Join us on Saturday, November 17th from 5-9pm for our Fashion Show Preview Photo Shoot at Studio 3! 50 SE Scott Street; Suite #1, Bend.
When I first shared the idea with men I know, there was an undercurrent of grumblings, “fashion, that’s for women” . . . “Nothing there for me” . . . “Whatever” . . . That first year we suppressed these objections, focusing our time getting the event up and running. But by year 2, we realized how energized the men who came to the Rubbish Renewed Eco Fashion Show found themselves wrapped in the experience.
The event is creative, it’s edgy, using crazy materials to create visual splendor grounded in sustainability, worn by real people with personalities. The “models” present an image revealed by merging aesthetics, vision, trash and action – living art. It’s not a bunch of unrealistically, skinny-stiff bodies, wearing things that distort the women’s figure.
The spectacle of the runway is coupled with a unique Bend energy. Local libations including beer from Boneyard, a brewery forged from beer rendering rubbish, Kombucha Mama, Crazy Dave’s Ginger Brew and Bend Distillery’s Crater Lake Vodka; cool music with sound from Sonic Solutions; a local artists, gallery-style marketplace, including the likes of Stuart Breidenstein’s jewelry, and Workhouse artists.
No matter what your impression of fashion, your ideas will be transformed by this forward-thinking event. Hey guys don’t write this off. Maybe next year you’ll even want to model on the runway.

Necklaces, zipper pulls, and earrings are the creations made by “Just A Little Charm” out of copper salvaged from the old Bend Bulletin’s roof.
Bend, Oregon is an incredibly cool place to live. Although the community has grown substantially since I moved here in 2000, it still has a small town feel. Walking downtown, I always bump into someone I know eager to engage in a meaningful discussion. People here not only hold “important” conversations, like how to make a difference in their community, they take action. One approach comes from the willingness, no, eagerness to think about waste, and to do something about it in an ingenious way. I’ve never met so many creative, capable, motivated and sustainably minded people in a small area (accept maybe Lopez Island – but that’s another story).
So have you ever thought about tiny speakers built into reused ALTOIDS tins? Sculpted bowls formed from old records? What about bold jewelry and accessories created from vintage Formica or salvaged roof copper? These are just a smattering of the imaginative and well-crafted offerings available this year in the Marketplace at the Rubbish Renewed Eco Fashion Show on December 6th. Check out these pieces for a taste of what’s to come.

N. Spekktor specializes in handmade treasures created from household items, journals, and old vinyl records.

Connect the Minty Blaster to the headphone jack on your portable music player and its built-in amplifier will provide a roomful of curiously strong, curiously hip mono sound.
Marketplace spaces are going quickly, so if you are interested, checkout the vendor submission info and grab a space before they’re gone.

Paris in Allison Murphy’s Kiddy Pool Dress. Photo by Tambi Lane
Amazing day at the Bend Fall Festival! Kids and adults alike, made pledges for a sustainable earth in tyvek “paper-cut” snowflakes for the Rubbish Renewed Community Garment. And six garments from the 2011 Rubbish Renewed Eco Fashion Show were showcased on the main stage in a runway snapshot of talented clothing artists.
If you didn’t make it today, or even if you did, come out tomorrow (Sunday) for another day of fashion forward fun. We’ll be on the main stage at 2:30 and our booth is open from 11-6pm. Come create an ornament to symbolize your pledge for action and help spread the message on December 6th at the Rubbish Renewed Eco Fashion Show, making a community shift for a better more environmentally conscious world.
How would you react to a friend wearing a paper grocery-bag couture dress adorned with trash ornaments on a runway? In 2010 this fashion-forward piece graced our runway, making an aesthetic statement for the environment. Conscientious residents of Bend created the Community Garment, making their often unconscious choices conscious by pledging to reduce their consumption and waste. In 2011, we were inspired by the sterile hospital dressing that protects surgical instruments and is later tossed into our landfills.
These are the types of fashion statements that don’t cost a lot of money, but move down the runway delivering a provocative message; A clear message to rethink waste, our habits, and to decrease our impact on the planet.
This weekend Rubbish Renewed invites YOU to come out, rethink your habits, and make a pledge to decrease your consumption and waste. Join us at Bend’s downtown Fall Festival to create the 2012 Community Garment. Find the Rubbish Renewed crew near the junction of Oregon & Wall in downtown Bend 11-5pm Saturday & Sunday.
It is hard to believe that the 2nd annual Rubbish Renewed Eco Fashion Show has come and gone! We took a strong event and, because of the community support and involvement, exceeded all of our goals. For a complete line up of photos from Tambi Lane Photography, please go to the gallery below.
We satiated people’s appetites with local food carts and helped washed it all down with beverages from our favorite local beverage businessesWe can’t wait for the third annual,
Amy, Karen & Allison
I love Rubbish Renewed Eco Fashion Show because it provides an outlet for my quirky passion – making fashion out of unconventional materials, what others might call trash. My obsession started when, at 8, I wove a shirt out of a hodgepodge of found items: dried grass, scraps of yarn, and carded wool from my mom’s spinning basket. After that I was hooked.
The draw of trash-fashion comes from the materials themselves. When I design, I start with the item, like old slides and film. With the demise of film cameras, my cupboard is filled with boxes of 2nds (the slides that didn’t make the final show cut, but are still “good”). The question arises – what could I do with them? Make a dress of course.
Then the thrill begins. I secretly sketch on napkins at restaurants, programs at lectures, and junk mail envelopes. I ponder how a series of hard squares might fit together on the human form, and how to attach them. This creates months, maybe years of thrilling design time.
Finally the construction process begins. For me it’s like rock climbing – a series of problems in front of me, some that seem impossible at first, but with patience and tenacity, in the end, I usually prevail.
Don’t miss the Rubbish Renewed Eco Fashion Show tomorrow night and see “Please don’t Take my Kodachrome Away,” by me (Karen Holm) and other artists renditions of their quirky passions.
mob ended the evening at TBD Loft transforming into a live window display. What a night!
What happened to your old scratched vinyl records? What do you do with the stash of raffle tickets that didn’t win? How about the plastic bags stuffed in the garage?

Find them in these incredible trash fashion photos taken last Saturday night at Tambi Lane Photography – the first public Rubbish Renewed preview photo session. Not only cutting edge in style, these garments re-envision trash into sustainable, wearable art. Come out tomorrow night (December 2nd) for 1st Friday. You may catch a glimpse of a few pieces making their red carpet debut. Find them around town or at TBD Loft for this year’s Trash Transcendence Community Created Garment.





Garments designed by: 1) Lloyd McMullen; 2) Cecile Cuddihy; 3-4) Sarabella; 5) Mohave Woodson; 6/8) Rowan Varvais; 7) N. Spekktor; 9-10) Panambi Opazo Elliott; 11-13) Alicia Renner (Horned Hand Business Challenge) + Stuart Breidenstein (necklace); 14) Astacia Christenson
photos by: Tambi Lane Photography
www.tambilane.com | 541.390.7666 | tambilane@msn.com
I love this time of year! More time with family, friends, holiday parties, and the 2nd annual Rubbish Renewed Eco Fashion Show is upon us; just 10 days away. Along with the season’s merrymaking, we can not ignore our increased production of holiday trash. The facts about holiday waste are staggering…
We believe in the power to educate, change, and inspire and want to invite you to come out on Friday night (December 2nd), during the First Friday festivities, to create the 2011 Community Garment. To have a hand in this “show-stopping” number, stop by TBD Loft (upstairs at 856 NW Bond Street), and make a pledge to reduce your consumption and waste this season and for a lifetime.