Showing posts with label local. Show all posts
Showing posts with label local. Show all posts

6.09.2011

Shopping Local and the Moravians


I think I’ve mentioned that I now live in sweet town of Lititz, Pennsylvania

Lititz has a rich history and it’s been preserved in many buildings around town.  Over the weekend we visited the Lititz Museum and Johannes Mueller House.  The Mueller house has been preserved and features pieces from 1792.

I’m not going to give you a full history lesson of Lititz here, although if you are interested, you can find more about it here.  One thing I did find it fascinating that the Moravian church (who founded the town) controlled everything about the resident’s lives from where they shopped to whom they married.

I don’t like people telling me what to do, so I’m not sure that I would have fared well when Lititz was first forming.  I did really like one of the rules, though.

If it’s available in Lititz, you MUST buy it in Lititz. 

If you can’t get it in Lititz, then you must stay as local as possible.

I don’t think this should be a requirement or law per se, but I do think it is a good rule to live by, generally speaking. 

Do you shop like the Moravians? 

9.08.2010

How to Change The World With Your Money {Your Money is Your Vote...Who do ya Choose?}

BUiLDiNG CHARACTER, one of my favorite local businesses

Today on scoutie girl, Tara brings up a very interesting subject, very near and dear to my heart.  Change the world with your money.  

I've talked about how important I think it is to support local small businesses and farms before.  I think it's not just important, but essential.  I also know that it's not always easy and I'm far from perfect.  But I do try to give thought to my purchases.  Actually, it's such a part of me now that it doesn't even occur to me to go to big stores like Wal-Mart (yes we've all read about my hatred of that corporation enough times) for anything.  People ask me where do I get things if I don't shop there.  I get confused because I can't figure out why anyone would even want to go into those stores.  

What struck me more today when reading the scoutie girl post, was how someone put it so perfectly by explaining that we are voting with our money.  I think it is such a more succinct way to put it.  I don't have a ton of extra money to spend.  When I spend it, I want it to count.  I want to vote for the small guys who earn a decent living as opposed to voting for sweat shops overseas.  I want to vote for my community earning money.  I want to vote for fresh food from people who are trying to earn a decent living, not people who are trying to take advantage of the people who are trying hard to earn a decent living.  I want to vote for handmade.

Even if I can only make a small impact, if many of us work together, we can make a bigger impact.  And, in fact, by supporting local, handmade, small businesses, our "small impact" has an even bigger impact to that person.  

7.13.2010

How I Came to Support Local and Handmade Small Businesses

Eastern Market forced inside due to the rain
Today a post on the scoutie girl blog really inspired me (as it often does!)  Regina Morrison had a guest post, "ya don't get it til you're in it" that really resonated with me.  It so clearly says how I feel, too.

Regina described her experience in a cubicle surrounded by bitterness (which eerily reminded me of a job that will remain nameless) and how she decided to funnel her energy into something that she enjoyed more.  You can read her whole post on scoutie girl.

Big Box Stores vs. Local

Some of you would be shocked to know that I actually used to shop at that one big box store that I now loathe quite often, though it has been many years since I have shopped there now.  I have known for quite some time that it is better to get my food from local sources as much as possible.  One of my most favorite foods is corn on the cob, and I can't imagine getting it anywhere but by the side of the road in a wagon next to a cornfield.  I anxiously await for its arrival each year.  Living in a place like Lancaster, Pennsylvania, with Eastern and Central Markets, you really don't have to try that hard to find a great variety of local food.

What really did it for me....

However, even after I stopped shopping at that horrible store, and even knowing that local farm food is really the best, I didn't turn to handmade and local for my other needs right away.  (Or at least for most of my other needs, anyway.)  I think it did take me starting my own small business to realize how important it is to support local business and handmade.
 
Like Regina said on scoutie girl today, "ya don't get it til you're in it."  (Actually, I think some people do get it who aren't in it.)  Once I was really relying on my business as my main source of income it really cemented the importance supporting local and art really is.  Yes, I was following my dream, but it's hard work.  I have to do 5 times the amount of work to make make the same amount of money as I did working for someone else.  

Sometimes more.  

Sometimes for no pay at all.  

So, if I am shopping for something anyway, why wouldn't I help out the little guy who is working as hard as I am?

Once I started my business I started to pay more attention to the world around me.  I found Building Character, whose purpose was so aligned with my thoughts on reusing and recycling, I had to be a part of it!  Now it's a whole collection of different handmade, antique and clothing from a bunch of local people in addition to the architectural salvage.

Make your spending count!

I think that a lot of us have had to do more with less, myself included.  I even left my full-time day job in the middle of a recession and now find myself working part-time again.  How I spend that hard-earned money is even more important to me now.  Yes, I could run to a big box store and get 2 or maybe 3 things instead of 1 handmade or local item.  But do I even really want those 2 or 3 things?  For me, the answer is a definite NO.  I want that one special item.  I also want to know that I am making a difference to the person I am buying the item from.

Make a change

I can understand and have heard every reason that people still go for the quick, cheap stuff.  Maybe if everyone just slowly started to gradually change their spending habits, it would make a difference.  Just starting to think about a small business for certain things one at a time would make a difference.

4.13.2009

Help Small Independent Shops!

I read about this on Lulu & Tutz's blog. You can click on the image to go to the website for the project.

Think of 3 independently owned stores you would miss if they were gone.

Stop in and buy something because your purchases are what keeps these businesses around.

For every $100 you spend in an independent store, $68 of it stays in the local community. In a national chain, only $43 stays.

For more info click on the image above.

Where will you be going to help support your local community?