Archive for the ‘Biome Lifestyle’ Category

Grab a bargain, while you can!

Friday, January 14th, 2011

Discounted products seem to be everywhere at the moment – not like I am complaining!

Biome Lifestyle’s sale is still running and will continue for a further week or so… with prices starting at £1 you really can grab a bargain!

Once the sale has finished though, it’s inevitable that prices will increase everywhere. Our suppliers have already hiked up their prices due to the increasing transport costs and cotton prices, so I am afraid we will be left with no choice but to increase our prices a little in 2011 too. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news but as they say, it’s a sign of the times!

I know I am enjoying the sale prices whilst I can and I thought I would share some of my favourite stores with you too, as long as you don’t buy everything up before I do!!

Take a look at this gorgeous Sweetheart dress from People Tree, reduced to just £37 from £75! Fair trade from India.

people tree dressFor further lovely sale items, go to www.peopletree.co.uk

Another of my favourite stores, which is great for everyday and weekend way is Howies. I am very tempted by this Fairisle pattern cardigan in soft & cosy lambswool…

104L-L414-1963-SEREN-CARDI-navy-feathered

Our local Whole Foods store also has a fantastic range of discounted beauty products, in particlaular Tisserand which is one of my personal favourites as it’s so gentle on sensitive skin.

Oh the choices, the choices! Hurry up pay day, we need you!

Wishing you all a great weekend! x

Happy New Year!

Friday, January 7th, 2011

Happy New Year to all of our loyal and wonderful customers!

This week we have been planning the year ahead and we are very excited by some of Biome’s exciting ‘big plans’ and even more excited about the lovely products we will soon be stocking!

So if you are making any New Year’s resolutions for 2011, make sure that buying lovely, ethically sourced gifts and home furnishings from Biome Lifestyle is at the top of your list!!

Here’s to a wonderful year ahead!

x

Happy Holidays!

Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010

Wow, what a year!

2010 has been quite a rollercoaster for Biome!

We have seen so many of our favourite small suppliers close down, which has been so sad. However, there have been many highs as well, with sales up from 2009 (hooray!), Sophie our new PR lady bringing in some great press coverage and Susie who manages our customer services doing a sterling job! Overall it’s been another great year and we look forward to the year to come!

Thank you to all our loyal and wonderful customers! We hope you have enjoyed using/giving our products and hope you return for more in 2011!

Wishing you all Happy Holidays and a fantastic New Year!

Best wishes,

Alexandra xx
FounderMerry christmas banner kitchen

Cover stars!

Friday, December 10th, 2010

Wow! We’re on the front cover of Your Home magazine! We can’t believe our luck!

Your Home coverBiome’s founder, Alexandra and her husband James’ flat is featured in the January magazine, as well as a great shot on the front cover too!

Huge thanks to the wonderful stylist Nicola Wilkes and photographer Matt Cant. Sadly our kettle broke down a few minutes before they arrived all the way from Wales, but thanks to constantly boiling pots of water, we made it through the day with some caffeine in our systems! It was a great day. We never thought little old us would don the front pages of a national mag! How exciting!

Let the countdown to Christmas begin!

Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

For the countdown to Christmas find below 24 ethical tips and eco ideas to ensure you ‘offset’ your increase in consumption and do your bit during the festive season…

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Support your local businesses, especially those that are trying to be ethical. This year, order an organic or free-range turkey from a local farm. Buy fruit and vegetables from a local box scheme. These options reduce transportation miles and support your local economy.  Contact the Soil Association (www.soilassociation.org) for their “Organic Christmas List” of suppliers.
The cost of this year’s unwanted novelty Christmas items and other presents will reach an estimated £1.3bn! Rather than spend on those unwanted presents, think about giving an imaginative and worthwhile gift instead. Give someone you love tickets to a local concert, salsa class or cinema show. At least you will know your gift will be used and hopefully enjoyed too!
Which Christmas tree option will you go for? This year, why not plant your own Christmas tree in your garden! Decorate it with LED lights and decorations – at least this way you won’t have annoying pine needles to pick off the carpet! However, if you really want a fresh tree in your home, why not opt for a potted tree which can be replanted at the end of the festive season? If planted well after Christmas, your tree should grow and thrive outside and it will always be a lovely memento of Christmas day.
Make your own decorations. If you have left over wallpaper, wrapping paper or even magazines, use the paper to create paper chains to decorate the house! Simply cut the paper into equal strips (approximately 15cm x 4cm) and glue the two ends together. Next, loop another strip through the paper loop and again glue the ends. Keep doing this until you have the right length of paper chain.
Use ethically sourced or natural materials for decorations. Next time you go on a walk, look out for fallen branches, hedges or holly bushes. Cut off small sections of the bushes (always ask the owner first) and decorate around your home. Ethically sourced decorations beat chemical-based plastic decorations any day!
Find out what matters to your friends and family and make a donation to an organisation that would be meaningful to them. Many non-profit organizations rely heavily on holiday gifts of money, stock, and personal property, even insurance to continue their work. Websites we like here: www.oxfam.co.uk / www.presentaid.co.uk/ others.
For decorating presents, try to buy recycled wrapping paper or re-use left over paper from previous years. Alternatively, why not wrap with magazine pages or newspaper. It has been calculated in the US that if every family reused just 2 feet of festive ribbon, the 38,000 miles of ribbon saved could tie a bow around the entire planet.
This year send Christmas cards made from recycled card to friends, family and loved ones. Remember to recycle the cards when finished – your local council should be able to tell you of local card collection schemes or alternatively add the card to your recycling bin.
Use your own bags for your Christmas shopping… Around 125,000 tonnes of non biodegradable plastic packaging are thrown away each Christmas. 8 billion plastic bags are used every year in the UK alone, and the UK supermarkets failed to meet their plastic bag reduction targets. So don’t forget to take your own bags with you when you go shopping and avoid presents with too much packaging.
We can all do our bit to reduce energy wastage this Christmas. Switching off the television, video or DVD, and digibox rather than leaving them on standby would shave more than GBP3.5 million off UK electricity bills in the Christmas week.
Indoor strings of Christmas lights don’t use a lot of energy. Swap your ordinary light bulbs for energy saving ones. They use a fraction of the energy and last on average 12 times longer. If every UK household installed just one energy saving bulb, over £80 million per year in electricity charges would be saved. Oh, and don’t forget to turn off your fairy lights each night!
Why not save on waste and money and send an online e-card instead? There are many sites available which offer free e-cards. Best of all, they can’t get dumped in a landfill after the festive period! Visit www.hallmark.com for ideas.
Try to look for gifts which are either fair-trade or made from recycled or sustainable materials. The choice of desirable fair-trade, recycled and sustainable items available to buy is expanding rapidly. Be safe in the knowledge that, not only has your purchase not been detrimental to the environment, but has also directly benefited the local communities.
If you receive a present you don’t feel you’ll ever use, why not donate it present to a charity shop or swap it for something you do want on www.freecycle.org.
Christmas dinner is a meal that has the rare honour of being based on seasonal produce – an unusual thing in this age of un-seasonal, year-round supermarket food. Use produce such as sprouts, chestnuts, parsnips and red cabbage which are in season over the Christmas period; that’s precisely the reason why they are traditionally eaten at this time of year. You should enjoy your Christmas food more if you know it hasn’t had to be flown halfway round the world to reach your table!
If BiomeLifestyle Eco Seed crackers aren’t for you try making your own crackers –by following the step-by-step Make your own Christmas Crackers guide!
If you’re having a party, avoid serving food and drink on disposable plates and cups – they will just add to our growing mountain of waste. Borrow extra crockery from friends and neighbours. Also, many wine shops and supermarkets lend boxes of wine glasses if you’re buying supplies from them.
Retain paper shopping bags after shopping trips, and decorate with bows and ribbons. Personalise with name tags and favourite coloured ribbon – you will be surprised how stylish they can look!
In the UK we buy 7.5m Christmas trees every year. Therefore, recycling fresh trees after Christmas can make a huge difference in reducing holiday waste. Instead of taking up space in the landfill, trees can be ground into wood chips, which can be used to mulch gardens or parks or to prevent erosion at a local watershed. Call your local council to find out about your regional Christmas tree recycling scheme.
Candle decorations are lovely at this time of the year and can brighten any home. Candles not only provide a much softer and attractive light, but they also save on energy. . . Isolate and enhance the flame by standing large pillar candles in recycled glass bowls. See www.biomelifestyle.com for candles and recycled glass holders.
Recycle your old Christmas cards from past years and create beautiful, hand-made Christmas gift tags. Give your children old Christmas cards, ribbon, old buttons, glue, a hole-punch and children’s scissors. Spend time together cutting up the old Christmas cards to use the images on the front of the cards, stick on buttons and ribbon to create lovely, homemade tags to attach to all your presents.
This Christmas, why not volunteer? It may seem a cliché, but you really can make a difference. And there’s nothing that gets to the heart of the matter, taking care of each other, than reaching out and making somebody’s holiday a little more like it should be. Organisations we like and who definitely need your help include Crisis, Shelter and Vitalise.
If you are buying electrical or electronic presents, buy rechargeable batteries to go with them. Or even better, look out for gifts which are energy efficient, such as wind-up or solar powered electrical goods.
How clued up are you on your natural environment? It can be great fun to test your knowledge and go on a nature-spotting session. There are all sorts of things you can look out for and try name – trees, birds, animals, insects, mushrooms. For more information on what to search for and when, either buy a good guidebook or go to www.whentowatchwildlife.org

It’s snowing!

Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

Brrr it’s cold!

The snow is falling in Norfolk, so the guys are working hard in our depot to keep warm! The photo below shows our snow covered yard yesterday morning!

Depot snow

Apparently they are almost knee deep in the beautiful Norfolk countryside today! Don’t worry though, thanks to our dedicated team, orders will be still going out as usual. The determined Natasha vowed she would ‘carry the parcels on her back if it comes to… it’! Let’s hope the snow slows down a little so it doesn’t come to that!

Thanks guys!! x

Wonderful advent calendars!

Friday, November 19th, 2010

I know I am being a little bit biased, but I just love our advent calendars! Beautifully handmade and reusable, the team at YOU Magazine adore the range too. Sourced from a not-for-pr

ofit manufacturer based in Kathmandu, Nepal with the mission of fighting urban poverty, there is a wonderful story behind the range.

FHC4

The small organisation supports skills training and income generation programs for eighty female heads of household and single mothers living in and around the capital. Many of the employees are survivors of human trafficking and other horrendous experiences; this employment support fosters a sense of independence and confidence in an otherwise marginalised population. By buying these Fairly Traded advent calendars you are helping women in the developing world improve their lives.

Girls and door advent calendar

The Door advent calendar is being filled above by a lovely customers two daughters. They are filling the calendar with hair bobbles, colourful star decorations and candy sticks! Thanks for the photo, looks like they are in for an exciting count down to Christmas!


For more advent calendar and Christmas decorating ideas click here!

This weeks charity work!

Friday, November 5th, 2010

Here at Biome we are often donating and working with UK based charities.

Although we are only small, it’s firmly grounded into our company’s ethos that we should ‘do our bit’. After all, every little helps!

So this week we have donated children’s rolling pins to a children’s charity, CHICKS (Country Holidays for Inner City Kids) who provide free respite breaks for disadvantaged children from across the UK. The charity organizes a lot of great activities for the children, visits to an adventure park, abseiling, pony trekking and gorge scrambling to name a few, these things they would never normally have the opportunity to enjoy.

chicks
The rolling pins were donated for a cookery day, so we really hope the kids had a fantastic day!

Secondly, I have just been contacted by another UK charity New Life Trading. The charity collects old, damaged or unwanted stock from retail stores, which they then de-brand and sell through their large charity superstore. All the profit is transferred to the Newlife Foundation for Disabled Children. (www.newlifecharity.co.uk); which provides essential equipment such as special beds, wheelchairs, communication aids, specialist seating, sensory and therapy equipment to disabled and terminally ill children across the UK.

We had a heap of damaged and end of line stock we no longer could sell, so rather than it gathering dust on our shelves, it will now be helping disabled children. That’s what I call recycling at its best!

Have a good weekend!

New facebook competition!

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

Biome Lifestyle has recently launched a Facebook page. Our aim is to create an ethically conscious and design savvy community who we can interact with daily. Customers will also soon be able to ask product questions and ask for order status too.

It’s all quite new to us so now all we need are a few more friends on there!

To follow us on Facebook, then please click on the image below and click the Like button.

facebook

If you would like to enter our competition to win £50 of Biome Lifestyle vouchers then please leave a comment on our wall, stating what your favourite Biome Lifestyle product is. The winner will be picked at random and notified via Facebook.

Come join us today!

x

Help! No tea!

Friday, October 15th, 2010

Our Tefal Quick Cup, after 2 solid years finally gave its last chug, splutter and cough today. It’s been a great kettle and I am contemplating buying another. I loved the fact I just had to press one button and hey presto, my tea was ready in a matter of seconds (ok apart from the milk and sugar bit)! It has been so quick and efficient making my beloved cups of Yorkshire & green tea that I feel I have lost a friend!

tea revives you

However, my friends and family hated it! They complained it was “tricky” (you only have to press one button!) “noisy” (this I can’t really argue with) and down right “annoying” (hmm).

So I am now in a dilemma – do I buy another and further annoy my acquaintances or look out for a new (preferably energy saving) alternative?

Do you use an eco kettle, if so which one and would you recommend it? Any help soon would be appreciated, after all boiling a small pan of water on the hob every time we want a cuppa is not the best for the environment or my patience!

Oh the dilemma!