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Cafes Do Brasil Coffee Travel Bag

It has taken me over a year to make the Coffee Travel Bag and finally, after many hurdles, it is finally complete. Getting the right peices to make this bag was complicated: the brass fittings had to be imported becuase I wanted a wide shoulder strap, the fusing had to be sourced and then ordered (becuase the burlap must be strong enough to make the bag useful) – this was complicated becuase after I had done the testing, the factory closed and disappeared. Then the webbing had to be just the right weight so that it could be sewn and held. All in all, to cut a very long tale short, this bag has been a real struggle but I think, worth it.

Clean Coffee Travel Bag

One of the benefits to this bag taking so long was all the advice and requests shared: please can there be a waterproof pocket, please can it be the perfect hand luggage size, please can the zip open both ways, please can there be a cardboard base, please can there be more than one pocket inside… all this feedback was applied.

Vespa Mercanta Coffee Travel Bag

For me this bag is a huge breakthrough in Wren design. It is unconventional yet practical, unique and stylish.

Mercanta Coffee Hunters Travel Bag

Because Christmas and the end of year holidays are just around the corner, I am offering a FREE SHIPPING upgrade to express courier for any Coffee Travel bag bought before the 22nd (when I go on a short holiday). This postage option delivers to your door in 4 days! Normally, express courier costs about $20 extra.

Ethiopia Coffee Travel Bag

To see and buy the bags in my etsy shop click here.

Imagine buying a couch that in a years time completely disappears? Montauk, a furniture manufacturer, has designed a couch that completely decomposes. This is just one example of a biodegrabable product. There are many more out there. For example, Looolo cushions (pic below) will biodegrade in one year, should you choose to throw them in your composter once you’re done with them. This idea, that an object be 100% biodegradable, is a noble attribute but how practical is it really?

We live in a throw-away society. The very same products that 50 years ago were bought for their long-lasting qualities are now objects of fashion and ultimately destined for the landfill where even the organic matter cannot decompose due to a lack of oxygen.

Bill Brown from the University of Chicago, who is best known for his work on ‘thing theory’, explains how the value of a piece of furniture you come in contact with often, like a dining room table or a sofa, draws much of its worth from that contact: the longer we keep it around, the more psychologically valuable it becomes. “We use the ‘object world’ to stabilize human life,” he said. “Hannah Arendt said that sitting at the same table grants man his sameness, which is to say his identity.” To Mr. Brown the idea of degradable home goods suggests an identity crisis and I think I can relate to this. If my bed were to decompose I do not think I would feel nearly as safe sleeping in it night after night. If what I built my physical home around is going to just decompose I do not think I would feel very secure.

So how do you satisfy your needs, the need to keep-up-with-the-jones and at the same time not kill the world. One idea is to make objects more valuable. This is usually by expensive materials and craftsmanship. To make a product that is meant to last and be passed on. To move towards traditional attributes of quality as opposed to fashion and convenience. For example, we don’t buy disposable wedding rings so why disposable crockery?

I think this idea, the one of value, makes more sense than the idea of making something that will fall apart and return to the earth. It would feel a bit like watching your money just go ‘phoof’. So, in conclusion, I pledge to buy only with the intention that the object last and be useful for many years and possibly even developing a sense of heirloom rather than saying “Well, it will just have to will do for now and if I don’t like it I can always throw it away and buy another one next year.” I say “No more!”