Cruelty Free Beauty
- 4 signs you have low iron levels
- Zero Waste Beauty: Adopt a green routine with these sustainable products
- This eco-friendly beauty box is packed with refillable multi-taskers
- “I find myself using it even when I don’t need to!”
- Arctic-inspired natural skincare brand launches in the UK
- Green People launches beauty balm packaged in 100% biodegradable pot
- Lush launches same-day delivery service for its iconic handmade cosmetics
- “This cruelty-free tanning water gave me the confidence boost I needed”
- rho launches sustainable loungewear that gives back
- Rose & Caramel Raises Awareness For Women’s Self-Esteem & Mental Health With ‘I TAN FOR ME’ Campaign
- Couple launches entirely plant-based and refillable deodorant on Kickstarter
- View all
Eco Living
- Simple Hacks to Cut Your Food Waste with Gino D’Acampo
- Five Easy Ways to Reduce Food Waste
- Eat these foods to boost your mood
- Upgrade Your Cheese Toastie
- Have a healthy Christmas with these festive food swaps
- Omega-3 Health Benefits
- 5 minutes with Max La Manna
- A nutritionist’s guide to eating for healthy joints
- Easy ways to achieve your health goals
- Discover the benefits of raisins on a vegetarian diet
- Improve your gut health with California Raisins
- View all
Vegan Recipes
- Quorn Vegan Hot & Spicy Burger with Pink Slaw
- Tomato and Pumpkin Soup
- Pea and elderflower cocktail
- Matcha Coconut Ice Cream
- Vegan Lemon Bars
- Mango Salad with Thai Dressing
- Garden Gimlet
- Tofu & Green Beans Teriyaki
- Cornflakes Bombay
- Rainbow Pickle
- Soba noodles with kale and collards
- View all
Popular recipes
- Spinach and ricotta quiche vegetarian recipe
- Cheats mushroom and spinach lasagne vegetarian recipe
- Lentil bolognese vegetarian recipe
- Creamy mushroom stroganoff vegetarian recipe
- Malaysian Rendang curry vegetarian recipe
- Feta, Butternut Squash, Caramelised Onion and Cashew Nut Wellingtons
News
- Eat these foods to boost your mood
- Independent bakery to serve up vegan doughnuts in Notts
- Online sustainable marketplace launches with vegan, organic and vegetarian products
- Nails.INC launches 21-free vegan nail polish
- M&S launches dairy-free yoghurts
- New sustainable fashion brand launches vegan bags in the UK
- Veggie Pret launches vegan bakery counter
- This new vegan pie is all about sharing
- British Airways commits to removing 700 tonnes of single-use plastic from flights in 2020
- Oddbox is delivering its fruit and veg boxes again
- UK’s First Plastic-Free Supermarket Opens In London
- View all
5 Ways To Give Your Christmas Table An Eco Makeover
It’s the biggest feast day of the year, but your table dressing can leave a waste hangover that lasts long after the crackers have been pulled. There is, however, another way...
1. Candles
Swapping paraffin wax, a derivative of petrol, for a plant-based alternative is a great way to make your Christmas table greener. Long-burning soy is pricier than the ubiquitous paraffin, so a single scented candle can be quite an investment. We love WXY’s Big Amber Glass Soy Candle (£26, wearthlondon.com) in Black Ash + Frankincense; for a cheaper alternative, try unscented soy tealights (£3.50 for 6, thebotanicalcandleco.co.uk).
2. Crackers
The annual minute of cracker action is a nonnegotiable element of Christmas dinner – after all, every family dynamic is eased by a silly hat and a naff joke. But sending unwanted toys and plastic bows off to landfill is suboptimal. Instead, invest in Cambridge Imprint’s limited edition box of six crackers (£39, cambridgeimprint.co.uk): each includes hand-printed paper, and a small but gorgeous gift.
3. Linen
Shops are filling up with cosy festive table runners and mats, but beware: unless labelled otherwise, those sweet Scandi felts will be made from acrylic, shedding plastic microfibres throughout their lifetime. Wool felt is both expensive and hard to source, so sticking to plant fibres makes sense. Let It Snow paper napkins (£3.99, gingerray.co.uk) add a splash of colour, and are home-compostable.
4. Centrepiece
Remember how we used to merrily douse fir cones in noxious gold spray paint and a deluge of microplastic glitter? A low-tox option is to leave small boughs of fir or evergreen naked, simply decorated with delicate glass baubles best kept out of the reach of little hands and paws. A bit of biodegradable glitter (from £4 for 3.5g at ecoglitter fun.com) will ramp up the glitz.
5. For kids
Kids love a silly straw, but ditching the plastic needn’t be dull. Wheat straws (£9 for 100, agood.com) reuse this agricultural byproduct to save the 60g of plastic a standard 100-pack of straws would entail; plus, shipping is climatecompensated. For a long-lasting alternative, give them a festive shimmer of gold with these reusable metal straws (£6.50 for a set of 4 plus a cleaner, oliverbonas.com). FOR
More from Vegetarian blog
The sustainable men’s fashion brand from the Netherlands has launched in the UK
How to achieve an all-over, flawless tan at home
ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE
We’re always told that bacteria is bad for our skin, right? Wrong! We examine the complexion-boosting world of pre- and probiotics...
Discover the benefits of buying organic and discover organic-certified best buys
ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE