The Panda Gift Guide To Fun And Success

As the end of the year approaches and holidays abound it is never too late to send your friends a little something to say you are thinking of them. A little something vegan, possibly handmade. I present a list of things I would enjoy should Sinterklass stuff them in a shoe for me.

The Complete Guide to Vegan Food Substitutions by Celine Steen and Joni Marie Newman. Two lovely people wrote a damn fine cookbook. The pumpkin ice cream is the best. And you can’t go wrong with homemade bacon bits.

Vegan Dish has a selection of vegan stamped mugs and bowls to enjoy this winter in the cold. Have some lapsang souchong in a bright blue mug to warm your day.

The good folks at Tattoed Geek have a plethora of soy candles and lip balms to stuff your stockings with. Treewool has the beautiful garland scarf that I have been eyeing all fall. You can’t go wrong with organic bamboo.

Vegan Pie in the Sky from Isa Chandra Moskowitz and Terry Hope Romero. Best dessert book of 2011 for all your pie needs. Pumpkin cheesecake is good any day of the year.

 

 

 

VOTM Guide to Gifting Part 2: If you’re not a cat.

You saw Buhbah’s picks, here’s mine! Buy local, handmade, vegan, etc. Some might say we’ve entered “last-minute” as it pertains to gift-buying for the holidays, but I say psshaw. Bake your hard-working postal worker some cookies and hope for the best.

This wonderful gift pack from Food for Lovers Queso (we love Chris and Crystal!) is essential. Your lucky recipient gets a jar of the best vegan queso, either a felt ornament from our very own Panda With Cookie or a queso cozy, and a personalized gift card. Open to US-only, sadly, but I know I have lots of American friends staring blankly at the tortilla chips in their cupboards.

I'd go for the felt serrano.

I love My Zoetrope, it is no secret. I fell in love with artist Michelle Cavigliano’s colourful illustrations last year, and this year I am really excited to have her 2012 Calendar sitting on my desk, awaiting 2011 to bite the dust. Because aren’t we all waiting for 2011 to bite the dust?

Someone on my list will find this grey turban ear warmer from Treewool under the tree. Good thing my family ignores the blog.

I am by no means a perfume girl, but I can think of handful of crazy friends who would love this fascinating Grandpa’s Pipe-scented roll-on perfume oil from LondonCity.

The next two picks come from local (to me) businesses run by incredible people I have had the privilege to either work with, eat with, or write about.

Nice Shoes is Vancouver’s first vegan shoe store, run by a wonderful vegan couple. And I have been thinking about, saving up, not saving up enough and then going broke, and then thinking about again these boots for years.

Karmavore Vegan Shop has the ubiquitous Peppermint Chocolate Vitasoy in stock. Enough said. Non-Canadians, you are in luck—Karmavore ships worldwide!

After that Vitasoy aperitif, we are getting hungry, yes? How about some PandaWithCookieBakes Earl Grey tea cookies or some SweetVConfections S’more Fudge?

This beautiful necklace makes me feel pretty emotional because it would have been the perfect gift for an inspiring bird-loving person I knew and loved and who passed away a couple of years ago. I’m sure many people would appreciate its uniqueness.

And because it always comes back to cats (Buhbah just jumped on my lap), who needs Santa cards when you can have trampoline kitties? The scrappyrat Etsy shop donates some of its proceeds to various worthy animal causes.

Treewool Vegan Knitwear

Treewool vegan knitwear is a new and impossibly beautiful all-vegan collection of knit wears designed and created with ethical materials from San Francisco-based on-the-move vegan, Kristen Blackmore, who graciously answered our burning questions about the gorgeous line!

The stylish lady behind Treewool, Kristen Blackmore.

VOTM: What/who inspired you start knitting, and how did that lead to vegan knitting?

KB: My mom taught me the basics of knitting when I was 14, and after that I got really into knitting. I bought a lot of ugly wool blended yarns at Michael’s craft stores, and made many terrible, itchy, scarves and sweaters. I even started a knitting club at my high school. I went vegetarian when I was 16, and I remember talking with my vegan friend, who himself had just learned about mulesing and the wool industry. I immediately felt like I should stop buying wool, but I was a little timid, and didn’t know where to start. I went into a yarn shop with a pattern that called for some sort of wool yarn and wound up letting the sales person pressure me into buying the yarn the pattern called for.

A year later, I went vegan, and my commitment to a wool-free lifestyle was strengthened. I also started college at The Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising soon after, which cut in to my knitting time. Once I picked it up again more consistently, I had a lot of fun researching the properties of different non-animal fibers, and experimenting with them. It also helped that I had to take a few textile science classes at FIDM. They were probably one of my least favorite classes while I was at the school, but now I’m realizing the value in them in a big way.

Carmelia Crop Top from Treewool's summer 2011 line

VOTM: When and why did you dream up the Treewool business?

KB: Some form of Treewool has been years in the making. I chose to go to school for fashion design in large part because of my commitment to environmentalism and veganism, and throughout my entire life, without a doubt, I have wanted to start my own business. I’ve loved making clothes for so long, and saw a lot of opportunity in the fashion industry for an eco-clothing line. I’ve had many different ideas for a clothing business, but Treewool didn’t take off until I learned to machine knit.

VOTM: What has been the response so far to Treewool?

The Fujita Scarf

KB: Honestly, the initial response has been a little overwhelming. I didn’t expect to be getting picked up by blogs and press that my friends weren’t involved with, or getting wholesale inquiries after just a few months. I’m trying to figure out how to balance everything. I always planned to start small and stay small, so it’s hard to stay grounded and not jump at every opportunity I’m given. Right now, my biggest focus is sustainability. I’m a very small company, so a lot of wholesalers with the really cool eco-friendly and recycled yarns I lust over won’t work with me in the quantities I need, so I have to get creative to keep my footprint low. I’m working on new ways to produce collections that aren’t as wasteful, and looking at my everyday business choices that could be made in a more environmentally responsible manner.

The Goldwyn Hat from the Fall line

VOTM: What advice do you have for aspiring crafty vegans?

KB: My advice to crafty vegan folks would be to put a lot of effort into sustainability. You can find accidentally vegan clothing, makeup, accessories, and housewares quite easily at large retail chains like Target and H&M. Handmade is so important, but the greatest part of making handmade goods is that is having the freedom to say, “these are my standards, and this is what’s important to me”.

And respect your work, because if you don’t, then no one else will. It makes me so sad to see folks pricing their gorgeous handmade items at budget retail prices. You put so much of yourself into it, let people give you something back!

Thank you so much, Kristen! Everyone can check out Kristen’s gorgeous fall line here.

Okay, I know that food hasn’t really been mentioned yet, and that Vegan MoFo is all about the food, so here you go. Kristen of Treewool is also the author of the fascinating blog, The Noochy Noodle. Yes, it’s all about vegan mac and cheese. I perused her site for my personal favourite, and I think that if I were to have to eat one vegan mac and cheese for the rest of my life, it would be this one. Behold, the Truffle Mac and Cheese from The Source in San Francisco. Why did Source have to open after my brief San Francisco tenure?!