Pages

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Display at Donna Seager Gallery

Donna Seager Gallery in San Rafael has a fine selection of fine jewelry including a vitrine of my beach plastic.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Fashion Forever


Forever Fashion

Join us for an exciting trunk show of fashion and jewelry.
Judith Selby Lang and Joui Turandot
Eco Fashion in Clothing and Beach Plastic Jewelry

Saturday, September 11
3 to 5 pm


Judith Selby Lang has distinguished herself as an artist interested in the environment. By giving aesthetic form to what is considered to be garbage, she serves as both cleaner and curator. While the content of her work has a message about the spoiling of the natural world by the industrial world, her intent is to transform the perils of pollution into something beautiful and celebratory.

Joui Turandot is an emerging leader in the field of eco-fashion. She creates evening gowns and ready-to-wear pieces from over 90% reclaimed material. Joui sources most of her fabrics from antique stores, grandmother's closets and artist's leftovers. With each piece, Vagadu boldly affirms that high fashion can be achieved using sustainable practices, a statement as daring and unique as the woman who wears it.




Friday, February 19, 2010

High style- Low impact



I am thrilled to announce my association with eco-fashion designer Joui
Turandout. My beach plastic jewelry is the perfect accessory for her
high style low-environmental impact garments. Joui uses reclaimed,
reused fabrics exclusively in her unique designs. All of the plastic
used in my jewelry is detritus collected from Kehoe Beach in the Point
Reyes National Seashore. Joui and I recently partnered for this photo
shoot by Darren Hendrix.

High res images are available

Joui Turandot
Designer
www.vagadu.net
www.vagadu.blogspot.com

Darren Hendrix
Photographer
www.darrenhendrix.com

Judith Selby Lang
Artist
www.beachplasticjewelry.blogspot.com
www.beachplastic.com
www.plasticforever.blogspot.com




Thursday, February 19, 2009

Milk Pull Tabs



When I was a child, milk came in clear glass bottles delivered early morning on our doorstep. Later, at the store, we purchased the boxy wax carton that served well. Now, in the name of sanitation and convenience, milk cartons have been “improved” with plastic safety milk pull-tabs. Now, thousands of these ubiquitous tabs are making their way to the landfill and will take thousand of years to go away.


My dad, knowing about my interest in plastic, for months saved pull tabs from his milk cartons and presented me with a large bag of them.

Handling materials can lead to exciting and unexpected discoveries.Touch is a special kind of teacher. Just fiddling around with the pull tabs, I found that it was easy to loop them one inside the other to make a bracelet to fit any size. It could be squished together or expanded to enlarge.



As one turns attention to anything, suddenly it is everywhere. You buy a red car and suddenly there are red cars everywhere. And so it was with the pull-tabs. They started to appear on juice containers, oil containers, soy and almond milk containers. And they were in a variety of colors, some were domed, some were flat, some were embossed, some were faceted.




And, yes, they started to appear on the beach.



People always take note of my unique jewelry, which gives me the opportunity to talk about plastic and to encourage action about everything, even about milk cartons.



During a recent trip to Tanzania, I visited a Masai village. An elder woman, entranced by my bright white bracelet, came over for a closer inspection. She touched the round discs trying to figure out the source and the material of my unusual adornment. I asked our guide to explain that I had made the bracelet out of milk pull-tabs; that they were something that would otherwise be thrown away; that I am an artist who uses recycled plastic in my creations. I was babbling so fast that probably neither she nor my translator understood a word of what I was saying. And, since the Masai subsist on milk and blood, I am sure that she had no idea about milk cartons or pull-tabs. I was thrilled that she was interested and was happy that she accepted my bracelet as a gift.

The elegant high-style of the simple interlocking of the tabs makes a fashion statement for everyday wear. For a fancier look, the tabs can be easily be embellished with indelible marking pens and with sequins.


Although I am pleased that I have found a good use for the pull-tabs I would rather that they not be used at all. Letters written to milk producers have not resulted in a return to the old-fashioned waxy cartons without the plastic lids. Fortunately, in my supermarket there is still a brand that has not adopted the plastic "improvement."

Friday, August 8, 2008

Plastic like Diamonds is Forever

Most plastic packaging is called “disposable”
from “disposable” food containers, “disposable” lighters,
but, we know that everything disposable
goes some where and that some where is for a long, long time.

When all of the oil has been extracted,
plastic as we know it today will be a rare commodity.
Petrochemical plastic will have tremendous value
as a treasured reminder of days gone by,
when plastic was a term for something cheap and disposable.

By giving aesthetic form to what is considered to be garbage,
I serve as both cleaner and curator.
While the content of my work has a message
about the spoiling of the natural world by the human/industrial world, my intent is to transform the perils of pollution
into something beautiful and celebratory.