Using personal protective equipment (PPE) while working as an anaesthetic nurse during the COVID-19 pandemic definitely took a toll on my skin. I frequently had bouts of “Maskne,” a type of acne which was linked to wearing a FFP3 facemask during my 10 hour shifts.
In addition to being a requirement for my job,
I was wearing my me made facemasks in public not only as a cloth barrier. but as a fashion fashion accessory.
Skin care was essentially non- existent of during this time. I hardly ever wore makeup while we were under lockdown.
Since life returned to normal after the pandemic, I resumed with the basics, mainly purchasing from well-known brands offering 3 for 2 sales and promotional gifts which I never utilised
After October 7th of last year, I began boycotting specific brands and companies, as a way to show my support for Palestine.
So, I researched a.k.a. scrolling through my TikTok feed looking at beauty brands with similiar values to mine and an ethos that I could live with. The algorithms used by social media platforms influenced my purchasing power as a consumer.
We currently plan and organise a monthly event where knitters/crocheters come together to eat, drink, and make, as well as doing our part to support the local and independently owned restaurants and cafes in Dublin.
@themurphyleaf is currently behind the scene, planning the annual Knitmas Party….watch this space!
Two years ago, Fibre Shed Ireland invited Instagrammers to use the hashtag #fridayfashionshift. I’ve missed these Fridays, so how about a re-boot this summer?
#FridayFashionShift
Each Friday, choose something from your wardrobe that fits at least one of the categories: [ ] Made from natural fibres [ ] Made locally or by even by you [ ] Is a family heirloom [ ] Has been mended/repaired [ ] Something else which represents your individual ethos surrounding fashion and clothing
Wear it for that day and share a photo with the hashtag #fridayfashionshift
Don’t forget to tell us why you choose it and how it represents your personal fashion ethos
Handknits for #FridayFashionShiftSecond hand denim dress
I don’t remember when I’ve been focused on sustainability. Maybe it started around the time of the Pandemic when I started making reuseable cloth facemasks. It really bothered me to see so many disposable blue face coverings littered carelessly on the sidewalks and footpaths around the hospital.
I recently attended the CAI Annual Congress of Anaesthesia and the Sustainability Session was one I attended with interest. Three very relevant topics in our current world:
• Sustainable Anaesthesia
•Planning the Irish Green Theatre
• Human Healthcare and the Ocean
Listening to these speakers and the Q & A following the session has made me even more passionate and speaking out about sustainability and the impactnto our planet’s ecosystem.
When I look around in the perioperative setting, we generate a lot of healthcare related waste from packaging to single-use items. In particular, the blue disposable head coverings worn in the operating theatres
I did a quick calculation on the number of operating theatre staff – nurses, doctors, support staff, technicians and med & nursing students who cross that red line you know the one, that says Surgical Attire Only Beyond This Point.
For example, a general surgery operating theatre staffed with a minimum of: 4 perioperative nurses, 1 anaesthetic nurse 1 Consultant Anaesthesiologist 1 Anaesthetic Registrar 1 HealthCare Aid 1 Consultant Surgeon 2 Surgical Registrars 1 Surgical SHO 2 students on their surgical rotation
That is 14 people wearing disposable hats and multiply that by say , 10 Operating Theatres. That sum is 140 per day. Elective surgery lists are 5 days a week which brings our total up to 700 single use theatre hats per week that may end up in landfill.
Single use hats are made from viscose, manufactured from tree pulp. It is estimated that 120million trees are cut down each year for viscose production, deforesting woodland and therefore potentially degrading local ecosystems and adding to climate change.
Viscose is produced when wood chips from the trees are pulped in a process requiring steam and chemicals such as sodium hydroxide and bleach (chlorine) This process is toxic and produces water waste.
I applaud the Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust who published their case study in 2022, whereby they tackled excess waste by switching to re-useable theatre caps.
I make my own theatre hats, which is my miniscule contribution to “saving the planet”.
I also sell 100% cotton theatre caps, mainly to my loyal and regular customers all over Ireland, using the tagline, Life is too short to wear boring scrubhats.
It’s time for me to elaborate and advocate for reuseable cloth scrub hats.
Things you need to know about the me and my VillaMaker ScrubHats:
• The fabric I use is 100% cotton.
• I support Irish by purchasing my fabric from shops and businesses based in Ireland.
• I contribute to reducing excess fabric and textiles by purchasing from many individuals who have “re-homing sales” to sell off their stashed fabric.
• I only use quality sewing thread (Gutterman)
• My hats are made in the VillaMaker Studio (a spare bedroom in our home in Crumlin)
• my pricing reflects my time and labour to making each hat
Some of my healthcare colleagues have sited and bought from Temu because the price is cheap. As a Maker, I detest the likes of Temu and Shein. But that’s a discussion for another day.
At the moment, I really don’t push my sales because it would take huge amounts of my time and energy to make my way to the top of the algorithms on the social media platforms.
I’d rather be sewing and selling for my loyal customer base who appreciate not only the quality of what I make, but those who are ethically and sustainably like myself.
Anyone have a history of joining the knitters’ parade of MKALs and not completing the mystery FO?
To quote Marshall McLuhan, “We look at the present through a rear view mirror.”
I’ve just started looking at the art of affirmations. • I am grateful for my past as it brought me to the present.
A last minute decision to join @feller.carol MKAL Grainchloch Shawl. Factor in that Vivacious 4ply is my stash and an online purchase for some luxurious fluff, Manos del Uruguay Cabrito in Tiza and Sea Salt.
There’s great community support and plenty of Knitworking opportunities on the Stolen Stitches Knit Hub.
I am extremely fortunate to be able to use the Mezzanine of the IFI Cafe Bar once a month. As it is in the city centre, this is an excellent venue for knitters and crocheters to meet.
Although I am the host for these socials, my other half is the event planner and organiser.
January is a long month, so we choose to keep things cheap and cheerful with tea, coffee, mini cakes and pastries.
Enjoying the auditory, visual and tactile pleasures of knitworking alongside some incredible makers is an incredible experience.
In the coming week or so, I will make an announcement regarding our next Knit & Stitch Social.
Keep an eye on my Instagram, @diane.villamaker for the most recent updates.
We’re halfway through Soctober and I’ve been toting my current sock wip in the first Japanese knot bag that I made at the start of the Pandemic.
Making these little project bags were a perfect stashbuster, using up cotton fabrics from sewing cloth facemasks.
Last year, I went to a party and needed an evening bag .
So, I whipped up one, out of a vintage art deco style damask fabric and lined it with gold silk satin.
I had no pockets and this Japanese knot bag was the perfect little carry all for my essentials – phone, money, lipstick, hotel keycard and my salbutamol inhaler.
My latest collection of Japanese Knot Bags will only be available by made to order soon.
Kandinsky Knot Bag
This Kandinsky inspired knot bag is a work of art . The abstract artist and colour theorist was well known with his bold and brilliantly coloured paintings.
Kandinsky saw the dot, or point, as a small circle. He argued that this was the most basic, fundamental element of painting, observing “everything starts from a dot.” From this basic dot, one could go on to create any variation of line or shape.
Circles were a recurring feature in his abstract art, and he painted them in a huge range of variations, from planet-like orbs to repetitive concentric designs.
Made from a Kandinsky inspired tapestry textile and lined with re-homed drapery fabric.
And knot forgetting one of the famous Impressionists, Van Gogh
Impression by Colour
This knot bag is inspired by Van Gogh’s colour palette. The post-impressionist artist became well known for his techniques in passionate brush strokes in symbolic and intense color, in surface tension, and in the movement and vibration of form and line.
I’m so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers ~ Anne of Green Gables
I’m back trading as a stall vendor at our first Libertine Market Crawl, today (1st October) . It’s The Murphy Leaf’s first time to leave the comforts of D12 and into the buzz of The Liberties. Exciting times as I launch a collection of handspun yarn at the Market.
The Autumn In-Vest KAL wraps up this week and I’m only partway on the Aldwych Vest.
After the huge success and soldout event of the SnB at the IFI Café Bar, I wish to announce that the opportunity has arisen to have a monthly social at the IFI Café Bar and I’ve seized this opportunity to make it our regular city centre venue for the forseeable future.
Most importantly is that we have exclusive use of the mezzanine. So, the next social will be in celebration of Samháin on Saturday 28 October, 1230pm to 4pm.
It will be a ticketed event going forward as the feedback I have received is that people like the idea of food being provided. To be clear, there is no profit to me. I simply charge what it costs for the food and gratitiuty. I will try to keep it as reasonable as possible. Again, it will be €6.50 which includes cafe style afternoon tea of a selection of sandwiches & chips. And you can purchase whatever you wish to drink.
Today also marks the first day of Socktober. Over the years I hosted Sock KALs, however, this year I’m stepping back and joining the Knit Up Philippines Sock KAL over on Facebook.
I’ll be casting on a true favourite, the Basic Sock Recipe pattern by the Yarn Harlot. I’m getting a head start on my Christmas socks with a sparkly ball of WYS sock yarn that I got as a birthday pressie, which I I contrast with some red from my stash.
It’s a new year, along with a new creative challenge hosted by Kim Werker ( @kpwerker on Instagram).
My creative mojo needs a serious tune-up and a good kick in the a**. So, I’m joining Kim in making 2023 a Year of Making.
The concept is really quite simple: commit to spending even a couple of minutes every day making something… it doesn’t matter what and I get to decide what counts.
I am so excited to get started that I even started a new journal. I even ink stamped a new insert to go into my Voyager notebook.