Skip to Content

The Seventh Generation Guide to Reducing Holiday Packaging

The holidays mean many things to many people, but whether your family celebrates Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, or another year-end occasion, one thing is certain: There's going to be a lot of packaging involved. From the gifts we give to those we get, the holiday season often seems to make as much waste as it does merry. As our gift to you, here are some ways to say "bah humbug" to all that waste with some tips decking the halls with fewer overstuffed trash bags:

AT THE STORE:

  • Choose gifts that come with little or no packaging or are packaged in easily recyclable materials or plastic types like #1 (PETE), #2 (HDPE), and #4 (LDPE).
  • If you have to purchase a wastefully packaged product, open it in the store and leave its packaging with the cashier. (This won't cut down on waste, but it will cast a vote for greener packaging next holiday season!) Keep a small pair of scissors handy to cut through annoying blister packs.
  • BYOB - Bring your own bags to carry your purchases home sustainably.

IN THE BOX:

If gifts come wrapped in foam peanuts, bubble wrap, air-pouches, and other packing materials, reuse them for the gifts you will give.

  • For a biodegradable packing alternative, pop an oil-free batch of unprocessed popping corn in a hot air popper!
  • Tear recyclable corrugated cardboard boxes into strips. Roll each tightly and place them under and around items to be shipped. Let them unroll slightly after placement to cushion your goodies.
  • Create gift wrap from outdated maps, comic pages, newspapers, wallpaper scraps, shopping bags, or any other oversized papers you have on hand. If that paper is blank, you can decorate it with your own holiday motifs.
  • Wrap gifts in other gifts like towels, bandanas, baskets, or tote bags. Or make your own reusable bags out of fabric.
  • Avoid foil gift wraps, which can be almost impossible for your recipients to recycle.
  • Skip the ribbons and bows, and trim your gifts with natural accents like evergreen tips, or holly sprigs, pine cones, raffia, ornamental grasses, and other biodegradable objets d'art.

DURING & AFTER THE CELEBRATION:

  • Unwrap gifts gently and set aside their wrapping paper for reuse. Bigger pieces can be used to wrap smaller items without creases. Put wrapping paper not worth saving in with your recycling.
  • Save the holiday greeting cards you receive and cut their covers into gift tags for use next year.
  • Save the gift boxes, tissue paper, bows, or ribbons you get, and you'll likely never need to buy these items again!
  • Still drowning in foam peanuts and other packing materials? First, check your peanuts. Many today are made from natural cornstarch and will dissolve harmlessly in water. Test one in your sink. If it melts, you can compost the lot. If you're stuck with Styrofoam® peanuts, bubble wrap, or other packaging, see if local shippers, museums, movers, or stores want it. Most UPS Stores, for example, will gladly accept clean packing materials for reuse (remember to call first!). The Plastic Loose Fill Council can direct you to additional local foam peanut recycling options.
  • If you find yourself with larger pieces of custom-molded foam packaging like those used to cushion electronics and other fragile items in their cartons, consult the Alliance of Foam Packaging Recyclers for recycling resources.

These tricks of the holiday packaging trade will help make sure your celebrations stay ever-green, and that's a glad tiding worth sharing every season!

photo: slideshow bob

Comments (14)

Posted by: rstraughan

Use reusable, washable bags

I agree with stitchwitch. In fact I have a little business that does just that - I sell reusable bags, including sets of gift bags that can be used over and over, washed, and easily stored. Check them out: http://wholeworldbags.com/Products.php

Posted by: hedgewitch3

Group Mailing

All of my family lives 1800 miles east of me. Sending individual gifts would be insanely costly as well as obscenely "un"-green. Since everyone eventually ends up at the home of my youngest sister, I'm sending one big box o'goodies for her to distribute in my absence. Minimal wrappings will be used only for the littlest of the bunch - don't want them to miss out on the surprise and joy of opening presents.
For friends more local, I'm giving homemade cotton totes in a variety of fabrics that can be used year-round. Inside each will be stuffed with some homemade baked goods, tins of teas or cocoa (tins will be reused I'm sure), and handmade cards which can be reused or recycled into something new for next year.

Posted by: moscowrecycling

An important Green gift Option

Don't forget that one of the best gift options is giving purchasing a massage, tickets to an event, a membership to a gym or non profit organization. These gifts obviously have less packaging and usually support buy local campaigns.

Posted by: frank_cluck

Handmade!

Another great way to avoid packaging and waste is handmade gifts. You can make edibles, such as cookies, fudge, ect and pack into reusable tins. I have been doing this for years, and a lot of the tins are returned to me through out the year. Home canned jams and jellies are great too, but you may have to educate your recipients. Many don't know you can reuse the jars and bands. Do you knit, crochet, or sew? Make a hat, scarf, mittens, socks, ect, then make a small bag or pouch to use as the gift bag. Save gift bags that you receive and reuse them for years to come! If you get creative you can come up with ways to made the holidays more meaningful and green!

Posted by: Christine

Holiday Packaging

Most grocery stores and a few nongrocery stores in my area sell the reusable bags in holiday themes. I like to buy them for using to wrap the few gifts that need to be wrapped. Then the reciepient gets to use the bag for their grocery shopping and it's a nice mood lifter sometimes.

Posted by: 3knobmama

Extras

We use FREECYCLE for nice boxes, peanuts, bubble wrap, etc. People need these things and have to pay out lots of money for new ones and this gives them a chance to use recycled ones and pass on what they do not need. Freecycle is also good for just about anything you can think of. Clothes when you clean out the kids closets. Bikes, toys, books they have out-grown, etc, etc. We have one in our tiny town so I'm sure most of you will have one going in your town, but they will help you get one going if not. You don't even have to let the people come to your home if you are nervous about that, you can meet them at a safe location. Check it out, its pretty cool.

Posted by: mamamolli

Dealing w/ UN-Green Family

My family has not really embraced "green-ness" the way I have - especially at Christmas. They tolerate my "hippie ways" but reigning them in at Chritmas is harder. :) So we agree on a few rules that everyone can live with. My husband and I only get the kids 3 presents (just as Jesus got three gifts) and try to encourage the family to be creative in getting green presents - things that will grow with them and require only the power of their imagination. With my husband's family we do a gift exchange - so everyone only gets one present from the "family" (saves everyone money too!) With my family we only buy for the kids and try to keep it under a certain monetary value for each child.
As for packaging - we try to get things where the "packaging" also serves as a containter (such as Legos, K'Nex, craft supplies in a craft box, etc) We ordered everything online and then kept all the boxes to set out for recycling - we stuffed one full of the wrapping paper and another with the cardboard boxes that the toys came in (making sure to get out all the plastic & metal ties) and broke down the rest. It took more time to seperate everything - but I only had one bag of acutal trash to put out. And ee have everyone come here for Christmas - so I can recycle as much as possible.

Posted by: KarolJean

Overpackaging

It's a fact of life at holiday time; some things will come with styrofoam peanuts and bubble wrap. The good news is that our local UPS store will accept boxes of both to reuse. Just be sure that they are not wet or soiled and they will not end up in the land fill. At least not yet!

Posted by: reaypuppet

Paper Recycling Programs

My son's elementary school has a community paper recycling program. In addition to the paper that is recycled from the school, anyone in the community is encouraged to bring all paper trash, as well. The dumpster is emptied by the program twice a week and the school gets a cash percentage of each ton of paper that is collected. We bring all of our paper packaging, wrapping paper, boxes, etc., all year long, and especially over the holidays. Not only are we responsibly disposing of our trash, but our school benefits in the process!

Posted by: lois747

Shipping pkgs.

I don't send packages very often, usually to my daughter. When I do, I usually have a kitchen towel around that I bought on sale. I use that for packing or I make a batch of cookies and use them for packing. I also use old cards for name tags on gifts.
I like the tote bags for gifts. I think I'll start making some for next year.

Posted by: mrsncook

Homemade gifts

The tote bags I made last year were a big hit, and I agree they're great to wrap a gifts in. We also like to make homemade ornaments like cinnamon or salt dough angels and stuff, which also make a great gift tag. This year we're using brown craft paper decorated by the girls and raffia. It can be used to line the table, too.

Posted by: sailor_titan

Furoshiki!

A great option to reduce waste is to wrap in cloth, Japanese furoshiki style. You can buy furoshiki wraps if you want, seam square pieces of fabric, or if you're lazy and cheap, you can just cut un-seamed fabric into squares. (Though this will probably make it less reusable, since the fabric may slowly unwind.) There's lots of websites online on how to wrap with furoshiki-- it's no harder than wrapping with paper and in some cases considerably easier and more convenient.

furoshiki.com sells wraps, click the "Techniques" button near the top for directions. You can also search for some great videos on youtube or google.

Posted by: mwdean

Gift Wrap and over packaged items

We look for recycled gift wrap that is also recyclable. Not an easy task, but you can find it if you look enough. (Why don't more stores carry recycled gift wrap?) Purchase the high-end decorative wired ribbon. This can be used year after year. We have been using the same ribbons for nearly 10 years now. They still look great.

Shipping gifts is a ridiculous idea. The carbon footprint and the excessive packaging is to high. Have someone on the other end pick up the gifts and wrap them for you, or send gift cards. Everyone loves a gift card. They just aren't much fun to buy.

On the topic of over-packaged items. Don't leave the packaging with the cashier. The "message" will never get delivered, and the packaging will end up in the landfill. Write letters to Manufactures and to the retailers corporate office. That is the only way a message will get delivered. What would shock people is the amount of packaging those packaged items arrive with at the retailer. I was unpacking a case of foam toys (I work for a big box retailer) I was appalled to see that each FOAM toy came in a box, which was sealed into a box. Then 6 of these boxed, boxed foam toys were in yet another box. Reducing Packaging needs to happen at all levels. The only way to do it is get the attention of the top brass.

Posted by: stitchwitch

Holiday Packaging

Skip the gift wrap altogether. Buy holiday themed cotton (quilt) fabric (at reduced prices after the holidays) and sew up reusable bags with draw strings. Cut a small piece of clear vinyl or plastic, and stitch to bag front around 3 sides to form a pocket to hold gift tags. My gift bags have been in use for more than 10 years, and are so popular that I've had to sew batches for other family members to use. Wrapping is a breeze. I make them in all sizes to accommodate the gifts we most frequently give. For things like clothes, I flatten the gift boxes that fit inside a particular gift bag and store it that way during the year. For me, there isn't any greener way to wrap presents.

Leave a Comment

You must be a member and signed in to post a comment.

Not a member?

Join Us Now

Already a member?

Connect via FaceBook