store and servicing the female audience with an entire area dedicated to perfumes and beauty products.
Elegance, sophistication and tradition
together with the continued research of exclusive and innovative brands make
“Profumeria Mazzolari” one of the most renowned perfumeries in Europe.
Mr . Mazzolari and Gwen
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
The Laundress on Birchbox
HISTORY
Longtime friends Lindsey Boyd and Gwen Whiting both had an appreciation for beautiful fabric. Boyd was a U.S.-sales manager at Chanel ready-to-wear, and Whiting was a senior designer at Ralph Lauren Home. But, like most of us, they were frustrated by what happens after gorgeous clothes or linens come home from the store — the inevitable stains, pilling, and stretching that occur after regular wear and tear. Armed with their knowledge of textiles from their studies at Cornell, both Boyd and Whiting also knew that many ‘dry-clean only’ items can really be washed at home — without toxic chemicals or the extra expense — if the right cleansers are used.
Merging their backgrounds in luxury brands and their academic smarts, the pair set out to create their own solutions to simplify the fine art of laundry. The result is an eco-friendly collection of treatments formulated for different fabric care problems —far superior to the one-big-bottle-of-detergent approach — that are easy to use and smell as good as your best perfume.
PHILOSOPHY
As Gwen and Lindsey say: “We are an eco-chic line of specialty detergents and fabric care committed to being green for you, your clothing, and the environment.”
BIRCHBOX EXTRA
We can’t get enough of The Laundress’ perfumer-quality scents, which are made with essential oils, not artificial fragrances. We love No. 247, a mix of bergamot, thyme, lavender, musk, and ylang ylang, and Cedar, an earthy-clean blend of cedarwood oil, frankincense, spices, and citrus zest.
STAR PRODUCTS
You can skip the dry cleaner — and the chemicals, expense, and wait time — with The Laundress’ two standout cleansers. The Delicate Wash removes perspiration, body oils, and stains from silk, rayon, and other tricky fabrics, and the cedar-scented Wool & Cashmere Shampoo cleans, preserves, and softens woolens safely at home. Both concentrated formulas are non-toxic and biodegradable.
Monday, October 10, 2011
The Laundress Featured on Charlotte Moss: A Flair For Living
We absolutely love A Flair For Living so we're delighted to be featured on it!
Does anyone iron anymore?
Cathy, Charlotte’s sister in Mississippi passed along this great short film about ironing called “I Always do my Collars First.” This short documentary follows four Cajun women, and is an insightful and artful look at what most people consider a mundane chore. It shows how a simple ritual as ironing can weave its way through the fabric of family life and a create a sense of identity. Which got us thinking. Does anyone iron anymore? Do you? Below are a few of our favorite ironing products from New York’s very own The Laundress , Pottery Barn and Ballard Designs as well as some helpful tips and advice on ironing. So plug in that iron, and pull out your shirts, just remember, always do your collars first.
For The Laundress: go to www.thelaundress.com
For Pottery Barn: go to www.potterybarn.com
For Ballard Designs: go to www.ballarddesigns.com
September 29, 2011
Charlotte Moss: A Flair For Living
Charlotte Moss: A Flair For Living
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