Eco-Beauty Recommendations from I-Spa’s Janine Giordanelli

Looking for ways to up the eco ante when it comes to your daily beauty routine? For eco-beauty tips, we checked in with San Francisco aesthetician Janine Giordanelli of I-Spa, the day spa at the InterContinental San Francisco, which is aiming to become a LEED-certified hotel this August. Read on for Giordanelli’s thoughts on eco-product lines, the benefits of opting for eco-friendly skincare and the importance of recommendations from those you trust.

What are some suggestions for eco-beauty options that can be found in your local drugstore?

Yes To Carrots C Me Smile Lip Butter, $3.69, available at Walgreens. It has so many healthy ingredients: organic carrot extract, coconut oil, jojoba-seed oil, shea butter.

Burt’s Bees Radiance Body Lotion with Royal Jelly, $8.99, available at various drugstores. This shimmering moisturizer is all-natural. Royal jelly contains essential amino acids and B vitamins, and the lotion has no chemical preservatives.

L’Oreal Bare Naturale Soft-Focus Mineral Finish, $15.25, available at various drugstores. The translucent powder absorbs oil and minimizes lines and wrinkles, giving you a flawless finish in seconds. It’s preservative-free for sensitive types, and it has a built-in brush applicator.

100 % Pure Organic Cranberry Facial Cleansing Foam from Sage Beauty, available online. This gentle facial cleansing foam washes away makeup, excess oil and other impurities without stripping or dehydrating the skin. Rather than using harsh detergents, 100% Pure cleansers are made with a mild virgin coconut cleanser. Cranberries are high in vitamins, flavanoids and fruit acids to wash away dullness. The product is also made with soothing and hydrating organic rose hydrosol and antioxidant-rich white tea. There are no synthetic chemicals, no artificial fragrances, no parabens, no petro-chemicals or any other toxins. It’s also all natural and 100 percent vegan. This cleansing foam is touted as nourishing for all skin types, but especially for skin lacking a healthy glow.

What products do you recommend at (I) Spa?

We specifically carry eco-friendly products and use them in our professional treatments. A few of the eco-beauty lines are: Phytomer, Eve Taylor and Spa Ritual.

Are these eco-friendly products more effective than their non-eco counterparts?

Absolutely, in fact, most times they are more effective than those not so eco-friendly beauty products in terms of irritation and sensitivity, as well as improving the quality of the skin overall.

What other advice do you have for women trying to add more eco-friendly beauty products to their routines?

It’s important to make sure that you get effective results from eco-friendly products. You want value and results, so you want to make sure you are getting high quality products from a trusted source. Recommendations are always a plus.

Photography courtesy of I-Spa

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Bag Lady: Talking Eco-Friendly Fashion with ReMade USA’s Shannon South

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If long since forgotten, hopelessly out-of-style leather jackets have a hero, it’s certain to be Shannon South, the San Francisco-based designer behind ReMade USA, whose leather handbags made from cast-off jackets have given fans of eco-friendly fashion a solution to their incurable leather obsessions. Since launching in 2009, South’s line of one-of-a-kind handbags has been featured everywhere from Style.com to Fast Company and landed at Barneys New York stores around the country. This week, ReMade USA has the distinction of being one of 10 eco-friendly labels chosen for a coveted spot in the Designers & Agents Green Room during the New York marketplace’s spring show of over 1,000 companies.

We caught up with South, 37, recently to chat about her design process, her transition to eco-friendly fashion, thrift store style and her tips for greening our own shopping habits.

Tell us about your design process. How do you decide what kind of bag to make from each jacket?

Every bag has to be designed based on the details of the jacket. It’s not the most automated system…Certain jackets work better for certain styles. If I find a big 80’s style jacket with big pockets…then I say, okay this will work great for the Powell bag. It’s basically a rectangular bag that, when it’s hanging, forms a hobo shape and has big pockets.

How many hours does it take, on average, to create one bag?

It can take, from start to finish, from two hours up to like six hours. The more large pieces of leather I have to work with, it’s a lot less work. Most of the work is involved in piecing it together. I like the large men’s jackets because they’re very boxy. A small, fitted women’s jacket is a lot of work, because I completely disassemble it, and I lay it out flat and I stitch the pieces together. The more fitted the jacket is, the smaller the pieces are.

Where do you find the leather jackets you use?

When I first stared, I was going around to thrift stores around San Francisco, but it became way too much work. There’s so much stuff that’s donated to Salvation Army and Goodwill. Way more stuff is donated to them than they actually sell. Then they sell it to other companies that sort everything and sell it in bulk. It can be kind of hit or miss. Sometimes I’ll get a shipment and I’ll get great ones, and sometimes they’ll be really worn.

You’ve said before that the jackets have a history. How so?

A lot of my custom orders are people sending me jackets. It’s really amazing. People send me the history of the jacket, and they tell me why it’s important to them. I’ve had one woman who sent me her brother’s jacket from when he was in his 30’s when she was in her 60’s and he had passed away. She was so happy about being able to use this memory that she had. I think the history and the emotional value is what’s most exciting to me.

How did you land on the idea of making bags from leather jackets?

I’ve been making bags for a long time. When I first started, I was making bags from remnant vinyl material from the sixties. I would find these really cool, close-out vintage vinyls and make these funky bags. Those materials were in a really limited supply, and then I started working with a factory in China, and I streamlined my designs. I was mainly making these PVC laptop bags [under the label Supreme Love Story]. They were cute, but I didn’t really have any connection to them anymore. I like working on the actual product myself.

I started thinking about how everything is so throw-away, and I did some research and found out that PVC is one of the worst materials, just the amount of energy and chemicals that were going into making these bags. And I didn’t like being detached from the actual project. I couldn’t find any materials that I liked that were not damaging in some way environmentally. I’ve been a vegetarian for quite a while, so I didn’t really feel right about using new leather.

How do you dress day-to-day?

I’m pretty casual minimalist, a lot of black, which can be dressed up or down, with a mix of vintage. I throw some 80’s in when I’m going out. When I moved here two years ago, I vowed never to wear fleece in public unless I was out doing some kind of sport activity.

Do you have any tips for how we can all be more eco-friendly shoppers?

I think that the most eco-friendly you can get is shopping in thrift stores. Not everyone likes to do that. Try and get more creative with the things you have already. Even buying organic things is still consuming, and it still takes a lot of energy to produce organic and recycled things.

Buy high-quality, not fast fashion, things that are not super trendy and will last a long time. Avoid fast fashion. Almost everything I’ve ever bought at H&M looks terrible after a couple washings. I avoid buying things just because they are a good deal. I love thrift stores and curated consignment shops mixed with basics. I try to only buy things I love and that I know I will wear until it has holes in it. I try to buy American when I can, but that is really difficult, though I believe we need to support small U.S. manufacturers.

Find new uses for things. I recently accidentally shrunk my boyfriend’s sweater, and I’m planning on making a stuffed animal from it.

Do you have a favorite local thrift store?

One of my favorites, I like Community Thrift. They have 50 percent off days every other Monday, so that’s a good deal.

What prompted your move from New York to San Francisco?

I guess I just wanted to kind of slow down. One of my best friends lived here. I was not thinking about this business when I moved here. San Francisco has been a major influence on starting this line of bags. I think the fact that people here are so much more dedicated to trying to be more careful about the way that they treat the earth, it definitely was something I noticed and became more aware of myself.

Like what you see? Send South a leather jacket to turn into a new bag, and you’ll save $20 on your order. And this week, a sale on clutches in underway in the ReMade USA online shop.

Photography courtesy of ReMade USA

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Video: Spread on Marmalade’s San Francisco Style

For our very first (be gentle, please) SF Indie Fashion style video, we tapped Marmalade boutique owner Hope Schaffer-Colling to show us quick, easy tips for turning the basic jeans-and-tank uniform into cute, casual outfits worthy of work or play.

“This is the basic stuff everybody has in their closets,” Schaffer-Colling told us before the shoot at the Union Street shop.

The laid-back style shown here reflects what you’ll find in-store at this Cow Hollow go-to for current looks at affordable prices (almost everything in the shop is under $100).

Credits: video production, SF Indie Fashion; model, Lauren Forbes

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5 Tips for Shopping Smarter in 2010

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With the holidays behind us, the portion of our brains that controls the urge to shop has shifted ever-so-slightly from its focus on gifts to focus on the slew of post-holiday sales that inundate shoppers with deals each January. But while we’re all for good deals, cluttering up our closets with items we’ll only end up ignoring is never, ever on our lists.

For tips on how we can shop smarter this year, we spoke with San Francisco stylist and image consultant Rachel Fauman. A former visual merchandiser and buyer for companies such as Gap and Nordstrom, the 28-year-old Pacific Heights resident has been helping Bay Area men and women make the most of their own personal style through her company EPIC for the last four years. Along with offering image consultations and personal shopping services, Fauman guides clients through one-on-one and group shopping trips, closet clean-outs and shop-your-wardrobe sessions.

When we caught up with Fauman recently, she gave us five simple tips she often uses on shopping trips with her clients. We’ll be keeping these in mind when we hit the sales.

1. Be willing to try on new things.

You’ll never find out whether it’s right for you unless you try it on.

2. Ladies: embrace skinny jeans, even if you’ve never done it before.

Think you can’t wear them? Fauman says, think again:

“For women, there’s kind if this idea that only super skinny women can wear skinny jeans. Really, they look great on anyone. They’re comfortable, and they’re totally sexy and they look great on curves.”

3. Gentlemen: mix colors and patterns in the same outfit.

“One of my favorite things to do for men is to have them be in, say, a purple and white stripe button down and then pair that with a plaid blazer for going out at night. Don’t be afraid to mix your patterns and don’t be afraid to use color,” Fauman advises.

4. Only buy it if you love it.

Before buying, ask yourself just how much you’re in love with the item at hand.

Fauman’s buying barometer: “If you don’t want to wake up tomorrow morning and put that item on and wear it, it’s probably something to consider not purchasing.”

5. Know what you’ll wear it with.

Before charging up a storm, ponder how well your potential purchase will mesh with items you already own.

“If you can immediately think of something in your wardrobe that it goes with, then that can be a sign that it’s a piece that’s really going to work,” she says.

Looking for stores to start off your next shopping adventure? Among Fauman’s favorites:

Elizabeth Charles, Candystore Collective, Eden and Eden, Jeremy’s, Loehman’s (“it’s a great place to get an $800 women’s blazer for $300) and Bloomingdale’s for the best sales.

Want more? Check out Fauman’s latest finds and style advice on her blog.