a word about wrapping paper
Friday, December 7, 2007 at 04:32AM {i really want to thank you - all of you - for your kind, kind words about my hanukkah posts thus far. i know that, for most of you, this is not your holiday. and it does go on for quite some time. so thank you for indulging me - and in many cases for encouraging me - as i share our traditions and our celebrations in this space.}
i couldn't let this holiday pass without mentioning wrapping paper. really, i wanted to talk about fried potatoes this morning. but that will have to wait, because i have a lot of potatoes to fry today for our dinner tonight. so wrapping paper it is.
i love a beautifully wrapped package. i love to wrap it. i love to give it. i love to receive it. but my appreciation for beautifully wrapped packages has evolved.
sometime in the last two years i read an article about how americans spend $2.7 billion annually on wrapping paper. (i can't find it the actual article i read at the time, but look it up on google and you'll see the statistic quoted again and again.) two billion seven hundred thousand dollars each year on something that goes directly into the trash.
that was it for me and my beautifully wrapped packages. i just couldn't stomach the waste. i used up what i had left in my wrapping-paper-stash, and then i moved on. i moved on to newspaper, which is not at all beautiful except for the fact that it is already (hopefully) going into the recycling pile and is being re-purposed first. and on top of the newspaper, i use grosgrain ribbon. i've accumulated a variety of ribbons in different colors and patterns, and i love the way the bright ribbon looks against the black and white of the newspaper.
so now, i wrap all of my gifts this way. hoping, of course, that the ribbon will be used again. and knowing that, even if it's not, the waste involved in my wrapping is far less than it used to be.
so there. i've said it. if you get a package from me this holiday season, or at any time of the year, really, it will be wrapped in newspaper and adorned with grosgrain ribbon. i hope that you'll recycle the newspaper and re-use the ribbon. but even if you don't, i hope that you'll enjoy the gift that is wrapped up inside.
(if you've got other environmentally friendly wrapping ideas, i'd love to hear them. most of my gifts are already wrapped for this holiday, but there are birthdays on the horizon. and i'm always looking for something new!)
celebrating 

Reader Comments (21)
I like to wrap packages in a dish cloth- that way the wrapping is also part of the gift!
Your faith tradition and mine may be different, but my belief is that love and tolerance, respect and encouragement are virtues that transcend formal faith traditions. I feel if I bring all of these virtues to my dealing with everyone, then the entire world becomes a better, kinder, gentler place.
I love the inspirations you share. I have you programmed in Google reader, so I'll be back again and again. Have a wonderful holiday season - Merry Christmas from my house to yours.
personally, i like to use them to hold my knitting projects.
and i've got to say, i CAN'T WAIT for your potato post. :)
I save all of the big paintings (from our big paper roll) and reuse them as wrapping paper. It makes the little guy feel good to see his art on a present, and everyone seems to love it.
My father-in-law used to work for the MO state highway dept and the out-of-date maps were my wrapping of choice. But now he's retired, and my stash of maps is gone. So it's on to newspaper!
I am loving your Hanukkah posts, Emily. They're beautiful, and heartfelt and educational to many of us.
As for environmentally friendly wrapping, mainly we do the newspaper thing but if there is someone who I know likes fabric I'll take a piece that has been settling at the bottom of the pile for a while.
as for wrapping, i'm all about reusing the wrapping materials that i receive -- using the other side of paper or wrapping things in rumpled tissue paper, sprucing them up with ribbon or a few wraps of yarn.
love the photos of your ribbon.
and really thank YOU for educating me on hanukkah.
my plan this year is to use the free end rolls from our local newspaper...with thrift shop ribbon... : )
I love the ribbon pictures!
i am personally a big fan of butcher paper - the kids can decorate it for their friends and i can dress it up with a nice ribbon and maybe a flower, too. perfect.
Is that a problem -- well, anyway - that's my story. I also like presents wrapped in old maps - maps from national geographics or old road maps, etc. etc. Or tiny packages wrapped in pretty pages from magazines.
Can't wait for the latkes post. Mouth is watering just from your mention of them before. Hmmm - I have 3 potatoes just sitting there....
I do alot of wrapping in brown paper bags, which will also just get recycled or repurposed in another way. I have used parchment paper in the past, and I keep using up tissue paper that has accumulated over the years. And then I try to embellish the gift with a pretty tag or ribbon or something.