Whole World Baby

Fashion with Compassion "Wrap Your Head Around It"
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A Cool Green Mom Making Her Mark

October 27, 2009 By: Jama Category: Moms

We invited to our Whole World Baby launch party a community of like-minded women to celebrate our new mark on baby fashion, but it transcended headscarves for kids and became an uplifting celebration of innovative, powerful women making their mark on the world. One special woman, who is perfectly in line with the women we gathered at our launch is actress, filmmaker, green advocate, mother, Alysia Reiner. But living on the east coast, being a mom to an adorable one year old daughter, Livia, and attending a film festival to celebrate a film in which she wrote, produced, and starred are pretty good reasons not to be able to make the launch, so she’s off the hook.

Alysia_Reiner

Alysia Reiner at the Hamptons Int'l Film Festival with her one-year-old daughter, Livia, wearing a WWooBie in "Silver Spots with Cherry Dots"

 

Alysia is one of those women who lives what she believes – she and her actor husband, David Alan Basche, have been tireless advocates of sustainable living long before it was trendy, even being featured in a web series for “Dwell” magazine throughout the green renovation of their Harlem brownstone.

And in addition to her impressive acting credits (which include The Vicious Kind, Sideways, Starter Wife, 30 Rock, Sopranos, just to name a few). Alysia recently added the role of “Mother” to her resume, giving birth a year ago to her ridiculously beautiful daughter, Livia Charles. You’d think that would be enough to keep a lady busy, but she can now add “Writer and  Producer” to her growing list.

Alysia’s film, “Speed Grieving” was inspired by her experience with the death of her father in a rapid battle with cancer.  The hope is that it can serve others as they deal with the unpredictable and seldom talked-about process of dealing with the loss of a loved one. And the goal is that it will be used in clinics, hospitals, and hospices to make grief a little less lonely for those suffering and serve as a reminder that staying PRESENT is the most serene way out of the disorienting black hole of grief.

At our launch party, we raised our glasses to women who are using their unique talents to bring change to the world, so to Alysia, who wasn’t able to be there – here’s to you – a true innovator, passionate mother, relentless activist, inspiring artist, and DIVERSIFIER. Bravo!

She’s a reminder to women everywhere to live passionately and out loud – there’s no better way to teach our children than by example. I’m sure she’s made her Pops so very proud.

Ladies Launched, Landed and Loved the Day!

October 20, 2009 By: Stacey Category: Work at Home Moms

What do you get when you combine a group of amazing women, tasty food, stimulating conversation and fashion with compassion? A beautiful day filled with moms, grand moms, green chefs, Douala’s, organic living coaches,business gurus,skincare experts, television writers, jewelry designers, real estate experts, artists, documentarians and more! This launch began as our way to celebrate our ” Little Engine That Could”.

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It became a day about so much more than headscarves for babies as our children’s aid organizations and charities took center stage. Hannah from Friends of El Faro opened the flood gates when she spoke with such passion and heart about her work at the orphanage and her personal connection to this group.

Friends-of-Faro

One after the other, the women gathered at our table shared the different ways that they are effecting their world. Whether raising their children, producing media that informs or entertains, volunteering  or making other women feel beautiful this day proved how powerfully woman in our community are living. It was a day where the women left their babies ( literal little ones, husbands or projects!) at home and celebrated one another.

Gia, our first sewer spoke so beautifully about why she felt a part of the Whole World Baby family. This was a chance to look at a lauch differently; a chance to make it about the world of the women gathered together. It was so wonderful and so many powerful and productive connections were made that we just might do it again.

We envision a gathering of women where as we raise a glass and break bread in honor of each other we are also perusing booths filled with all of our efforts. Just imagine baby clothes, organic products, green cookbooks, life coaches, marketing experts, arts and crafts and more. Stay tuned; we’ve launched upon the strength of these women’s wings and landed with our feet firmly on the ground ready to walk a path into the Whole World.

The Struggle with Being Green

October 05, 2009 By: Adrianne Ferree Category: Social Issues

To all the momprenuers and greenies out there! As many of you know we market our business, Whole World Baby as Eco-friendly. I’ve got to say, there is a hectic balance between practicality and Eco-friendliness that has been quite a struggle and on a couple of occasions even compromised.

eco-friendly-mompreneurs

What I’m talking about is the reality of being green. We started out with our best intentions of being as green as we possibly could. Our fabrics are remnants, we drive locally to pick up and reduce landfill waste, our organics are made in USA instead of receiving from overseas, communicate 90% of the time electronically to reduce transportation and for convenience. Our mailers were going to be made out of left over junk mail we collected from family and friends, our labels were going to be left over reused cardboard we cut ourselves, our biz cards were home printed and cut using old manila folders and the label on the headscarves were going to be non toxic stamped images.

Well? Honestly? We compromised, our values were revealed as we started to make business decisions affected by branding and image, and what will “sell” and what’s “expected”. Our nerve for being “way out there” conflicted with being fashionable. We needed to sell our product if we wanted to help our children’s aid partners, right? The stamping idea came out sloppy looking and inconsistent, who would buy that? The business cards looked like we were being cheap NOT eco friendly, and they took a lot of time to make, so we settled for professionally printed cards on recycled card stock. The mailers made out of junk mail ended up looking like trash and not worthy of the headscarves for babies that are priced a little more than normal to include a bit for charitable giving. Can you image a package arriving looking like rolled up trash? A customer might throw it away! We tried to make it look better, but had to keep adding material to it, which defeated the purpose of minimal packaging. So we decided recycled paper envelopes were good enough. How could we raise money for charities if no one wants to buy the head scarves because our image doesn’t meet expectations!!  Are we making decisions for the right reasons or are we so immersed in this ideological and aesthetic driven paradigm that we crush our best intentions out of our need to sell?

Where we have been very clever and successful was with the headscarf’s tag. Each tag is made from 100% post consumed paper. The loop that attaches the tag to the headscarves is a tassel. Once untied the tag with tassel can be used as a bookmark, therefore no trash! We also use just about every inch of fabric we can, even small scraps are combined with other fabrics to make unique and charming “one of a kind” scarves you can find only at our retail partner shops. So we are very creative in our green efforts at every opportunity we can. The balance is always a challenge, but I think when all is said and done, we’ve done a pretty good job making some conscientious compromises.

Thoughts? Ideas? Love to hear some of your ideas.