The Good Shopper Blog

"Canadian pride may not rest on our sleeves, but it resides deeply in our hearts."

Steve Miller


22
Nov
2012
18:59:56

Save $$$ On Your Heating Bills With Solar Blinds Made in Canada

By / Par: Isabelle Remy - Dorval, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

The very best part of my job is discovering awesome products made all across this beautiful land of ours. This week, I was blown away by Krumpers Solar Blinds, based in Ottawa and run by dynamo Diana Livshits.

krumpers_logodiana.jpg 

Diana is passionate about her products, with good reasons. Krumpers Solar Blinds are the only 2-sided reversible blinds on the market: one side for the summer and one side for the winter. They help regulate the temperature inside your home all through the year; saving you money on heating and cooling by up to 40%. See how they work in this demo:

krumpers_tv.jpg 

That demo says it all, doesn't it?!

Krumpers Solar Blinds act like sunglasses for your windows:

1) They reduce glare by 70-80%;

2) They stop more than 92% of UV rays;

3) They protect your furnishings and décor from fade.

krumpers_kitchen.jpg 

Krumpers Solar Blinds act like insulation for your windows:

1) In the summer: they keep the heat outside, reducing heat transfer by up to 76%;

2) In the winter: they keep the heat inside, reducing heat loss by up to 45%.

krumpers_lakeview.jpg 

Krumpers Solar Blinds are completely transparent:

1) They do not obstruct the outside view;

2) They do not add colour or texture to a room, so you can decorate as you wish;

3) They offer full privacy during the day: you cannot see through them into the house.

krumpers_office.jpg 

Krumpers Solar Blinds are made-to-measure and come in 3 different styles:

1) Roller blinds;

2) Vertical blinds;

3) Fix panels.

They are strong, durable and easy to clean with a damp wet cloth. And best of all, they will pay for themselves within a few years and will continue to save you money for years to come. Now that’s a true investment!

Check out their handy price calculator and read some awesome consumer reviews.

We are so excited to bring you a great offer from Krumpers Solar Blinds, exclusive to Buy Canadian First readers, followers and fans:

Get 10% off any blinds, from now until December 31st 2012!

Just mention "Buy Canadian First" when placing your order. Then sit back and watch your heating bills melt away!

Images courtesy of Krumpers Solar Blinds.

22
Nov
2012
18:59:56

Save Your Wiper Blades… And Your Energy!

By / Par: Isabelle Remy - Dorval, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

My biggest pet peeve when it comes to cars and winter is having to scrape the wiper blades off a frozen windshield. Arhhh!!!! Even if you can scrape off the ice from the windshield, ice clumps stay on your wiper blades attracting more of the same and eventually re-icing your windshield. It’s frustrating and exhausting, right? 

dads_ice.jpg 

So what’s the solution, other than moving to Florida? The guys behind Dad’s Wiper Covers came up with a simple yet clever invention: handy wiper covers that slip on your wiper blades whenever you’re not driving your car. Proudly made in Ontario using the very best materials and workmanship, these covers are UV protected, will not crack and will withstand temperatures up to (or down to…) -40c. 
 
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The covers will keep your wiper blades dry, flexible and ready to go at all times. And when they’re not in use, they fold away for easy storage. And since they extend the life of your blades, they actually SAVE you money!
 
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Here’s a note from Dad: "Interesting fact: 80% of our sales are based on purchases from women. So all you men out there!...want some brownie points with your wives/girlfriends etc. BUY them some Dad's Wiper Covers! :) "
 
Want a demo? Watch here.  
 
And to make sure everyone on your list gets a set, we have negotiated a special discount EXCLUSIVE to Buy Canadian First (just mention "Buy Canadian First" when placing your order):

Buy 2 sets and get the second set at 50% discount, from now until December 31st 2012!

I don’t know about you, but these are definitely going on my Christmas list! One for me, one for my Mom, one for my Sister...
 
Images courtesy of Dad's Wiper Covers 

24
Oct
2012
18:59:56

Déguisez votre casque pour l’Halloween!

By / Par: Guest bloggers

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Saviez-vous que ceux qui portent les housses de casque Tail-Wags sont de tous les âges ? Et pour cause. Chacun des modèles imaginés par la fondatrice Karyn Climans sont issus des envies de ses clients. C’est pourquoi je suis devenue cliente et peu de temps après me suis jointe à elle pour apporter ces housses adorables aux marchés francophones. 

Je suis exigeante dans toutes mes décisions d’achat. Lorsque j'ai reçus ma première housse Tail-Wags – le léopard violet pour ma fille de huit ans  – j’ai revêtu ma casquette d’inspection qualité et parcouru ma liste de critères : les coutures, la texture, l’imprimé, le marquage, l’emballage, les couleurs comparées a celles du site web. Tail-Wags a reçu une note parfaite !

Et ce n’est pas tout. Tail-Wags contribue à notre économie locale et crée des emplois. Ses produits sont d’origine et de fabrication 100% canadienne. Les tissus (polaire, lycra) et imprimés sont fournis par des entreprises québécoises et ontariennes. Les designs, la coupe et la couture, tout est fait ici au Canada! 

Et les enfants portent les housses à la maison, pas seulement sur les roues ou les pentes! Elles sont une extension de leur imaginaire. Les adultes aussi le portent comme symbole de rallye pour leur triathlon et bien d’autres occasions!

On n’est donc pas surpris de lire et de voir Tail-Wags sur les ondes à travers lepays : CBCTFOMagazine Parents  et Dragon's Den , pour ne nommer qu’eux.

Alors sans plus tarder, voici mes 4 choix du mois pour l’Halloween ou pour toute occasion tant qu'à y être!


Le Gladiateur, noble guerrier porteur d'épée, protège sa patrie et son honneur, pour cette soirée d'Halloween parfois fraîches:

diana_gladiator.jpg

L’éclair déchirant l'air sur les pentes, les rampes de planche à roulettes ou les rues de la ville: 

diana_redwings.jpg


Le brillant violet de la Princesse et sa douce tulle. Les fillettes adorent la sensation: 

diana_purpleprincess.jpg

Et pour le genre un peu holé-holé, la Bête sauvage est parfaite pour ceux qui ressentent l'appel de la nature:

diana_redthing.jpg


Alors n’attendez plus, procurez-vous la housse qui vous va à temps pour l’Halloween. Et profitez de notre offre de 10% valable jusqu’au 31  octobre 2012. 

Diana@tail-wags.com
 
Au plaisir!
 
diana_headshot.jpg 
 
 
Bonjour mes amis ! Je suis une entrepreneur de retour à Montréal depuis deux ans. J’aide les PME a circuler sur les réseaux sociaux et depuis peu, je me suis associée a Tail-Wags car j’adore cette marque 100% canadienne et tout ce qu’elle représente. J’ai également un site éditorial Yazziness.com  dans lequel je parle de sujets d’affaires mais aussi de mes coups de cœur (gadgets, produits, resto). Je suis heureuse d’être bloggeuse sur le blog The Good Shopper et j'espère que mes coups de cœur vous plairont! J’ai hâte de vous lire en retour.

15
Oct
2012
18:59:56

Treat Your Biking Helmet with a Disguise for Halloween

By / Par: Guest bloggers

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Proud wearers of Tail-Wags helmet covers are of all ages. Founder, Karyn Climans, designs styles in sync with each customer's wants and desires. I find myself saying this every other day because this is why I became a customer and soon after joined her to market to the francophone community.

I'm very demanding when it comes to consumer products no matter what the price tag is. When I first received the cover - the leopard for my 8 year-old -, I put on my quality assurance cap and got out my checklist: stitching, touch, print, packaging, label, color comparing to web site display. Tail-wags got a perfect score!

And it doesn't end there. Tail-Wags contributes to our local economy  and creates jobs, as it is 100% Canadian from start to finish. The fabrics (fleece, lycra), the designs, the cutting and sowing, all done here!

And kids are wearing them all over the house not just on wheels or slopes! They are an extension of their imaginary. And adults wear them as a rallying symbol for triathlons and what not!

Not surprisingly, Tail-wags has been getting rave reviews from the media all across the country. CBC News, TFO Broadcast, Parents Magazine.

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Without further a due, here are my 4 top picks for Halloween or any time of the year as of that matter!

The Gladiator for the bold one! Made of fleece for those chilly trick-or-treat evenings:

diana_gladiator.jpg


Blaze through the speed of light:

diana_redwings.jpg
 


The Princess's tiara sparkly purple and her soft tulle. Girls love to feel the tull flow as they ride:

diana_purpleprincess.jpg

And for the wilder kind, The Wild Thing. Can you hear it?:

diana_redthing.jpg


So wait no more! Get yours in time for Halloween. And we're offering 10% off throughout October.

Diana@tail-wags.com

Looking forward to hearing from you!

diana_headshot.jpg

A warm hello to all my Anglophone and Francophone readers. I'm Diana Yazidjian, a Montreal entrepreneur back from a 9 year ride in Europe. I have an editorial site on business and also on nifty finds Yazziness.com. As of late, I have partnered with Tail-Wags 100% Canadian brand for the love of the brand and what it represents to us Canadians. I am so pleased to be a guest blogger on the Good Shopper Blog and hope that you will enjoy my nifty finds! Looking forward to hearing from you also!

02
Apr
2012
18:59:56

Fashion Week

By / Par: Stacey Kazmir

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

It was World Mastercard Fashion Week last month in Toronto and my friend, Pam, attended the runway shows for two Canadian designers! There were many Canadian-made designs on display during the week including Joe Fresh, Travis Taddeo, Ashtiani, CAITLIN POWER and the two my friend Pam saw on behalf of Did you know Canada?RUDSAK and Soia & Kyo.

Soia & Kyo debuted in 2004. Montreal designer, Ilan Elfassy, is known for creating fabulous fitting clothes with exquisite detail and unique styling. His clothing has been featured in many popular international magazines and he has a celebrity following. He has said that he is inspired by “the ‘hipster urban traveler’" and this global feel is certainly present in his designs. During Fashion Week, Soia & Kyo modelled their Winter 2012 line of lush jackets with stunning details and edgy, urban men's wear. We were excited to be able to interview Ilan Elfassy before the show and you can read the interview with him on my Did you know Canada? blog.



During RUDSAK's show, Pam thought RUDSAK's catwalk was bold and brilliant - not shying away from luscious fur collars mixed with buttery leather in super cool black and neutrals. RUDSAK was founded in Montreal, Canada in 1994 by its visionary and creative leader, Evik Asatoorian. Evik Asatoorian says he embodies his collections with a remembrance of their native Canadian roots. His look is known as sleek, minimalist and city-inspired.

It's the Fashion Design Council of Canada that owns and produces Fashion Week, now in its 13th successful year. The bi-annual event has garnered international respect and is the second largest Fashion Week in North America!!

Who is your favourite Canadian designer??

Images courtesy RUDSAK and Pam Fontaine.

Tags / Balises: Buy Canadian, Fashion, Made in Canada
18
Jan
2012
18:59:56

Introducing the New 2013 Ford Fusion

By / Par: Guest bloggers

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

When you think "Ford", do you think  "Made in Canada" ? Well, you should. You can find the Ford Canadian Headquarters & Eastern Operations Centre and an assembly plant, located in Oakville, Ontario. For as long as I can remember, my family has owned a Ford. My husband thinks that they are reliable and dependable. He knows he can use them for work and still trust the safety of our family in them. I guess you can say he is a Ford guy.

 

Last week, Ford Canada  sent one hundred and fifty Canadian and other bloggers to Detroit.  While there, I learned more about Ford as a company and as a product, than I had ever known before. As a mom to a teen who will be on the road and driving soon, I really appreciated the safety features that we were introduced to, especially the My Key system.  Imagine sending your teen out in your car and not worrying about their safety or the safety of your car. This is a possibility with Ford My Key. My Key is a parental control device that allows parents to virtually be in the passenger seat. Some of the great features of this are:

-seat belt reminder until clicked. Also the radio is not able to work till the seat belt is on

-the low fuel warning is set at a higher amount. This will give the teen enough time to fuel up and not wait till it is too late

-special features like Park aid (for parallel parking) and BLIS cannot be deactivated.

-top speed is limited 

-limited audio volume

See Ford Canada  for complete details.

The My Key feature makes me feel very comfortable and allows my teen to venture out on her own in my car.

In Detroit we also saw the New 2013 Ford Fusion which made its debut at the North American International Auto Show. What a nice looking car it is.  Ford is very proud of this car and they have every right to be. It is available in  gasoline power or hybrid, has electric, power-assisted steering, My Ford Touch,  and, my favourite, Park Assist (no worrying about finding a spot to pull into). There are many more great features on this one-of-a-kind car. I look forward to testing one out for myself soon.

Have you driven a Ford lately?

Post written by Gingermommy 

 :: images courtesy of Buy Canadian First member Ford Media and Tales of a Ranting Ginger 

03
Jan
2012
18:59:56

It's a New Year!

By / Par: Wendy T. Gibson

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Hello Canada! What a great year 2011 was with you here on the Good Shopper blog, sharing awesome, made-in-Canada  products and meeting the people behind the brands! We know that you are going to love what we have in store for 2012!

 

Isabelle  was busy as a beaver in 2011, diligently spreading the word about the many benefits of buying Canadian first. Isabelle travelled across Canada to appear on national TV and radio to promote products made-in-Canada! She even found herself at TIFF, the Toronto International Film Festival, handing out all-Canadian swag bags to lucky celebs! So exciting!

 

We started the Buy Canadian First Book Club  in 2011 and our Stacey has been doing a great job of  interviewing Canadian authors, reviewing Canadian books  and then, giving them away! Nothing can stop her, so just join her! She has a great line-up for 2012! 

 

This year, we are so excited to be adding two more amazing Canadian bloggers to our already talented team! From beautiful B.C. comes Donna of Funky Junk Interiors . If you love decorating and DIY, you will love Donna's great decorating how-to's and amazing tips as well as her posts about small businesses in Canada.

 

From Ontario comes Kim, whom you have already met in guest posts here. Known as the Ranting Ginger , Kim has tons of Mom and blogging experience, reviewing and giving away Canadian products. We look forward to her posts about social media in Canada, among other things.

 

Tweet! 

We have all kinds of Canadian goodies up our sleeves here at the Good Shopper blog for 2012 and we are sharing the love, as always. Stay tuned for exciting details of the Twitter Parties that we will be throwing, where you will have the chance to win all sorts of fantastic Canadian products! As always, there will be lots of giveaways too, here on the blog, along with our always informative, great Canadian content!

Have you ever been to a Twitter Party? 

:: images courtesy of the Good Shopper blog. 

 

23
Dec
2011
18:59:56

Christmas Specials

By / Par: Stacey Kazmir

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

It's Day 23 of our Cross Canada Countdown and we have a "head's up" for you!  Canadian-made television station CBC has a full line-up of entertainment this Christmas Eve and Day, Canada!

With the support of Tbooth, CBC will be running Christmas Specials all of Christmas day with limited commercial breaks.

 

CBC Television's December 25th Schedule:

  • 12:00 p.m. The Queen's Christmas Message (a broadcast made by the sovereign of the Commonwealth realms to the Commonwealth Nations each Christmas)
  • 12:05 p.m. Disney Parade
  • 1:35 p.m. The Forgotten Toys
  • 2:00 p.m. Léon in Wintertime
  • 2:25 p.m. Mr. Magoo's Christmas
  • 3:20 p.m. Booky & The Secret Santa
  • 6:30 p.m. Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
  • 8:00 p.m. The Queen's Christmas Message
  • 8:05 p.m. Frosty Returns
  • 8:30 p.m. A Heartland Christmas

A great day to get those PVRs going if you won't be home to watch!

 

You can also watch the entire Elf movie online on CBC's website! If you recall, Elf stars the hilarious Will Ferrell and Bob Newhart, and is about a man who was raised at the North Pole with elves. He is sent to the U.S. in search of his true identity. Head over there tonight to watch with the family!

The morning of the 24th, while everyone is getting ready for a big night and day, be sure to have the kids check out CBC Kids Holiday Morning. All across the country from 6 a.m. to noon (6:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. NT) see holiday episodes of some of your favourite Kids' CBC shows including Super WHY! episodes "The Nutcracker" and "'Twas the Night Before Christmas".

 

The night of the 24th, while you are preparing treats, presents and stocking, turn on Season of Song: Canadian Tenors & Friends. The Tenors are joined by stars like Canadian Paul Anka, David Foster and Justin Bieber.

What are some of your favourite Christmas Specials?

22
Dec
2011
18:59:56

Join the 1Y1C Research Brigade

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

As my year of Canadian immersion comes to a close, I’ve realized that there’s a ton of research I’ve left undone. I simply haven’t had the time this year to assess the Canadianness of a bunch of non-essential categories or sub-categories. For example, I happily had no need for a rifle or shotgun in 2011, so I never got around to determining if there were any made in Canada.

Over the year, I’ve received offers from a few people who volunteered to help with researching the project. It occurred to me that I might be able to crowdsource some of these research challenges. Hence, I’ve created the research brigade.

darren_brigade.jpg

If you’re a fan of the project, or are just looking for some way to avoid your relatives for 45 minutes or an hour this holiday season, here’s your chance. I’m looking for volunteer researchers to pick a topic and then use their Google kung-fu to determine whether such a product is sourced or manufactured in Canada. Here’s how it would work:

  1. Pick a topic from the list below.
  2. Do online research (or make phone calls, if you’re feeling really eager) to determine if the product is sourced or manufactured in Canada.
  3. Complete the form below with your results (or just email me at darren@1y1c.ca). You can just include notes and links. If you’re keen to write something fully-formed, I might even feature it as a guest blog post in the new year.

Make sense? If there are a lot of examples of Canadian sources or manufacturers, try to pick the most popular ones. It’s quite possible that you’ll discover that there are, in fact, no Canadian-made products for a given topic. That’s okay, too.

What do you get? My undying thanks, of course. Also, if I end up writing a book about the project, I’ll send five randomly selected brigade members a signed copy. We may end up with less than five volunteers, so your odds of gotten a book are good.

Here are the topics. Again, we’re searching for the answer to the question: “Are there any of these products made in Canada?”

  1. Eyeglasses (including sunglasses)
  2. Rifles and shotguns
  3. Common manual tools like screwdrivers and hammers
  4. Tents (for camping)
  5. Motorcycles and scooters
  6. Razors (manual or electric)
  7. Hockey pucks
  8. Common sports equipment like soccer balls, footballs or baseballs
  9. Skates
  10. Pens and pencils
  11. Common school supplies like rules, erasers and felt tip markers
  12. Condoms
  13. Cutlery
  14. Musical instruments
  15. Anything else?

As #15 suggests, if there’s a topic that I haven’t covered that you’re curious about, feel free to dive in. Or you can leave a comment and I’ll add it to the list.

Once you’ve done your research, just fill out the form below. My sincere thanks to anybody who participates!

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

16
Dec
2011
18:59:56

Month #12 – Internet

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

And so, my year of Canadianness reaches its crescendo this month with all-Canuck Internet use.

I’m writing this while listening to the sounds of the waves on Cox Bay intermix with Broken Social Scene playing on iTunes. I’m wearing a t-shirt from Bearhug, and have local venison sausage digesting in my stomach. I’m drinking a glass of the local water, and have a DVD of “Gunless” nearby to watch later on. Oh how Canadian I’ve become.

Considerable calculus went into the order of the categories I added each month. I didn’t want things to be too easy in the early going, but I also had some practical requirements for how the year would play out. One such requirement is that, because I work on the web, I’d need to put the category of ‘Internet’ last.

What do we mean when we say “the Canadian Internet”? It’s a good question. Do we mean websites that are hosted in Canada? Probably not, because many Canadian companies, media organizations and blogs host their so-called ‘Canadian content’ on computers that are physically in the United States or elsewhere. Rather stupidly, when I set up this site, I added it to my existing set of sites hosted by the good Americans at Laughing Squid.

Others have pointed out that I shouldn’t use Facebook, Twitter, Flickr or dozens of other sites because they’re American. This seems overly reductive. The computers that host these sites, and the sites and services themselves are the infrastructure of the web. I don’t require that Canadian music be recorded through Canadian soundboards and played on Canadian speakers (if I did, it would have been a quiet year), so I don’t think I should ban myself from these services.

Instead, I’m restricting myself to only electronically communicating with Canadians. On social media channels like Facebook, Twitter and Google+, I’ve created lists of Canadian friends and followers. I pay attention to those, instead of the default view of everybody.

darren12_image.jpg 

Whenever possible, I avoid exchanging emails with non-Canadians. An American friend emailed me the other day, and I sent him this:

Dear non-Canadian Sir/Ms:

Thank you for your email. Unfortunately, due to restrictions imposed by my One Year, One Canadian project, I’m unable to exchange
electronic communications with non-Canadians until January 1, 2012.

This has been an automated message from Canuck Bot.

It’s in jest, but I’m doing my best to ignore American email. And I’m only reading Canadian news sites, blogs and other reference sites. I’m a big fan of Reddit, but these days I’m only in the Canada, Vancouver and hockey sub-sections of the site.

I’ve faced a challenge in a bunch of web-based tools we use for work. We use online tools for time tracking, invoicing, project management and so forth. I’m simply avoiding these, and regretting the decision to not use Canadian equivalents like FreshBooks and FunctionFox.

Thus far, the biggest challenge is getting a decent, detailed view of stories that don’t have a Canadian component or angle. I was interested in Louis CK’s recent experiment in self-publishing a recent comedy video, but I had to hunt around for Canadian coverage. Likewise, I’m sometimes interested in how Canada is discussed internationally. The Guardian would have been my go-to site for an external view on Canada’s withdrawal from the Kyoto Agreement.

I am missing vast chunks of the web. I certainly wouldn’t want to keep up this online diet indefinitely. What would you miss if you could only consume Canadian content online?

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

07
Dec
2011
18:59:56

I’ve Lost Seven Pounds on My All-Canadian Diet

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Back in August, I gave up all food that wasn’t sourced in Canada. On a day-to-day basis, what has that meant?

  • I drink water almost exclusively. With the exception of a few samples, I can drink no soda (I’ve been a lifelong Coke user–I seriously miss it). Most juices are out as well, and I don’t drink coffee, tea or alcohol.
  • I don’t eat many deserts. Chocolate is out. I’ve occasionally had some homemade pie with Canadian fruit, and my wife made an excellent galette with blackberries and peaches from the freezer, but they’re the exception to the rule.
  • Junk food and fast food are non-starters.
  • I rarely ‘grab something on the go’ when I’m out of the house. That means I’ve been eaten far fewer muffins, bagels and other baked goods you’d usually find at your local coffee shop.
  • I eat a lot of fruits and vegetables, fish, chicken and pasta (made from Canadian wheat durum).
darren12_image1.jpg

As I mentioned in an earlier post, I’m downright apathetic about food, so this process has just been a time-consuming bother more than a trial. I have missed the stimulating effect of Coke and the occasional sugary snack. I didn’t realize how much I depended on those to get me through some wintery afternoons.

I didn’t plan for this to happen, but I’ve lost seven pounds. Or, if you prefer, 3.2 kilograms. I think the big difference is that I’m pretty much drinking only water. If you add up the calories from a can of Coke a day, plus the occasional juice and hot chocolate, you get to a couple thousand calories a week pretty quickly. Over a few months, that makes a difference.

I’ve been using an app to track my weight all year. This is what the last few months looks like:

darren12_image2.jpg

Maybe I’ll start a new Canadian dieting craze? “Act now, and get your Canada Diet Program for three monthly installments of $29.99! The pounds will melt away like a spring thaw in Winnipeg!”

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

30
Nov
2011
18:59:56

Month #11 – Transportation

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Another month, another topic. This month I added ‘transportation’ to the Canadian-only landscape that is my life. It’s one of those topics where, in retrospect, I have no idea what my December, 2010 self was thinking. What is Canadian transportation? And how do I restrict myself to it?

darren11_carimage.jpg

I started by looking into the history of Canadian transportation. Did we maybe invent some unique form of Canadian transportation, like the seaplane (nope, that was the French) or the snowmobile (yep, thank you, Mr. Bombardier)? The list is actually pretty thin. Besides the snowmobile, we can claim partial ownership over the hydrofoil, the CanadaArm and, oddly, checking your bag.

Then I considered what makes a form of transportation Canadian? Well, Air Canada has “Canada” in the name, so that seems safe. I frequently take the “Canada Line” rapid transit service to and from downtown Vancouver. It was built for the Olympics last year, so that feels pretty patriotic. And I belong to a local car co-op, which seems very homespun and Canadian.

What if I wanted to drive a home-grown car? What would my options be? I’m not talking about a Chevrolet that was assembled in Oshawa, but rather a real Canadian-designed and built vehicle.

Enter the Bricklin. Designed and manufactured in New Brunswick from 1974 to 1976, it’s the gull-winged equivalent of Magnum PI’s moustache. It looks like the sort of car that an early-career James Bond might drive. But not Connery or Moore’s Bond, it’s more of a Lazenby vehicle. Frequently called the worst car ever built, the two-door sports door was fraught with mechanical problems, and its creator, Malcolm Bricklin, struggled financially. He only ever built 2854 cars, and bilked the New Brunswick government out of $23 million.The story of the Bricklin was recently retold in that most sacred of artistic modes, musical theatre.

darren11_carvideoimage.jpg

I’ve been poking around various local contacts, trying to determine if anybody in the city owns a Bricklin. According to Wikipedia, roughly 1100 of them still exist. In the meantime, I just sticking to forms of transportation with “Canada” in the name, and my shoes from Roots.

Read comments here.

Bricklin photo courtesy of Alden Jewell.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

11
Oct
2011
18:59:56

Month #10 – Music

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

I first discovered the Cowboy Junkies when my brother brought home their extraordinary 1988 album, The Trinity Sessions. The band's languid rhythms and Margo Timmons's hesitant, sultry whisper clutched at my serious teenage heart, and kicked off a lifetime love affair. They were the first band I ever really discovered, and they were Canadian.

And, while the band has taken musical vacations to different climes-the American South or China-they've always felt profoundly Canadian. The sparseness of their sound seems to echo our endless wilderness. They've always been a humble band-songwriter and guitarist Michael Timmons (Margo's brother) plays sitting down, with his hair concealing his face. And their back catalog is full of Neil Young covers.

darren_music.jpg
 

I had been primed to love the Junkies, of course, because my childhood household was filled with rock and roll-and lots of it Canadian. I didn't appreciate them then as much as I do now, but my father fed us a steady stream of Neil Young and The Band. One of the first riffs I mastered when I was learning to play the guitar was the emblematic opening of Young's "Hey Hey, My My".

The Junkies were just the first in a long line of Canadian bands I've come to deeply admire. They're in a zigzaggy line from the Junkies through Weeping Tile to, most recently, Dan Mangan.

My taste is mostly in the folk rock and singer-songwriter mold, but I dabble in other mediums. My favourite music to listen to while I write are Glenn Gould's famous recordings of Bach's "The Goldberg Variations". And I fell for Sophie Milman when I saw her play at the Vancouver Jazz Festival a few years ago.

The Rules

They're pretty simple. I'll only listen to Canadian music for the rest of the year. There's not a lot I can do when I leave the house, but at home, on my iPhone and in the car I'm going all-Canadian, all the time.

Will that be a burden? As it happens, I'm an obsessive self-documenter, and so for years have tracked my musical taste with Last.fm. Here's what I've listened to over the last 12 months:

I'll I'll accept partial responsibility for Taylor Swift, but not Glee. In any case, more than half of my most-listened-to artists are already Canadian. My wife and I have an iTunes library of about 10,000 songs. I went through them and made a playlist of all the Canadian ones, and that came out to be about 1,500 tunes. So, that should carry me through the rest of the year.

Photo by Adam Bowie.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

02
Oct
2011
18:59:56

Why Aren’t Canadian Movies Better?

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Let's just acknowledge something right off the bat about Canadian movies: they're rarely good. I've been watching a bunch of Canadian cinema over the summer-mostly the films that enjoyed brief runs at local cinemas-and they've been dismal. The Mountie, Modra, Breakaway, Terry, The High Cost of Living-the list of underwhelming movies goes on and on.

The problem, I think, is that I inevitably compare them to Hollywood fare. Obviously, mainstream American cinema is full of dogs too, but they're easy to avoid. Plus, there's a constant flow of quality movies from which to choose. For Canadian movies in the theatre, there's usually zero to one on in Vancouver at any given time. And there's no assurance that that one will be any good.

As a case in point, this weekend I watched Breakaway, the story of a team of Canadian Sikhs who earn redemption on the hockey rink. It was pretty dreadful. The script was clunky and the performances were wooden. It was the unfunny red-headed step-child of Bend It Like Beckham.

darren_movies.jpg

In a conversation with a friend of mine, he suggested that Canadian cinema was the AHL to Hollywood's top-flight league. He's right, after all, as we send our best filmmakers to California to find fame and fortune. So maybe I should lower my expectations for Canadian movies? Part of the problem is that while I don't watch AHL teams at Rogers Arena, I see Canuck films in the same theatres or on the same TV screens where I watch the very best American movies. So, the average Canadian movie will inevitably disappoint by comparison.

Of course, our country has produced a number of great movies. The one bright spot in my 2011 viewing schedule was Incendies, a terrific tale of a daughter discovering her past in the war-torn Middle East. It was French and included incest as a plot point-two common characteristics of good Canadian movies.

I sometimes think that, in North America, we have a biased view of so-called "foreign films". Why? Because the movie market filters out 98% of movies from any other country, so that we only see the very best (or, possibly, the most commercially viable) films from France or China. Maybe that's the approach we need to take with Canadian movies: treat our local films as if they're from a foreign country, and only watch the very best?

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

15
Sep
2011
18:59:56

Month #9 – Travel

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Note: I'm back-dating this post to September 15 because I failed miserably to write it last month.

For the rest of 2011, I shall not set foot on foreign soil. I know that, compared to giving up non-Canadian food or television, this self-denial doesn't feel like much of a sacrifice. But I have had to forego invitations to one of the Carolinas (I can't for the life of me remember which) and Point Roberts, Washington.

Point Roberts, incidentally, is this idiosyncratic peninsula that's connected only to Tsawassen in British Columbia. Much like the Russian region of Kalinigrad, it's a pene-exclave which Americans can only reach by air, water or passing through Canada. It's full of Canadians who have bought cheap (or cheaper, at least) property for holiday homes. Hence, the invitation I had to decline.

And so I'll only travel in Canada for the balance of the year. I've done plenty of that already. I've been to Calgary, Edmonton, Quebec City, Toronto, Ottawa and Halifax since the start of the year, and I have plans to see Regina and to return to Toronto before the year is out.

darren_travel.jpg

That sounds like a lot of Canada, but, of course, it's just a thumbnail on the body of our great nation. I'm a little ashamed of how little of Canada I've actually seen, particular if you remove the big cities from the equation.

I have traveled outside of Canada a lot, though, and I've lived abroad in Ireland, Malta and Morocco. Nothing makes you more patriotic than watching your country from a distance, or celebrating national holidays with newfound Canadian expats.

A side note: a few months ago, I had a notion of assembling a slideshow of Google Street View screenshots of big Canadian roadside statues and monuments. This proved more difficult and time-consuming than I imagined, so I leave you with just three of my favourites, and a question: if you were going to recommend a Canadian destination to me outside the major cities, what would it be?

I

.

I included a photo of the Terry Fox Memorial in Thunder Bay (by Paul Weimer) because it's a spot I've always wanted to visit, but haven't had the chance yet.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

07
Sep
2011
18:59:56

Canadian Fashion Designers Shine at TIFF

By / Par: Wendy T. Gibson

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Sure, we know that the Toronto International Film Festival is all about films! But don't pretend that you aren't interested in the red carpet fashions, even if it's just a little bit. Made in Canada  designs were well represented this year, as always, at TIFF.  Canadian designer Erdem dressed Keira Knightley for the after party of A Dangerous Method, held at the Grey Goose Soho House in Toronto. Her spectacular, multi-coloured dress is gorgeous!

Designer Erdem Moralioglu is loved by movie stars, political wives like Mmichelle Obama and royals, such as the Duchess of Cambridge. Kate wore a midnight blue Erdem for her first trip to Canada this past Summer. (By the way, the dress is from Erdem's Resort Collections, and hits stores like The Room at The Bay in November).

 

The TIFF sketchbook, by Raylene Knutson, made me laugh. The clever drawings, depicting what Madonna would look like if she wore some Canadian designers, is a great mini-intro to who's who on the Canadian fashion scene!  The Canadian designers suggested were Mikhael Kale, DSquared, Erdem, Pink Tartan and Jeremy Laing.

 

Another Canadian designer at TIFF  was ecocessories. This is a line of eco-friendly, designer jewellery that is handcrafted by Canadian, Jessica Hill. TIFFers had the opportunity to see and wear this unique concept jewellery, where old, broken and unwanted pieces are recycled into new, high quality, one of a kind treasures. The really cool thing about this designer is that you can bring your old jewellery in and have it completely redesigned with wire wrapped sterling silver components and chain! I have seen Jessica's jewellery and it really is lovely and eye-catching.

 

Buy Canadian First members Lundstrom  and Canada Goose  were also at TIFF. According to Canada Goose, they have "developed a special talent for protecting celebrities, directors and cameramen from the elements on movie sets around the world"! 

It's wonderful to see our talented Canadian designers showcasing their creations at annual events such as TIFF, where the whole world is watching. We are very pleased to have participated with our members at TIFF this year, by providing samples of their wares in swag bags! Have a look at what Isabelle has written about her adventures at TIFF

What Canadian designed clothes or jewellery do you like? 

:: images courtesy of Buy Canadian First members and ecocessories .

31
Jul
2011
18:59:56

Month #7 – Books and Magazines

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

It's only been a few weeks, but I miss The New Yorker already. I've shared a subscription with my brother and father for the past couple of years, and found the magazine incomparable in terms of the quality and depth of its reporting. It's the only magazine I read regularly.

When I'm traveling, I'll sometimes indulge in lighter fare like Esquire, Details or Wired, but that's the extent of things in the analogue world. My online reading inevitably sends me all over the place, from The Atlantic to Slate.

 

But July has been the month to go all-Canadian for books and magazine, so I have to give up my American magazines and magazine sites. Where does that leave me on this side of the border?

Macleans - My father used to read Mcleans religiously when I was young. I usually just read the movie reviews and Allan Fotheringham's backpage column. It's my impression that, in recent years, the magazine has morphed into a hyper-ventilating mouthpiece of conservative Canada, but I honestly haven't picked an issue up in a decade. I'll buy one and test my assumptions.

The Walrus - Early in its life, I gave The Walrus several tries. Ultimately, though, it didn't stick. I can't quite say why.

Geist - I've read Geist off-and-on for years, though I've never felt really compelled by its brand of showily-brainy non-fiction. As it happens, I've written a couple small items for this magazine, all of them at the less brainy end of the scale.

Canadian Geographic - My Mom used to get this magazine. I almost exclusively looked at the pretty pictures.

Sharp - I just discovered this in the Toronto airport. It's seems to be positioned as Canada's Esquire. The issue I read had Bradley Cooper on the cover. It was unremarkable.

Though I've never read it, several people have recommended Toronto Life to me. What's your favourite Canadian magazine?


Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

24
Jul
2011
18:59:56

Summer Reads

By / Par: Stacey Kazmir

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

I've mentioned before that I love to read - I don't smoke, I don't drink (except the occasional mixed drink at a party), but reading is my addiction, always has been. Summers are the perfect time for someone like me as it's perfectly natural to have a book (or an eReader) at all times - while at the park with the kids, at the beach, while camping or cottaging. Here are some of the made in Canada  books on my Summer list and available from Buy Canadian First member Indigo Books and Music Inc:

 

 

Room from author Emma Donoghue is about five-year-old-Jack. Jack's world is contained within an 11x11 foot space called Room where he and his Ma live after she was kidnapped seven years earlier while walking through her college campus at age 19. Described as disturbing, thrilling, and emotionally compelling, Room is the perfect book for a long afternoon at the beach or a late night a the cottage because this is one book you won't be able to put down.

 

Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen, is a great one to pick up this Summer and be ready for the movie adaptation to come out on DVD later this year. Water for Elephants is told as a series of memories by Jacob Jankowski, a "ninety or ninety-three year-old" man as he puts it, who lives in a nursing home. It wasn't always this way though. Jacon Jacob ran away and joined the circus when he was twenty-one and that's where the real story is. Described as being full of rich descriptions and action, Water for Elephants is a real 5 star book.

 

 

A Trick of the Light from author Louise Penny will be available at the end of the Summer. This is a new installment in her series featuring mysteries set in Quebec and centred on the work of Inspector Armand Gamache of the Sûreté du Québec. Now is the time to pick up her earlier award-winning books if you haven't already, to be prepared for the release of A Trick of the Light on August 30th.

 

This past weekend during our camping trip I enjoyed pulling a book out for those few quiet moments (Exit Strategy by Canadian author Kelley Armstrong). What's on your Summer Reads list?

 

::images courtesy of Buy Canadian First member Chapters-Indigo. 

21
Jul
2011
18:59:56

Escapism For Canada’s Brunettes

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

I recently watched an episode of Being Erica which began with Erica awakening to find her bed empty. Her boyfriend, shirtless under an apron, greets her from the kitchen, where he's cooking breakfast. He is ridiculously handsome, and has underwear model abs. After embracing Erica, he offers her a day of shopping with his credit card.

 

It's escapism for Canada's women, and that's excellent. We've had fifty years male fantasy in the form of Gunsmoke, Magnum PI and Two and a Half Men, so it's high time to even up the score.

On a related note, in its first season, the show depicts all five of its recurring blonde female characters as villainnesses, or at least difficult and a little bitchy. The show's creator? A brunette.

For those new to Being Erica, the show has a wacky premise. In the pilot, Erica meets Dr. Tom, a kind of metaphysical therapist who transports her back to various points in her life, where she inhabits an earlier version of herself. The time travel stems from the idea that Erica has many regrets, and the time travel enables her to correct past mistakes.

But here's the thing: more often than not, she cannot or does not change the past. The show's message is also a kind of (gender-neutral) fantasy: my life is the indelible sum of past actions, and it's inevitable and right. There's something very assuring in that idea, and reflects our culture's current fetishization of "absolutely no regrets". I'm not sure that's a great lesson, but only a stupid man would turn to television shows was lessons.

I'm only ten episodes into the first season, and I'm actually enjoying it. The writing is entertaining, and the leads are strong. I'm proud to say that the actress who plays Erica, Erin Karpluk, is from my alma mater. I've tried six or eight Canadian series, and this is the one that's stuck. I'm going to give Combat Hospital a try, too, as I think that passes the Canadian test.

Speaking of the Canadian test, how Canadian is Being Erica?

  • The cast occasionally acknowledges that they're in Toronto, and we see iconic Toronto locations like the ferry to Toronto Island.
  • One of the recurring characters if French Canadian.
  • I've spotted some Canadian currency.
  • One of the characters works as a columnist at The Globe and Mail (she seems modeled on Leah McLaren).

If an American wasn't paying close attention, though, they could watch several episodes without realizing the show was Canadian. So, I give it two out of five poutines.

 

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

10
Jul
2011
18:59:56

Month #6 Contest – Win a Chillbed Laptop Stand

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

I know, I'm a bit behind. I failed to deploy a contest last month. What can I tell you? The categories are adding up, and I'm having a hard enough time just wrestling my busy life into too-small mukluks that is this project.

But, on the upside, you get two contests this month. The first one comes courtesy of the good folks at Chillbeds. They produce made-in-Canada laptop stands.

 

I didn't realize how handy a laptop stand was until I received one-not a Chillbed, but something similar-as a gift a couple of years ago. My Macbook Air gets really hot, and after a half-hour or so it can be uncomfortable to have it in my lap. A laptop stand ameliorates this problem. Likewise, they're super-handy if you want to watch something on your laptop in bed with a, uh, bed partner. You put the stand in-between you and nobody gets a stiff neck.

In keeping with last month's home category, here's the contest. Before July 31, leave a comment here naming one thing in your home that's made in Canada. It can be a piece of clothing, an item of furniture, a beauty product-anything, really.

I'll pick a winner in early August, and they'll receive a Chillbed.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

10
Jul
2011
18:59:56

Summer Style

By / Par: Wendy T. Gibson

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

There's nothing like a magazine made in Canada  to find out what's hot and what's not! I've been reading Chatelaine  magazine for years and years and years. I like their slogan: "Making everyday extraordinary". As basic lifestyle magazines go, it's great and has everything from recipes, health trends and book suggestions to event coverage and thought provoking articles, with a Canadian context.

 

 

                               Magazines Canada

This is a great magazine for finding out, among other things,  what is hot in fashion in Canada! I really enjoy their online  supplement as well, especially this month's focus on what Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, is wearing during her visit here. Many Canadian designers are being featured, which is wonderful international exposure!

 

 

                      Abstract Print Dress - Marallis

Chatelaine August 2011 tells us to watch for and wear abstract print dresses this Summer. They also have a good article on double duty clothes that will last forever. The trend in make up this July and August is "Light and Bright" and don't miss "Fun Fashion Must Haves"! I'm not sure that I agree with all of them, but it was fun reading about them!

  


                                  Natural Beauty

Magazines make for some great Summer reading! What Canadian magazines do you turn to for style inspiration?

:: images courtesy of Buy Canadian First members The Shopping Channel, Natural Beauty and Magazines Canada.

30
Jun
2011
18:59:56

Month 6 – Building a Canadian House

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

A little more than six years ago, my wife and I purchased three and a half acres of high bank (that means that the last step before the water is, as they say, a doozy) waterfront property on Pender Island. Pender is one of the Gulf Islands that sit between Vancouver and Victoria. They enjoy a sub-Mediterranean climate, easy access to Vancouver and some rural landscapes.

We consulted an architect, who drew up plans. We intended to build relatively soon, but life intervened, and we moved to Malta instead.

 

In the next couple of years, we may get serious about building the house. So, I wanted to include a month in One Year, One Canadian about building an all-Canadian house. In short, to ask the question "how much of a house can you build using only materials manufactured and, ideally, sourced in Canada?"

As of today, I know absolutely nothing about this question. I'm the least handy person in the world. I'm 37 years old, and (while I have kissed a girl), I've never purchased lumber. I actually paid a man to hang pictures in our apartment. It's really that pathetic.

I don't even know where to start. Do you know a contractor, a carpenter or a supplier of Canadian building products? Leave a comment, and help a fellow Canadian out.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

11
Jun
2011
18:59:56

Canadian Television, Two Months In

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

When I describe this project to people, the category they usually commiserate with me about is movies and television. "I could never do that," they say. "I like way too much." They often also confess how they watch TV passively-they keep it on in the background, or simply surf the dial (kids, once upon a time televisions had chunky dials you had to turn).

I'm the master of my own denial, but they're right to sympathize on this category. Since April, I've been on a steady diet of Canadian TV and movies. It hasn't exactly been wall-t0-wall cinematic magic.

 

I began with a sampling of English Canadian comedy and light drama. I've watched several episodes of Little Mosque on the Prairie, Corner Gas and Republic of Doyle. The shows are, I'm afraid all studies in mediocrity. They're mildly amusing, and it's fun to see Canadian places and hear Canadian accents on TV, but they don't really hold a candle to my comedy favourites like 30 Rock, Community and, because I'm kind of an Anglophile, The IT Crowd. Compare Republic of Doyle to, say, Sherlock and you'll see what I mean.

Watching these shows is a bit like watching AHL hockey. It's mildly entertaining, but you'd rather be watching something a little better.

I'm a little embarrassed to admit that, of the Canadian fictional shows I've watched, I've enjoyed Being Erica the most. It's kind of Cathy meets Quantum Leap but, you know, not awful.

A little side note on Being Erica: the show's music is co-produced by indie singer-songwriter Lily Frost, who I always think of as "the girl from that Telus ad". There seems to be rich tradition of hiring recognizable Canadian musicians to produce music for TV shows. Due South's theme was written by written and performed by Jay Semko, front men of the long-defunct Northern Pikes.

Now Due South. That's a Canadian show I really enjoyed. Maybe it was the magnetism of Paul Gross and Callum Keith Rennie, but I never felt like I was being charitable or patriotic by watching a hometown show.

I do sympathize with Canadian television producers. They have an English language talent pool that's less than one-tenth of that of the US, and much less funding to work with.

That said, I remember a different result when I lived in Ireland. Despite the availability of Coronation Street and East Enders, the Irish-made soap opera Fair City apparently remains the most-watched drama in the country. Perhaps that reflects the Irish's natural disdain for any kind of British incursion.

While comedy and drama have been something of a wasteland, I have discovered a couple of Canadian shows I like: Canadian Pickers and Canadian Antique Roadshow. I'm no great lover of antiques, but I do like to learn about the history that accompanies every object. I suppose it's a bit lame that both shows are Canuck versions of shows devised elsewhere, but that's the case for nearly every show we see in North America (American Idol, Survivor and The Killing, to name three).

These shows succeed on the strength of the concept, and so they can compete on even terms with similar shows produced in larger markets. Canadian Pickers is just two guys poking around old barns and garages, and the Roadshow is basically a televised craft fair.

Along with NHL hockey and reruns of The Rick Mercer Report, these shows have been sustaining me over the past couple of months. I'm eager to fall for some Canadian fictional shows, but nothing has really stuck. What would you recommend?

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

30
May
2011
18:59:56

Month #5: Culture

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Services is out. Culture is in.

Thanks to commenter Natalie, I've changed things up for the month of May. This month I'm adding ‘culture' to the mix.

What do I mean by ‘culture'? Anything cultural that doesn't fit into one of my other media categories (TV, movies, books, magazines and music). To start, I'll only be seeing Canadian live performances-theatre, ballet, opera, author readings and so forth-for the rest of the year.

 

This will be a bit of a sacrifice, because I attend a lot of theatre. So, it's prairies and raven tricksters for me for the rest of the year. I joke, but when I was in theatre school, it seemed to me that every Canadian play I worked on was either set in a depressed, wind-blasted, incest-riven prairie farm house or on a depressed, wind-blasted First Nations reserve where some traditionally-clad bird dancer hovered over the action. Add in Canadian theatre's love of historical dramas, and we rarely see a play set in a contemporary Canadian city. There's always Brad Fraser, I suppose. I just checked, and none of the 2011 plays at either of Vancouver's biggest theatres, the Arts Club or the Playhouse, qualify as Canadian. I'll have to seek out some smaller venues.

And then there are cultural institutions. I have a membership to the Vancouver Art Gallery. For the rest of the year, I can only look at Canadian works of art. I'll be really sorry to miss this Eadweard Muybridge exhibit, for example. Cursed Welshman. A few weeks ago I was in Quebec City, and took care to only look at Canadian paintings at the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec. I spent my time looking at Jean-Paul Riopelle's work, and the Modernist review in Salle 7. I'll do the same when visiting the Vancouver Art Gallery for the rest of the year.

What foreign culture would you miss if you went all-Canadian for a year?

Photo shows Kevin MacDonald in the Arts Club Theatre Company's production of Paradise Garden, a Canadian show I saw last year. Photo by Ross Den Otter.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

25
May
2011
18:59:56

A 100% Canadian Clean

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Purity is hard to find. That's been one of the lessons of the first five months of this project. It's really, really difficult to find products that were designed, sourced and manufactured in Canada. I've only achieved this gold-standard with a few household cleaners and toilet paper.

Now, thanks to a little company in Golden, BC (population: 3811, not counting bears and cougars), I can add soap to that list. Kate from Apple Island Naturals heard about my project, and was inspired to make soap entirely sourced in Canada. And she was serious about it. Here's where the source materials came from:

The lye comes from one of two manufacturers. One is in Quebec and the other is in Ontario. My supplier uses both manufacturers, so he couldn't really narrow it down for me any further. The essential oils were manufactured in Montreal from trees grown in Ontario and Quebec. The base oils were manufactured in Saskatchewan from plants grown in Saskatchewan and Alberta. The melted snow (and don't worry, it was definitely clean snow!) came from my backyard.

 

Canadian right down to the melted snow. Now that's what English soccer commentators call "a result". I bought a bunch of bars, and it's working very well for me. I smell so Canadian.

Kate kindly sent along some samples of some of the other, not-entirely-Canadian soaps. I'm giving them away over on the 1Y1C Facebook page. All you have to do is leave a comment here, and you'll be entered to win three bars of Apple Island soap.


Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

24
Apr
2011
18:59:56

Canadian Movie: The High Cost of Living

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

This weekend I saw my first Canadian movie of the year. And, delightfully, it was in a theatre. The High Cost of Living is a drama set in Montreal, and stars Zach Braff (yep, that American guy from Scrubs) and Isabelle Blais. It's Deborah Chow's first full-length film, and it won Best Canadian First Feature at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival, where it debuted.

 

Braff plays aggressively against type as a scruffy American with an expired visa, dealing drugs from his dingy apartment in Montreal's Chinatown. Braff and Blais's characters are involved in a car crash that spins their lives off in new, unexpected directions.

Here's the trailer:


The High Cost of Living is seriously dark, in a tradition of bleak Canadian movies like The Sweet Hereafter and Crash (the one with the autophilia and without Brendan Fraser). Men With Brooms, it is not. It's also a bit dull-not enough happens to satisfactorily fill the film's 93 minutes.

In looking at film and television (and theatre and radio, I suppose) this year, I'm principally interested in how Canadian a movie or show is. I'll provide a bulleted list of Canadian elements, and then rate its overall Canadianess out of five. Five poutines, that is.

How Canadian was this movie?

The High Cost of Living was this Canadian:

  • Though the city is never explicitly named, it's set in Montreal.
  • Roughly half the dialogue is in English, and half is in French.
  • People use Canadian money.
  • It snows.
  • The film subtly criticizes the Canadian medical system.
  • An American discusses the differences between Canada and the US.
  • An American star slumming it in a recognizably Canadian film, reinforcing our inferiority-complex about homegrown films.

For these and other reasons, I'm giving The High Cost of Living three out of five poutines.

 

 

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

10
Apr
2011
18:59:56

Month #4 – Movies and Television

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Now we are getting serious.

Finding Canadian-made household goods has been a challenge, but switching toothpaste and deodorant is, by any standard, pretty much a foamy latte problem. The subsequent months-clothing and investments-have proved interesting distractions more than anything. There's plenty more to learn in all three categories. However, April is where, to reference a famous American movie, the speeder bike hits the redwood tree.

I love going to the movies. Attending a weekday matinee by myself is one of the sweetest joys of my self-employed life. And I go to a lot of movies. In 2006, I saw 61 films in the cinema.

How many of those were Canadian? None, I'm afraid.

That's not because I hate Canadian movies. There simply aren't that many to see in the cinema. At any time in Vancouver, there are zero to one Canadian movies showing in the theatres. Those that are shown are often "good for me"-they're the granola of movies. I don't mind these movies, but it's always an extra effort to go to them.

So, switching to only movies from the Great White North is going to be a sacrifice.

 

Everything Night in Canada

I don't actually watch that much television. I'm an ardent Canucks fan, so I see most of their games. I also watch the occasional English soccer game.

After that, though, I download nearly all of my TV. Those shows are either middle-brow dramas like "Dexter" or "True Blood", or middle-brow comedies like "Community" or "30 Rock".

Am I loyal to any Canadian television dramas or comedies? Nope. Is that because most Canadian television can't compare to the best American shows? I'm afraid so.

The saving grace, at least for a few months, is hockey.

What's Canadian?

In discussing this month, people have been interested in  talking about the rules. How will I identify Canadian movies and television? Does Battlestar Galactica qualify because it was shot in Vancouver with a bunch of Canadian actors? Is Juno Canadian because it's directed by and stars Canadians?

Others bring up the Canadian Content question. Will I just refer to the CRTC's list of approved programs? I looked into the qualifications for CanCon Television (the CRTC doesn't oversee movies), and the requirements are pretty byzantine. Here's the summary provided on their site:

  • The producer must be Canadian and is responsible for monitoring and making decisions pertaining to the program
  • The production earns a minimum number of points based on the key creative functions that are performed by Canadians
  • A minimum percentage of program expenses is paid for services provided by Canadians or Canadian companies

I could go the CanCon route, but there's actually a simpler criteria. It's like that old maxim about pornography: we know it when we see it. Danger Bay? Canadian. Battlestar Galactica. Not so much. One Week? Canuck. Juno? Nice try.

That approach may seem overly simple, but I think it'll work just fine. What do you think? Do I need a more sophisticated approach than "Canadians can spot a Canadian production a mile away".


Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

28
Mar
2011
18:59:56

Contest: Books for a Facebook Like

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

As regular readers know, I run a monthly contest on the site. I'm once again tardy with this month's contest but give me a break, I've been scouring the city for Canadian-made hair wax.

For this month's contest, all you have to do is ‘like' this photo of old money on Facebook. As I publish this post, it's the top item on One Year, One Canadian's Facebook page. I'll let that run until April 15, and then randomly select a winner.

And what does the winner receive? Three business books from the good folks at Douglas and McIntyre. Those books are:

  • "Chocolate Wars" by Deborah Cadbury
  • "Why Mexicans Don't Drink Molson" by Andrea Mandel-Campbell
  • "The World Is Flat" by Thomas Friedman
 

One Canadian book out of three ain't bad, eh? So get your Like on.

I know these early contests have been pretty easy. Fear not, I'll come up with something more challenging for next month's category, movies and television. Maybe some kind of CanCon trivia question?

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

21
Mar
2011
18:59:56

Month #3 – Investments

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

There's a perfectly good reason for why I've been tardy in discussing investments, this month's category. Here it is:

I know almost nothing about the topic.

My wife and I have a trusted financial advisor and RRSPs and sundry other financial assets, but they're really not, shall we say, a strength of mine. We meet with our money guy a couple of times of year, and generally all I care about is that the lines go up. My wife is far more responsible in these matters.

There's another reason I've been slow writing about this month. In preparation for this month, I connected with my financial advisor to ask how Canadian our current investment mix was. The Blessed Beaver of Upper Canada shined his light on me because, huzzah!, all of our investments are already Canadian.

So, problem solved?

 

Yes, but that's not much fun, is it? I plan to give my money guy some money, and ask him to split it in two piles and invest it. For one investment, he'll invest it in strictly Canadian investments. For the other, he'll put the money in foreign investments. We'll check back in along the way, and see how we end up at the end of the year.

Photo by Adam Campbell.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.
 

16
Mar
2011
18:59:56

Spring Fashion 2011

By / Par: Wendy T. Gibson

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

One of my favourite Canadian fashion mags is LouLou, Canada's shopping magazine. It's filled with the best clothes, shoes, accessories, beauty products, and gizmos and gadgets for your home, with complete buying information in Canada.

The layout is colourful and easy to navigate and crammed with information. I like how they comparison shop for me. The magazine always includes a page full of stickers that you can use to bookmark your favourite items! How cool is that!? It's colourful, hip, Canadian and interactive, too!

 

                                 LouLou Magazine

According to LouLou, there are eleven trends to watch for this Spring:

 

                           Diane Kennedy 

1. Boho/ 70's: Elephant pants are back! Grrrrrrrreat. 

 

 

                                Tristan

2.  Romantic/boudoir: Sleepy sexy.

 

                              Tristan

3. Minimalist: A little goes a long way.

 

                            Marallis

4. Tribal: Lots of prints and patterns!

 
 

                     Naturals Apparel

5. Sporty: Are you ready to reveal?

 

                                  Dace

6. Urban Safari: It's a jungle out there!

 

                                  Tristan

7. Tomboy: Manly, yes, but I like it too!

 

                            Bigger Bars

8. Whiter than white: White is the new black.

 

                         Turbine

9. Flashy and fluorescent: Colour is the new white.

 

                           Jayn Simpson

10. Eastern promises: Hints of exotic!

 

                  Jennifer Glasgow

11. Satin: The new cotton!

So, do you see anything that you like in the Spring fashion trends of 2011? Sometimes, it seems like there isn't much new, fashion-wise. Only the names have been changed! I can't say that I am thrilled to see '70's style fashion back for another go. I was there the first time, albeit very, very young, (*winks*) and I thought that the fashions were kind of not-so-hot then. I can remember lime green bell bottoms, orange elephant pants and paisley printed palazzo pants. It was like fashion on acid! 

Are you a trendsetter or a trendgetter?

:: images courtesy of Buy Canadian First members.

Tags / Balises: Apparel industry, Fashion, Spring, trends
13
Mar
2011
18:59:56

Cougar, Kruger and the toilet paper solution

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Earlier this week I was a guest on The Bill Good Show, a venerable local radio show here in Vancouver. There was the usual chat about the project, and then we took some calls from listeners.

Mr. Good was an excellent moderator of the phone lines. Earlier we had discussed my ongoing search for toilet paper that is sourced and manufactured in Canada. It's a topic which never fails to delight the media.

We took a call from somebody who said he used to work at a local paper manufacturer in New Westminster, which I heard as "Cougar Paper". He said they definitely made toilet paper from Canadian trees and wood pulp.

I noted down the name, and promptly went home to investigate. I googled, and did find a paper company, but they don't have a plant in New Westminster, nor do they make toilet paper. I was foiled again.

Later in the week, though, I received a long and informative email from the good people of Kruger Paper. They did, in fact, have manufacturing facilities and a tree farm in New Westminster, and produced several brands of toilet paper. It turns out that they've been around since 1904, when Mr. Joseph Kruger opened a paper business in Montreal.

 

Success! I can now bask in the warm, smug glow of Purex EnviroCare, toilet paper entirely sourced and manufactured in Canada. They also make a couple of brands of paper towel, so that problem is solved as well.

Why did this take so long? Web searches were consistently disappointing. No one seems to be optimizing their website for people like me looking for "toilet paper made in Canada". Even the aforementioned Purex product page doesn't mention Canada. I then turned to the aisles of my local grocery stores, where I made an incorrect assumption. I stalked the aisles of Whole Foods and Choices, certain that they would be my best bets for earth-friendly and locally-made TP, as they have been for other products.

I was wrong, and should have instead started with the kitteny-softness (actually, the Purex EnviroCare is recycled toilet paper, so it's more poodle than kitty) that is that familiar brand Purex.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

08
Mar
2011
18:59:56

Pounding the pavement for Canadian footwear

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

"85% of the shoes sold in Canada are made in China." That's what I learned from the clerk at the third shoe store I visited today. She seemed to know a little more than the other stores' clerks, whose best answer to the question "do you sell any shoes that are manufactured in Canada?" was to "just google it". Right, because that never occurred to me.

I need shoes. I need a new pair of running shoes, and some hiking shoes. By the year's end, I'll need some new dress shoes, too. So, before we get started on the subject of investments (for that's March's category), I wanted to do some research into footwear.

 

Pounding the mall pavement got me nowhere. According to their staff, there wasn't a single shoe in Ronsons, Town Shoes or Aldo's that was made in Canada.

I did, however, make some progress wielding the aforementioned Google and collecting a few tips on the 1Y1C Facebook page. What did I learn?

  • La Canadienne makes women's shoes in Montreal (they've got some nice shots of their manufacturing facility on that page). Unfortunately, I'm disinclined to cross-dress.
  • Nor am I particularly butch. If I was, I could consider Viberg's vast array of boots for dock workers, loggers or just plain stomping around. Along similar lines, I've sent a note to Mark's Work Wearhouse to see if they have any footwear that qualifies.
  • Now we're talking: Roots makes a few lines of men's shoes in their Toronto factory. In a pinch, I could see myself wearing these.

I also found a number of local manufacturers of Canadian cliches: winter boots and moccasins.

So, not a complete failure, but my feet still aren't ready for jogging or hiking. I'll soldier on with worn-out shoes.

UPDATE (March 11, 2011): I heard back from Mark's Work Wearhouse. They sent me a list of footwear that's made in Canada-for men it's all work boots and shoes, nothing in the running, dress or hiking category.

Photo by Emma Jane Hogbin.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

02
Mar
2011
18:59:56

Putting household goods to the test

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

As we move into month three of the project, I've had time to familiarize myself with an array of Canadian-made household goods that I started using back in January. Here, then, are some encapsulated reviews of stuff I've tried thus far:

Soap Works body soap - I've actually used this soap on and off for a few years. It's typically available at Choices and Whole Foods, and I like that it's usually sold without any packaging. There's novelty in just picking up a plain bar of sold and sticking it in your shopping basket. More than any of the other products I'm trying, their soap behaves and feels totally like ‘normal' soap. Their soaps are made in Canada-I've emailed them to check if any are entirely sourced north of the border.

Green Beaver Frosty Mint natural toothpaste - Setting aside the peculiar brand name, I don't love this toothpaste. Its minty smell somehow reminds me of the vinyl waiting room of a 1960s dentist's office. Like a number of these natural products, it's got an off-white colour which I've never associated with toothpaste. It'll take some getting used to.

Green Beaver Tea Tree natural deodorant - I've discussed the deodorant question elsewhere, but in general I've found that if I re-apply the pit stick at least once later in the day, it's sufficient. Mind you, we're still in winter. I may need to become still more vigilant. The tea tree variety smells nice, though I'm slightly disappointed by the mechanics of the stick-the lid is overly tight, and the little increase-the-stick-height wheel doesn't work as smoothly as I might like.

 

L'Olivier lavender foam bath - I had a guest tester for this bubble bath. She reports that it had a natural lavender odor and it produced a robust cloud of bubbles that lasted the entirety of her bath. I received this bath foam as part of a set of samples that L'Olivier sent me (they're pictured above).

Abeego food storage sheets - These are peculiar, reusable food wraps "created with hemp/cotton fabric infused with a blend of beeswax and plant extracts" in Victoria, BC. They smell like beeswax, as you might expect, and they're semi-moldable so a sheet fits fairly easily over a bowl or plate. There's also a little tie-able sandwich holder that's kind of nifty.

Abeego food wraps

Natureclean dishwashing unscented liquid and automatic dishwasher gel - These two products get the rare gold-standard of being entirely sourced in Canada. They do an adequate job of washing dishes, but both are inferior to their more toxic and less local equivalents. Mostly I have to chip the occasional piece of dried food off a dish or two when I'm emptying the dishwasher, and scrub the pots and pans a little harder.

Cascades recycled bathroom tissue - There's no getting around this: it ain't Royale kitteny-soft.

Any grand conclusions thus far? These products are, on average, slightly inferior to the common brands I was using last year. It's an acceptable compromise, though, for locally-made, more eco-friendly products.

There are plenty more reviews where that came from. Have you tried any of these products? If so, what did you think of them?

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

25
Feb
2011
18:59:56

Weddings.... The Royal Wedding and trends in Canada for 2011

By / Par: Tina Chicki - Langham, Saskatchewan

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Friday April 29, 2011. 

This is the day that Prince William will marry Kate Middleton at Westminster Abbey in London.  I am sure it is the most anticipated wedding of all of 2011.  I will be watching the events that day from my living room as I am sure many will be, here in Canada, and around the world.  Until then, I have been watching "The Royal Wedding" website on CTV.ca.  It is packed with lots of juicy tidbits about the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton, from the Royal invitations to the bachelor party guest list.  There is even a Facebook  and Twitter page so you don't miss any of the details!

 

I have been happily married to my husband for almost 12 years. It seems like so long ago that I was planning our day.  Trends have certainly changed since then.  I thought it would be fun to write a blog post about weddings and trends for those of you who, like Kate and William, are planning a wedding in 2011.  I love a great party and always find weddings so much fun and excitement!

Canadian Bride has a listing of the popular wedding theme colours for 2011, which are gold, purple, pink, blue, green and black, white and red.

What about invitations?  The Royal invitations are stunning, simple and beautiful.  There are many options available for invitations such as making your own or having them printed professionally.  Why not check your local free classified ads on Kijiji and use someone in your own city to make them for you? 

I remember that, when I was about to be married, choosing my dress was a very special time.  I found these fabulous dresses made by Canadian designer, Adele Wechsler.  Her designs have been featured in places like Flare magazine and even Martha!  She has a stunning ecocouture collection that is made of sustainable products from right here in Canada.

Another Canadian designer that I found is Nina Duong, of Nina Duong Haute Couture.  These designs are also stunning and have been featured in Wedding Bells magazine.

Buy Canadian First member, Chapeaux De Madeleine, has this gorgeous ivory flower veil, that would sure make a statement on your wedding day.  I am certain that Kate will have a fantastic veil when she walks down the aisle in April.

I always enjoy checking out the wedding cake when I attend a wedding.  They are always so beautiful and I admire the hard work it takes to make such cakes.  It seems that rolled fondant cakes are becoming the norm, but I also think a traditional frosted cake can be so beautiful.  I can imagine a cake covered in white fondant with lovely scrolled details in black and black ribbon wrapped around the bottoms of the layers.............classy!  Check with your local bakeries, I am sure you can work out the details with them to create the cake of your dreams!

Wedding music?  There are many great Canadian musicians, with fantastic music that could be played at your wedding. Chapters-Indigo has a vast selection of music...why don't you check it out?  Of course, one of my first choices would be Michael Buble. 

 

Now that the mood has been set with music, you and your guests can have a magical evening.   I hope that my picks help give you some ideas.

Are you excited about the Royal Wedding?  Will you be watching?  What do you think about this elaborate event?  Please feel free to share your comments with us!

 

:: Image sources: Ctv.ca, Adele Wechsler, BuyCanadianFirst Member Chapeaux De Madeleine and Chapters Indigo, Flickr Creative Commons member sweetcakesbyrebecca

Tags / Balises: Culture, Entertaining, trends, weddings
20
Feb
2011
18:59:56

Can you make cleaners with strictly Canadian ingredients?

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Sapadilla makes "nice little eco-cleaners" from their headquarters in Burnaby, BC. Co-founder Jill Goodbrand (how could you not be an entrepreneur with a name like that?) kindly agreed to answer my questions via email. If you read the whole interview, you too can learn terms like surfactants and saponify.

She also sent me a bunch of their products to check out. I haven't cracked them open yet, but I'll report back on what I think.

 

1Y1C: A couple of my friends actually recommend Sapadilla to me. Tell me a little about why you started the company.

Jill: I was working as a copywriter for big ad agencies, and Steve, who holds a Masters of Environmental Science, was working in his field - but in stuffy offices. We both wanted to do our own thing, partly because we've got entrepreneurial genes and partly because both of us felt frustrated about being a small piece of a big puzzle. We wanted to create a company that allowed us to be involved in things full circle. And, of course, it had to be something we felt good about bringing into the world.

Several years ago, we took a look at the cleaning category, and found it lacking. Natural cleaners have been around for quite a while, but we felt there was nothing to love. No companies producing the type of high quality product you might get excited about, the way you can about some products in other categories, like fine foods or bath and body. And so, we set about researching and developing our line, aiming to create high quality natural cleaning products that were enjoyable to use. We stuck to three key factors: essential oil aromas, package design and earth-friendly formulations.

1Y1C: When you hear from customers, what do they like about your products?

We actually receive regular emails from enthusiastic customers telling us how much they love our products, which is definitely very rewarding. What we hear the most is how much they love our aromas. People are generally exposed to synthetic fragrance, so it's a very refreshing change to use only pure and natural essential oils. Next to that, customers get excited that we're local.

1Y1C: How do you differentiate your cleaners from other natural cleaners on the market?

Again, it's all about the essential oil aromas. We worked with a natural perfumist to create our blends, so they smell wonderfully fresh and natural. We use these oils at high concentrations, making our products more special and high-end.

1Y1C: Are any of your products entirely sourced in Canada? That is, do all of the ingredients come from Canada? If not, what are the barriers to sourcing Canadian ingredients. I'd imagine price would be the major one, but can you simply not get some ingredients in Canada?

No, not entirely sourced in Canada and here's why. Cleaning products are made with ingredients called surfactants. Some good, some bad, some really bad. Conventional cleaning products use petroleum-based surfactants (among other nasties), while most natural cleaning products use plant-derived ones. Of the plant-based surfactants we use, one is made in Canada (Cocamidopropyl Betaine), but our main cleaning ingredients are from the Alkyl Polyglucoside family and, as far as we know, these are not manufactured in Canada.

We use this ingredient because it is has a far superior environmental and health profile to other plant-based surfactants that are available in Canada (like Sodium Lauryl Sulfate and Sodium Lauryl Ether Sulfate). We get our plant-derived APG's from a manufacturer in the US, but they can also come from Europe or Asia. We purchase all our ingredients through Canadian suppliers, but they come from all over: Canada, the US, Europe and other areas. That said, all the manufacturing of our products is done here, so they are made in Canada as far as NAFTA is concerned.

To clean your home with ingredients 100% grown in Canada would be very difficult. I'm not sure if any basics like vinegar or baking soda are manufactured anywhere here, but you could look into that. Probably safe to assume lemons are out!  Plus, you'd need some sort of soap for dishes, laundry, etc. and, actually, you'd have a tough time making basic soap entirely sourced here too.

You could find corn, hemp or soy oil (or animal tallow), but unless you can find a Canadian manufacturer of lye (sodium hydroxide), which is required to saponify the oils (that is turn them into soap), you'd be out of luck. You could get really extreme, I suppose, and made your own wood ash lye, but I don't imagine too many people are up for that!

The issue isn't really cost, it's the availability of one of our major ingredients. It would be wonderful for us if all ingredients were made in Canada.

Note: Jill heard back from more of her suppliers so the above answer was amended slightly on March 11, 2011. It now reflects the fact that you can find one surfactant that's manufactured in Canada. Previously it indicated that no surfactants were made in Canada.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

17
Feb
2011
18:59:56

From Uganda to Calgary, Fashionably

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

A couple of weeks ago, I asked on the 1Y1C Facebook page if anybody knew any designers in Calgary who I might connect with. I was passing through Cowtown for a speaking engagement, and had a few extra hours to do an interview. I received a suggestion that I talk with Hadija Gabunga of Hipband.

 

We met at the Art Gallery of Calgary, where I shot this video:

 

Being a rookie video interviewer, I failed to ask where she got her fabrics from. In a follow-up email, she tells me they're manufactured in Montreal.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

15
Feb
2011
18:59:56

Contest: Answer a question, win a chapeau

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

As regular readers know, there will be a contest each month on OneYearOneCanadian.ca. Last month I gave away an MEC gift card.

This month, courtesy of the good people at Tilley Endurables, I'm giving away a hat. In fact, the winner gets a hat of their choice from the Tilley website. I note, in addition to the traditional out-and-about traveling hats, they've got a nice I'm-an-Irish-gentleman-or-hipster cap and even a ball-cap. All their hats are designed and manufactured in Toronto.

.

How do you win one of these chapeaus? Simply leave a comment answering this question: what is your favourite piece of Canadian clothing?

You can define ‘Canadian clothing' as broadly as you like-there are no wrong answers. Given that it's already February 15, I'm going to run this contest through March 10, and then randomly draw a winner.

UPDATE: I had a couple of colleagues randomly choose numbers, and I combined them (for, you know, further randomness). Congratulations to Deryck, who's won himself a Tilley hat!

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

13
Feb
2011
18:59:56

Month # 2 – Clothing

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

In 1850, Great Britain produced almost all of the world's finished cotton. Now, of course, it makes almost none.

In 1850, our nation wasn't even, well, much of a nation. So how much finished cotton does Canada produce today?

That's one of the questions I'll be exploring in this month's new category, Clothing. Last month's Household Goods were a good introduction, but now we're getting serious. The game is definitely afoot.

What am I hoping to learn about Canadian clothing? Let's see:

  • Where do our clothes come from?
  • Do we actually manufacture any fabrics or other source materials in Canada?
  • Can I buy a suit made from Canadian-made fabric?
  • Are there Canadian-made running shoes?
  • Is it even possible to create a wardrobe of clothes that are entirely sourced in Canada (without, you know, knitting and sewing them myself)?
  • Why has the rest of the world adopted the term ‘toque'?

What in my wardrobe is already Canadian? For years, I've been a frequent Stanfield's customer, underwear made with pride in Truro, Nova Scotia. I also usually get my dress shoes from John Fluevog (certified Satan-resistant, it says so on the sole). Neither products are sourced in Canada, but they're a small start.

 

The Rules

I'd like to start from zero clothes in my closet, but that's not practical. Not only would it be exorbitantly expensive to build an entirely gold-standard Canadian wardrobe, but I suspect that it's virtually impossible. I also need to remain gainfully employed, and my work requires that I occasionally dress up. I can't very well wear only Stanfield's underwear and a Cowichan sweater to a speaking gig, can I?

So, I'm only going to add Canadian-made clothes to my wardrobe for the balance of 2011. As per my Made in Canada rules, I'm going to work as hard as I can to create entire outfits that comprise clothes sourced, manufactured and designed in Canada. Pray to your cold, Canadian gods for me.

I'm going to have to cancel two of my favourite clothes-by-mail services: the Threadless t-shirt a month club and Man Packs, for t-shirts, socks and underwear.

Have you got any recommendations for clothes that are made in Canada?

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

08
Feb
2011
18:59:56

My ‘Made in Canada’ standards

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

How do I identify what counts as ‘made in Canada' for this project? As I've said before, there are rules for each month, and they're up for debate. However, for all of the products, I'm applying these (deceivingly) simple criteria:

  • Gold - The product is designed, manufactured and entirely sourced in Canada.
  • Silver - The product is designed and manufactured in Canada, but its constituent parts or ingredients don't all originate here.
  • Bronze - The product is designed here, but neither manufactured nor entirely sourced in Canada.

Does somebody have an Olympics hangover?

 

My goal is always the gold standard, but I'm afraid there will be compromises. More on this in my next post, about this month's category of clothing. I'm also going to write about the official ‘Product of Canada' standards that the federal government has established, which differ considerably from mine.

What do you think of my approach?

Photo by Tom Magliery.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

01
Feb
2011
18:59:56

Live more Canadian, spend more money

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Let's talk money. Several people have asked whether or not I'll be meticulously tracking my dollars spent on Canadiana this year. I don't think so. I'm already a compulsive life-quantifier, and I don't have the spare time to track both Canadianess and price.

However, I do occasionally want to check in on the question of dollars and cents, and how much more-for surely it's more and not less-I need to spend to live my Canadian life.

Here is a sampling of Canadian household goods that I picked up. Not all of these meet the gold standard of sourced in Canada, but these are at least silver medalists (manufactured in Canada):

I purchased these products at my friendly, neighbourhood Whole Foods store Choices (whoops). Collectively, they cost $41.76. Here's the receipt:

More than $40 for six ordinary, household consumables. That's quite pricey, eh? At least I got six cents off by bringing my own bag. Score.

I got to wondering...what would the "normal" versions of these cost at my local Save-on-Foods? I went downstairs (yes, I literally live above Save-on-Foods-I can take the elevator down) to the store and priced out the products that I would normally purchase instead of these wacky Canadian ones. Here's what I came up with. Prices include any savings I might have enjoyed with my magic Save-on-More card:

  • Speed Stick antiperspirant - $2.25
  • Pears soap - 3 for $3.59, so one bar is $1.19
  • Garnier Fructis shampoo (because my hair gets too much sucrose and glucose) - $4.79
  • Alcan aluminum foil - $4.29
  • Colgate Total toothpaste - $2.99
  • Western Family toilet paper - $8.99

Add tax, and that gives me $27.44, or about 65% of what I paid at Whole Foods.

Man, I am getting hosed. Whose idea was this project?

In fairness, I knew that I'd end up spending more money on Canadian products. Hopefully I discover some that are of a higher quality, and last longer than their foreign equivalents.

Are there any Canadian products that you buy, even though they're more expensive?

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

28
Jan
2011
18:59:56

Celebrating the Chinese new year, the year of the rabbit

By / Par: Andrea Willowcat - St. Jean Baptiste, Manitoba

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Welcome to the year 4708!!

February 3rd, 2011 marks the new year in the Chinese calender, ringing in the year of the Rabbit.  The Rabbit represents the fourth year in the 12 year cycle of the Chinese zodiac.  Like the houses of the zodiac in Western astrology, the animals of Chinese astrology are thought to describe the personality traits, and possibly, even impact of the world events in any year they rule. Those born in the year of the rabbit, as well as any of the other signs compatible with the rabbit, will likely have good fortune throughout the year. The year of the rabbit will be much calmer than the rough tumble of 2010's year of the tiger.

My mom loves the Chinese new year. Every year she mails a card with the Canada Post Chinese new year stamp and eventually ends up at my home with 2 bags of Chinese take out, little gifts, sparkling loonies in pretty red and gold envelopes and red candles to light up the dinner table. Last year was the year of the Tiger, my year, I still have my little tiger figurines and my red envelopes with a shiny loonie hiding inside. I will keep my day free  and set the table in wait for my mom to enter in a big red gust of good luck.

To prepare for the Chinese new year:

 * Cleaning the House - The Chinese consider it important to give the house a complete cleaning to sweep away the bad luck that may have gathered throughout the year. The rabbit year brings us back to the home and family. The Ecoholic Home from Chapters.Indigo may be just the book needed to clean house for the new year.

 * Decorate your windows panes and doors in red as red is believed to be a lucky colour. You and the kids, with some scissors and a littlle imagination, can make decorations with papercuttings, an ancient tradition.

*Take a few days off from house work - good luck needs to settle in. If you sweep too soon you may sweep away your good luck.

*Give out money packets made up of red envelopes with gold symbols and lucky coins inside.

*Serve festive foods - during the New Year's season there are foods that symbolize abundance and good fortune. Special dishes are prepared and often tangerines and oranges are given to children and guests as they represent wealth and good fortune.

•The Tray of Togetherness - A circular tray with eight compartments that is filled with symbolic foods that represent a sweet start to the new year.

 

Maybe this year I will surprise my mom with a tray of togetherness and fill it with special foods to symbolize and celebrate our sweet beginnings with the year of the rabbit. How does the rest of Canada celebrate and recognize the new year? The Royal Canadian Mint has a collection for the New Year, as does Canada Post and HGTV Canada can help plan your celebration! Do you celebrate the Chinese New Year?

 

 

 Photo credits: Chapters.Indigo, Chinese paper cut art, Canada Post

Tags / Balises: China, Culture, Festivals, Holidays
25
Jan
2011
18:59:56

Should I accept free stuff?

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Here's a question. The project has received some early media attention, which is great. Along with lots of comments and tweets and email messages, I've already received offers of free made-in-Canada stuff. Thus far, it's been offers of some cleaning products, clothes and Canadian hosting services (never fear, I'm going to switch over from my American hosting before December, the ‘Internet' month).

This was unexpected, and not a goal of the project. I've had a relatively-popular blog for (deary me, is it really that long?) nine years, and I've received a smattering of stuff (and regular tickets to local theatre for reviewing purposes) over the years. If I was going to seek out a bunch of free stuff, I'd have done it over on that site.

I'm not sure how to proceed. If I accepted free stuff, it'd be with no strings attached. I might write about, and I might not. But, on the other hand, I wouldn't want to call the integrity of the project into question. So, I leave it up to you. Let me know what you think in the poll below, and I'll do whatever you choose. I'll close the poll in a week.

 

Photo by Xavier Tredjeu.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

 

24
Jan
2011
18:59:56

Don’t sweat it

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Can we talk about perspiration? I'm a man. A man with hair on his chest, love in his heart and sudoriferous glands under his arms. I think, therefore I perspire.

I'm not one of those moist-faced dudes who look feverish despite being in the best of health. But suffice it to say that if I go on a 45-minute run, you could water a ficus by wringing out my shirt. I sometimes evaluate how hard I've exercised by the size of the peninsula of sweat that appears on my baseball cap. Sometimes when the sweat dries, it leaves a little shoreline of salty deposits behind.

I've always been an antiperspirant man. I've read the claims about antiperspirants causing Alzheimer's, but I'd rather forget a fragrant life than live a smelly one.

 

I've tried deodorants over the years, but they haven't proved, shall we say, Strong Enough For a Man. I remember, in my university days, trying one of those crystal deodorant sticks-truly a New Age solution for an old-school problem. If memory serves, the crystal stick was pink and odourless, and about as effective as rubbing a parsnip under my arm.

I've only begun my search for gold-standard (sourced, manufactured and designed in Canada) antiperspirant or deodorant. I suspect that I'll have difficulty finding anything as effective as good old ‘sport scent' (surely a misnomer-aren't I trying to avoid smelling like sports?) Speed Stick antiperspirant.

I'm starting with some tea tree deodorant from Green Beaver. How could I resist the hockey player on a frozen pond on the label? It's not entirely sourced in Canada, but a good place to start. I'm deploying it twice a day.

Have you got any suggestions for a, uh, pit stick manufactured and, ideally, sourced in Canada?

Photo by Jon Jablonsky

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

19
Jan
2011
18:59:56

Q and eh, part one

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Thanks to everybody who's left a comment, or followed my progress on le Twitter and la Facebook. A lot of you have asked questions. Instead of filling up the comment threads (as if the comment threads were a finite resource), I thought I'd write a post of your questions and my answers. This will probably be the first in a series.

 

Kyle: Are you going to turn in your iPhone for a Blackberry?

Kyle asks this because Research in Motion, the folks who make Blackberrys, are located in Wateroo, Ontario. While, as you know, iPhones are designed by tiny hipster angels in Heaven.

If you consult the official 1Y1C calendar (note: calendar subject to change), you won't find electronics on it. Why is this? I need to eat. In order to eat, I need to generate income and exchange it for food. Sadly, my only reliable skills require a computer and a phone. Plus, at best, I could find a device that was designed in Canada (and I wonder if RIM doesn't work with American design firms).

I'm looking for (ideally) a company that will produce some little cards for this project, in the style of Moo Cards. Ideally, they're located in Canada, and use card stock sourced from Canadian sources. Any suggestions?


David: Will you be mentioning the retail outlets where we can get the products you write about?

Absolutely. This project is designed to be about my thoughtful consumption, and I hope others who are interested can benefit from my research. I want to reward retailers for talking transparently about where their products come from.

Kat: Will you be getting rid of all the products you have that are not Canadian?

Whenever possible, I'm planning on using up the non-Canadian product and replacing it with a Canadian one during that category's month. It seemed needlessly wasteful to chuck existing products, especially disposable stuff like soap or cleaners. Also, this eases my, uh, transition each month.

Lots of people: What are your rules going to be for the Clothing month, the Internet month or any of the other months?

Good question, lots of people. In truth, I'm not sure yet. That's one reason I organized the project into 12 cumulative months, so that I could spread out my planning and research throughout the year. It also enables me to consult with you good people about what the right set of rules for a given month might be.

Rest assured that the rules will vary for each month, based on the category and the practicalities associated with it.

Theresa: If you can't find toilet paper sourced and manufactured in Canada, why no just use (and re-use!) old rags made from clothes manufactured in Canada?

Fortunately, I make the rules. And while I welcome creative solutions to common problems, this seems like a bridge too far.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C

14
Jan
2011
18:59:56

Let's get knitty

By / Par: Andrea Willowcat - St. Jean Baptiste, Manitoba

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

The word knitting is derived from knot, which is thought to originate from the Dutch verb knutten, similar to the Old English verb cnyttan, to knot. Once an essential means of protecting ourselves from the elements, today, knitting is a skilled craft and hobby producing beautiful pieces that still keep us cozy. I love to knit but time is often my foe. To become more skilled in the craft, my goal is to make some time and learn to knit mittens and striped socks, which I adore! I am hopeful that by next winter my fingers and toes will be warm as will all my poppets.

 

Knitting is hip! In my opinion it always has been, but now, knitting is over the top. This is especially seen with sites like Ravelry (A place for knitters, crocheters, designers, spinners, weavers and dyers to keep track of their yarn, tools, project and pattern information, and look to others for ideas and inspiration), knitting circles and guilds all across Canada and all the fabulous Canadian knitters who blog about their craft, such as Hook and Needle with great tutorials and Knitty blog with knitting news (including a piece about a Toronto school art teacher who started a knitting club that inspired both boys and girls to participate), contests and more.

 As a shopper, I find that I am a bit of a tightwad and most of my knitting supplies are found at second hand stores and yard sales. It is truly a joy to chat with seasoned crafters who have tips and stories but who's hands can no longer craft. For me, it is the best way to collect my knitting needles. Sometimes my pocket book widens when it comes to the wonderful world of yarn and ohh, there are beautiful yarns available in Canada! The retail stores Patons and Bernat have several Made in Canada selections. I adore shopping online for yarn, too, as the possibilities are endless; alpaca, merino, wool, angora and mohair, bulky and fine and, of course, any colour of the rainbow. The Canadian Co-operative Wool Growers Limited has a great shop with yarn, supplies, and books as well as this chunky yarn I've been coveting for a while. Sadly after 12 years, Four Seasons Knitting Products is closing it's virtual doors and tempting me with a plethora of discounts.

I know that it'll take years before my socks and mittens are well made enough to be given as gifts, let alone worn, in fact a little, wee voice mocks me about the time needed to hone my skills. Time is a rare commodity in my life so back to scarves and big fluffy wash cloths in those rare sitting moments. Fortunately all is not lost.  Buy Canadian First member Les Bas de Julie can help with her beautiful wool socks, another item on my wish list.  One of these days I am headed to the city to where the wool things are and join my friend Andee for a little knitting. Who knows, I may learn how to knit a mitten yet!


 

I would love to know if  you knit, crochet or spin? What are your favourite materials, current projects and knitty hang outs? 

 

 

photo sources: Flickr- Sunny Buick, Canadian co-operative wool growers ltd, flickr- 111emergency, BCF mamber Les Bas de Julie

14
Jan
2011
18:59:56

The toilet paper conundrum

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Toilet paper should be easy. Canada has vast timber reserves, and we routinely hear about how much virgin boreal forest is getting turned into bog roll. Nobody wants to wipe their bum with old growth forest, but surely I could count on some exploitative Canadian manufacturers. Right?

And yet, my searches-both offline and on-have turned up bupkis. I was optimistic when I spotted Cascades toilet tissue at Choices. Their toilet paper is manufactured from recycled paper in Quebec, and they have a strong commitment to sustainability. Plus, you know, they have an absorption guarantee.

 

I contacted them to confirm the origin of their recycled paper, and this was their reply:

Unfortunately, it is impossible for us to attest that all of the ingredients used to make our products originate in Canada.  In the paper making industry, we deal with big suppliers in North America that have multiple locations.  It would be hard for us to know where every single component is coming from.

We wish you the best of luck with you project to consume only products and services made in Canada.

Zut alors! So, I think Cascades toilet paper becomes the first of the compromise household goods. According to this month's rules, I can use a manufactured product that isn't necessarily sourced in Canada if I can't find a product entirely sourced here.

Sidenote: In writing this post, I solicited my tweeps for synonyms for toilet paper. Popular choices included bathroom tissue, TP, ass wipes, dunny roll, bun wad, sh*t tickets and bog roll.

Photo by Mandie.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

11
Jan
2011
18:59:56

Month #1 – Household goods

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Have you ever considered how much stuff you regularly consume and replace around your house? Even when you disregard food, there are cupboards full of things that you use up. Here's my list, organized into the two basic groups of Kitchen and Bathroom.

Kitchen Stuff

  • Dish-washing liquid
  • Dishwasher detergent
  • All-purpose cleaner
  • Paper towel
  • Saran wrap
  • Garbage bags
  • Aluminum foil
  • Laundry detergent
Bathroom Stuff
  • Soap
  • Shampoo
  • Conditioner
  • Hair goo (at least, that's what I call this stuff)
  • Toothpaste
  • Deodorant
  • Floss
  • Mouthwash
  • Shaving cream
  • Disposable razors
  • Hand sanitizer
  • Eye bag remover

I'm just kidding about that last one. I mean, who am I, Patrick Dempsey?

In short, it's everything under your kitchen sink, and in your bathroom cupboards. I'm calling this stuff "household goods", though I'm shopping around for a better name. Any suggestions?

The Rules
Household goods are the first category of Canadian stuff I'm consuming. What's my criteria for this month? Ideally, I'm looking for products that are entirely sourced and produced in Canada, excluding the packaging. Lots of products, of course, are "made in Canada" (more on this later), but few are completely sourced in our country.

There will no doubt be items which, no matter how hard I look, are not sourced in Canada. In that case, I'll have to settle for manufactured in Canada.

Images courtesy of Don O'Brien.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

10
Jan
2011
18:59:56

Win a $50 MEC gift card for 18 seconds of effort

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

I think we'll have contests every month here at One Year, One Canadian. That sounds like fun, doesn't it?

For month #1, let's keep things nice and simple. There's a $50 Mountain Equipment Co-op gift certificate up for grabs. To win it, all you have to do is leave a comment on any blog post, follow One Year, One Canadian on Twitter or ‘like' my brand-spanking-new (and, for the moment, deeply uninteresting) Facebook  page.

If you do all three, you'll treble your chances of winning. For non-British speakers, that's double plus one. I figure one of those activities will take you, on average, 18 seconds.

  

Is the gift card itself manufactured in Canada? I'm doubtful, but I'll look into it.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

10
Jan
2011
18:59:56

Kitchen cleaners and eerie children

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Earlier this month, I began researching companies that might produce products that are both sourced and manufactured in Canada. I began across the street at Whole Foods (or Whole Paycheque, if you prefer), scrutinizing the detergent and soap sections. I lingered, scrawling product and company names in my notebook while the peppy Whole Foods staff looked on nervously.

I later visited Choices as well, and was surprised by the broad array of Canadian-made cleaners out there. I took my list home, typed it up, and began contacting companies to determine whether their products are entirely sourced in Canada. If you're particularly keen, you can check out my spreadsheet of products.

I quite liked the sound of Green Beaver toothpaste, though they haven't gotten back to me yet. I was also pleased to find a brand of laundry detergent called "Vancouver Only". I made a note of it, and went home to search for the company's website. Amusingly, the top search result begins "Vancouver Only, the brand with absolutely no web presence". So, no joy there.

After some research, the good folks at Nature Clean Living told me that their unscented products are entirely sourced in Canada. Score! I'm now the proud owner of their laundry detergent, dish detergent, hand sanitizer and dishwasher detergent. The dish detergent doesn't quite have the grease-cutting crispness of our usual liquid, but otherwise it's doing a good job.

I am, however, slightly troubled by the eerily-cheerful children featured on the Nature Clean bottles. There's a kind of creepy vacancy in this kid's eyes, isn't there?

Eerie Kid
Mom, those neighbourhood dogs won't be keeping us up anymore.

Next up, soaps and shampoos.

Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

03
Jan
2011
18:59:56

Pantone Reveals Colour of the Year for 2011!

By / Par: Wendy T. Gibson

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Has it been a year already since I was telling you about Turquoise? We are trading the cool, calming effects of the ocean for the energizing glory of  a sun-loving flower! I like it! Specifically, the colour is PANTONE 18-2120 Honeysuckle.

Pantone says that energizing Honeysuckle "lifts spirits and imparts confidence to meet life's ongoing challenges"! Couldn't we all use a hit of Honeysuckle right about now? Winter can be so very drab and colourless, so gray and monotonous. Honeysuckle packs a pow that will really perk up anything and everything!


According to their press release, Pantone feels that, while the 2010 color of the year, PANTONE 15-5519 Turquoise, served as an escape for many, Honeysuckle emboldens us to face everyday troubles with verve and vigor. A dynamic reddish pink, Honeysuckle is encouraging and uplifting. It elevates our psyche beyond escape, instilling the confidence, courage and spirit to meet the exhaustive challenges that have become part of everyday life. What a generous and inspiring colour!

“In times of stress, we need something to lift our spirits. Honeysuckle is a captivating, stimulating color that gets the adrenaline going – perfect to ward off the blues,” explains Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of the Pantone Color Institute®. “Honeysuckle derives its positive qualities from a powerful bond to its mother color red, the most physical, viscerally alive hue in the spectrum.”

   I actually just got a beautiful honeysuckle turtleneck sweater that has been garnering me lots of compliments! Honeysuckle really is a flattering colour for all ages! A little honeysuckle can flatter your environment too! Toss a honeysuckle coloured pillow or two on the couch, add some honeysuckle coloured sheets to the bedroom and towels to the bathroom, and you'll feel energized whenever you see them!

Another way to work in this beautiful colour is to paint just one wall in a room. It would be very forgiving in a powder room! Or what about painting the inside of your kitchen cupboard doors with Honeysuckle? Gorgeous! Some Honeysuckle napkins or placemats on the kitchen table would round the effect off nicely! The great thing is that Honeysuckle goes with just about everything, so you won't have to do a major overhaul of your home to achieve all the perks that come with this delightful colour! 
Are you tempted to add Honeysuckle to your palette?
For over a decade, Pantone's Color of the Year declarations have influenced product development and purchasing decisions in multiple industries including fashion, home and industrial design. More information is available at www.pantone.com. Images courtesy of Pantone.

Tags / Balises: Decor, Do it yourself, Fashion, Home
26
Dec
2010
18:59:56

Welcome to One Year, One Canadian

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

For the year of 2011, I'm living Canadian. For 12 months, I will only buy Canadian products, eat Canadian food and consume Canadian media. I'm going to document this process through this website, and plan to publish a book about my project in 2012.

  

So, how will my project work? I'm dividing the year into 12 sections, each corresponding to a month. Each month, I'll add another category where I restrict myself to consuming Canadian products and services. It's subject to change, but my current plan looks like this:

For example, January (and all subsequent months) is about restricting my consumption of household goods-all the consumables under the kitchen sink and in your bathroom-to those, ideally, entirely sourced and produced in Canada. Starting in February, I'll Canadian clothing to the list, and so forth.

By December, I'll be living a peculiarly Canadian life. Or at least, that's the plan.

Why are you doing this to yourself?

I'm interested in what I consume. Not in a high-minded I'm-green-locavore-snob way, but in a "where does this stuff come from?" way. I've always liked shows like How It's Made, where we get the origin of our stuff.

I'll also admit to being somebody who's concerned about our environment-I've been writing about it and working for it for years. But I'm not a hemp tunic-wearing hippie. I'm a pragmatist, and I'm interested in ways to make ours lives sustainable without foregoing the occasional hamburger or iPod.

Finally, I'm hoping that this online project can become a book in 2012. I've co-authored an ebook and a big boy book, and I'd like to write another. Plus, I've always enjoyed these so-called ‘stunt journalism' projects, so I thought I'd give one a try.

 Read comments here.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from  Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

15
Sep
2010
18:59:56

Cruising Facebook and the CBC for cool Canadian music!!

By / Par: Andrea Willowcat - St. Jean Baptiste, Manitoba

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

After a long day, I often find myself at the computer. Tonight is no exception, but my nose is stuffy and little Sarah Fina is feverish and complaining of a sore tummy. I check my email, twitter, Ning, Etsy and finally, on to Facebook so I can catch up on everyone's musings and daily happenings. I stumble upon a photo where the unfailingly awesome Fred Penner is tagged; he's on stage with several other artists and as I span the crowd I spy a super Canadian cutie and I wonder 'who is that?'.  I click to his profile. And so begins a profile-hopping linkfest and all around internet fiesta, from one Indie Canadian musician to another. 

Incidentally, the super Canadian cutie I spoke of happens to be Dan Mangan of Vancouver. I would have liked to describe his voice in my own words but this review sum's it up best:

"Mangan's distinctive voice, which is confident and weary beyond his years, sounds like it's been aged in oak... Compelling, twisty and imaginative."
-The Georgia Straight

Canadians will have to wait until mid-October to see Dan Mangan when he will be returning from the United Kingdom. Until then, listen to his album Nice, Nice, Very Nice, as you read some more information on this talented Canadian artist.

Canadian musician Dan Mangan and his t-shirt by Canadian artist (and friend) Emily Chen .

Peering into Dan Mangan's musical likes, I spy a name that catches my eye: Fine Mist. Fine Mist is two British Columbia natives, Jay Arner and Megan McDonald. Their debut album, 'Public Domain', was released on September 14, 2010. 

"...there's no denying that Public Domain is the perfect title for the album, which takes an angsty, romantic approach to synth-dazzled electro pop. "
-Exclaim.ca

In fact you should read the whole Exclaim.ca article, a fun glimps into Fine Mist, their work and some great little anecdotes. Perhaps Jay can buy Megan some wine from the Buy Canadian First cellar? Check out Fine Mist's MySpace and Facebook pages for some great tunes.

Canadian duo, Fine Mist

Peggy says, "it's better than pancakes" and well, that's enough for me. Jon Janes is The Mountain and the Trees,  Canada's East Coast's " Local Yokel Rising Crust Folk Singer" or "Folk-N-Roller", which ever you prefer. Jon plays guitar, banjo, mandolin, ukulele, harmonica, bells, drums, and whistles, hums, and sings. He is often backed-up by the Valleys & Seas Orchestra, featuring a collective of friends with a variety of instruments.

"Behind the strength of a smile, and an EP that stopped most of Canada's folk lovers in their tracks, he quickly found himself with a much larger and high profile (cough... CBC3 ... cough) fan base."
-Herohill.com 

The Mountain and The Trees will be back in Canada mid-October to delight folk audiences. Stop by his MySpace page for a one stop linkage to Facebook, Twitter, CBC and more.

Canadian musician, Jon Janes, The Mountains and The Trees
 
My evening is at an end. Sarah Fina and her big sister are sleeping. The rest of the family is away. I am sipping on blueberry juice (the little wonder orb to help my cold) and tonic water (just to make it fizzy) and wondering what's next on my agenda. I'll paint and the gruff voice of Dan Mangan will be my muse.
 
Let's create the Ulitmate Canadian Playlist! CBC radio3 is the place to go. Sign up as a member and create your playlist, favourite other playlists, and become a fan of talented Canadian Artists and more!  Who's going on your Canadian play list?
 
 
Images courtesy of Dan Mangan, Fine Mist and Jon Janes.

 

10
Aug
2010
18:59:56

Fall fashion

By / Par: Rebecca Stanisic

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

I know we are still in the summer, but the stores are now full of clothes for the Fall.

Lou Lou Magazine published an article featuring their 2010 Fall Fashion trends, including neutrals and simply styles, sporty looks and boudoir inspired beauty.  For the full article and all of the trends, visit the magazine's site

                       

Below are some Canadian inspired threads that I think fit these trends but also that any woman can wear, not just the ones on the runways. 

Neutral beauty:

                        

                                                            Dress by dace

                        

                                                           Skirt by Tristan

Sporty Fun:

                        

                                                             Tank by BLANK

                        

                                                     Vest by Respecterre

Beautiful, sexy and elegant:

                           

                                                    Dress by Jayn Simpson

                            

                                                      Dress by Jayn Simpson

Do any of the outfits above suit your style?  What's your favourite? Do you have a favourite Canadian designer?

Tags / Balises: Apparel industry, Fashion
09
Jul
2010
18:59:56

A Retro Fitness Craze Makes a Canadian Comeback!

By / Par: Wendy T. Gibson

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

As a lazy, good for nothing, who tends to get a little, um, puffy if I don't watch it, I ask a lot of my exercise regimes. They must be fun, easy, inexpensive and ... fun! By George, I think that I have found it! It's hula hooping!

 photo courtesy of Wendy T. Gibson

We use weighted hoops that Basia Baklinski, our teacher, pictured above in the yellow shirt, makes herself. (Basia is in her early sixties and a fantastic advertisement for the benefits of hula hooping!) These hoops are big and heavy! I am completely uncoordinated and, for the first class,  could not get that hoop to hula for the life of me! All around me, other first timers were laughing in delight at how much fun they were having, while I tried one way and then another, to keep my hoop going, to no avail! By experimenting with a few different hoops, I found one that I could keep going and that was when the fun really began! It is completely exhilarating!

Organic Cotton Yoga Pants by Me to We

The secret of it is practice. The beauty of it is that you are thinking only of the hoop, not how much weight you are losing, or how hard your core muscles are working - and believe me, they are!!! If you are like me and have a mind that won't shut up, hula hooping also becomes an amazingly, meditative thing to do. I stand in my backyard in the early morning, listening to the birds and spinning my hoop, my mind peaceful and calm for what will probably be the only time that day. I'm told that this will burn 200 calories in half an hour!!! And you are going to feel it after, especially at first. Fortunately, there is something super addictive about hula hooping and in no time, you will start to feel stronger and more confident!

Frogaliscious Funky Back Tank-Limited Edition from Terra Frog

I don't count calories or weigh myself. I go by my clothing sizes and how my favourite pants feel on me. Since I started hula hooping only a few short weeks ago, I have already lost inches around my waist! I had to make a new hole in my belt, people! I'm getting into some of my one size smaller pants again! My arms, legs and bum bum are getting toned as well and my waist has shown up again!!! Another wonderful and unexpected side effect is that my complexion has improved! Nasty, stubborn blackheads have been flushed out by the massive sweating that hula hooping brings rise to!

 

Bamboo Tank Top by Me to We

Hooping gear is pretty straightforward. You need a hoop! Lots of people practice barefoot but I prefer to wear lightweight shoes. Clothing that gives the hoop something to "bite" on and soaks up the sweat fast is best! Then you need just enough space for the hoop to clear. Consider finding a spot inside to hoop, for rainy days and winter time.

I highly recommend checking out the amazing Canadian site called Hoop City! It will help you find shops, classes and hooping friends in your region.

Have I convinced you yet to try hula hooping? I would love to hear about it!

Image sources: BuyCanadianFirst.ca

15
Feb
2010
18:59:56

Warm Up With Hot Spring Fashion Trends!

By / Par: Wendy T. Gibson

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

I thought that I would bring some heat to your cold, cold hearts this February  with the hottest new fashion trends for Spring 2010! Here at Buy Canadian First, I was thrilled to find Magazines Canada. They carry every sort of Canadian magazine imaginable, often in both official languages, including hot trend magazines like LouLou, Clin d'Oeil, Elle Canada, Flare, Fashion and More. 

 

Elle Canada  has a fabulous article on the Top Ten Trends for Spring, with beautiful photographs of incredibly skinny girls looking sad because they are hungry, perhaps. If you can somehow get past these gaunt fashionistas and superimpose your own classically beautiful body and face on them, you'll love the options available this season!There are a few fashion must-haves that I just don't want though...possibly because I already have them in my closet from the eighties. But I think that I can really work with some of the other choices!

 

Elle Canada's Top Ten Trends for Spring include leather shirts, lace, one bare shoulder, the boyfriend blazer (with a tuxedo twist), micro-minis, denim with denim, boudoir dressing, military chic, jump suits and body con(scious)! (Depending on your age and current fitness levels, you may either want to just toss body con or use it to inspire you to new levels of fitness!)

The FLARE "Spring '10 Runway Report "  has helpfully combined all the new must-haves into 5 key categories!

The New Minimalist, characterized by leather, nude tones, jumpsuits, relaxed trousers, and crisp white shirts. Shown above is Cover Me World's beach shirt made in Quebec.


The Exhibitionist, recognizable by their silk bra tops, high-waisted tap pants, soft bondage, ruffles, and lace slip minis. How beautiful is this corset by C.J. Grenier, also made in Quebec.

 

The Eccentric, who can be spotted  way off by their  layering, shoulder details, voluminous dresses, kooky hats, beading and embellishment.This gorgeous creation is from Chapeaux de Madeleine in Ottawa.


The Sports Fan, with their distinctive body-con silhouettes, lacing, printed shorts, structured sweatshirts, and scuba dresses. This great yoga top is made in Ontario by Naturals Apparel. And finally,

 

The Free Spirit, who enjoys ethnic prints, khaki separates, '70s details, and military jackets. These great Indian pants are made in Quebec by Frett Design.

You may have noticed that there is no category called I Don't Care What I Look Like As Long As I'm Warm! So what hot fashion trends are you going to be sporting this Spring?

Image sources: BuyCanadianFirst.ca

06
Jan
2010
18:59:56

Have a Colourful, Happy New Year!

By / Par: Wendy T. Gibson

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

"Colour is my day long obsession, joy and torment!" said Monet. I know just what he meant! I adore colour and use it as a major component in my design work. Because of this, every January, I wait eagerly to be informed of Pantone's annual Colour of the Year announcement!

Pantone is acknowledged world-wide for having developed a language of colour that is universally understood. To designers, crafters and artisans, this language is an invaluable aide in communicating exact tones, shades and hues. A common colour language is necessary when one realizes how colour affects mood, productivity levels…even rates of healing in hospital wards! What is this year's colour? I won’t make you wait any longer! Pantone’s colour of the year for 2010 is......Pantone 15-5519 Turquoise !  

 

Beautiful turquoise! Immediately I think of the ocean and white sand beaches. The colour, not quite blue, not quite green, definitely NOT teal, soothes and energizes at the same time! I love how turquoise goes with so many other colours, too. This gorgeous, versatile beach dress from COVER ME World is a perfect example of the colour. Wouldn’t it look great on a winter getaway next to some turquoise Caribbean ocean? (I would settle for even a turquoise bottomed heated pool at a hotel!) 

 

In reality, I won’t be going anywhere too warm, too soon, so these fantastic turquoise moccasin slippers from  Canadian Outfooters, are really a more appropriate thing for me to want right now! I’ve never seen these kind of shoes in this colour and they look so bright and appealing! The red and white bead detailing makes the combination happy and full of energy. Just what you need to slip on your feet when you come home on a cold winter’s day!

 

Art is another way to bring turquoise into the house to be enjoyed and experienced. This exquisite tapestry by Cheticamp artist Yvette Muise predominates with turquoise and blues, complemented by rich tones of purple and pink, green and yellow and would look wonderful in my living room…but then the rest of the house would have to be brought up to its standard!

 

Perhaps I will start small with a card with turquoise tones. These cards from Everything Eco Enterprises are by designer Kal Barteski and printed on 100% post-consumer recycled paper and seed-embedded paper. You can plant them in the garden!

 

What do you wish you had in turquoise? A coffee maker? A sweater? A necklace or gloves? A car!? Luckily, all these things - and many, many more - will be available, graced by Pantone's 2010's Colour of the Year! Make a resolution to try it!

Image sources: Pantone, BuyCanadianFirst.ca

18
Nov
2009
18:59:56

Cold and flu prevention the Canadian way!

By / Par: Tina Chicki - Langham, Saskatchewan

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Influenza and the common cold. These are  words we have been hearing a lot about the last while from the news on television to radio and even on the internet.  This tends to be the time of year that these viruses make their appearance annually. Influenza, though commonly referred to as the flu, is a infectious respiratory  infection caused by a virus. It can produce aches and pains, chills, fevers, sore throat, coughing, weakness and general discomfort.  Vomiting and nausea can sometimes be caused by influenza but is often gastroenteritis which is unrelated and caused by a different virus. 

The common cold also circulates during this time of year and can also be misinterpreted as influenza. There is a great article in Canadian Living Magazine explaining the differences between the two. Generally the flu comes on suddenly leaving you feel very tired and "wiped" along with chills, fever, aches and headache. The cold usually presents with a stuffy and runny nose with possible nasal congestion, mild cough and dry, scratchy throat. The main difference is the sudden onset of the flu with fever and aches. The Government of Canada also has many great articles on their website such as this article about influenza. There is also Fightflu.ca which is a comprehensive guide with a wealth of information.

The H1N1 virus is a new strain of pandemic influenza. We are not known to have any natural immunity to this virus.  Symptoms present like seasonal influenza but are more severe.  It has also been shown that this virus can target young, healthy people as well as seniors and young children.  People with medical conditions and pregnant women are also more at risk for H1N1.  For more information on the H1N1 virus please visit Fightflu.ca. Presently, there is a mass country-wide immunization going on for the H1N1 virus.  Whether you choose to be immunized or not is your choice. For more information on the H1N1 vaccine by province please visit this page.

There are many things that you can do to help your body heal and fight off that cold or flu. 

  • First and foremost, rest is key. Make sure you can rest as much as possible.
  • Avoid work or school if you are feeling symptoms to prevent spreading the virus. Cough or sneeze into your sleeve so not to transfer germs to your hands. Dispose of tissues as soon as you use them and then wash your hands. Did you know Scotties tissues are a Canadian product?
 
 
  • Keep areas such as doorknobs and lightswitches, telephones and keyboards clean Attitude Eco Cleaner is a great Canadian-made product to use for such jobs as this. It can be found at BuyCanadianFirst.ca member Well.ca.
 
  • Eat plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables. Drink plenty of fluids such as water, juices and teas. BuyCanadianFirst.ca member Fully Loaded Tea has many delicous teas to drink. Citrus Spiked Black Tea looks and sounds very tasty.
 
 
 

 

These are a few  tips and products to help prevent cold and flu.  Do you have any tips that you use to help you out during cold and flu season?  Please share them with us!

 Image sources: BuyCanadianFirst.ca, Well.ca, St.Francis Herb Farm

30
Sep
2009
18:59:56

Caring for your skin with Sea Buckthorn oil grown in Canada

By / Par: Tina Chicki - Langham, Saskatchewan

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Aging. Unfortunately, this is something that all of us must undergo throughout our lifetime. Many of us try very hard to slow this process. There are many companies researching incredients that can help reverse the signs of aging. One such new skin care ingredient that is being increasingly used and studied is Sea Buckthorn oil.

Sea Buckthorn is a plant that is native to central Europe, Scandinavia, Russia and Asia. It has been used for medicinal purposes in Europe since Grecian times. Sea Buckthorn is now more readily available in North America as there are more and more growers. These little golden berries have taken the Canadian natural skincare industry by storm. The fruit itself is full of antioxidants, omega fatty acids and vitamins. The oil that's extracted has been known to help several skin conditions like roseacea, eczema, acne and wrinkles. The oil naturally filters UV rays and was also found to aid in skin and tissue regenration (therefore great for treating cuts and burns). 

 

Mont Echo is a Canadian company based in Quebec.  The company was founded almost ten years ago when Sea Buckthorn plants were first brought to Quebec. Since then, the Mont Echo orchards has been expanded to several thousand plants. The focus of Mont Echo is to create Sea Buckthorn products for bath and body uses as well as for consumption. Mont Echo is a member of the APAQ (Quebec Sea Buckthorn Grower's Association).

 

Mont Echo has an assortment of Sea Buckthorn products. A list of products can be found here.

A couple of their products definitely caught my eye while browsing their products. PurSea lip balm is made with infused sea buckthorn oils, which is great for dry lips. And who doesn't need lip balm anyway?  I know I always have lip balm in my purse and can always use more. Another product I noticed is PurSea moisturizing lotion. It is made with a variety of soothing oils including Sea Buckthorn oil. With winter coming, I know lotion is an important part of my daily regimen and should be one of yours too.

 
 

Mont Echo products are available online and at select retailers. Please visit their website for more details.

Have you used Sea Buckthorn products and want to share feedback on them?  Feel free to leave us a comment.  We would love to hear from you!

Image sources: BuyCanadianFirst.ca, Mont Echo

14
Sep
2009
18:59:56

Canadian fall fashion trends

By / Par: Andrea Willowcat - St. Jean Baptiste, Manitoba

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Out with the frills, flowers and the adventure wear because in comes the 80's, biker chick and 40's wartime lady.

The rebellious roar of the biker chick is barreling through the runways and streets in black leather, studded clothes and accessories, 'paint on' leggings and metal adornments as well as thigh high boots that fit to the leg like a second skin. A little fetish and a lot of sass, if there is a bad girl in you this season is the time to let her out.

The 80's are still with us and gaining momentum with immense shoulders, neon knits, acid washed denim and leggings that are worn solo, layered with mini skirts, over sized shirts or tunics and men's suit (boyfriend) jackets. Satin frilly dresses and other over the top styles with ruffles and lace that reminiscent of the Madonna 'Like a Virgin' video. 

Retro glam, the ultimate of lady fashion, reminds us of  movie star vixens Ingrid Bergman and Katherine Hepburn. Beautiful tailored jackets, gloves, somber colours and fur wraps take us back to the early 20th century. Dresses that follow the natural line of the body and long sleek gloves are a must have this fall.

Sink your fingers into beautiful fabric textures of tweed, velvet and suede and adorn your black staples with some crimson, hot pink, rust, indigo and gold. Studded leather jackets and bags, the cozy 'snood' as well as black bottoms with the perfect crisp white shirt are all in this fall.

This season the fashions are fabulous so free your inner femme fatale with these 5 fashion must haves.

Thigh high boots - Worn over your leggings under your tweed skirt. A a footware staple not to be over looked. Check out the Sandie boot, made by Montreal's own La Canadienne.

 

The perfect white blouse paired up with black pants - Perfect for the black and white look or pair the blouse with a fall coloured pencil skirt, like dark organge (rust) and a matching jacket for the beautiful retro glam. We love this white Aferditie Blouse by Buy Candian First Member Dace.

 

The snood - A multi purpose accessory that can be draped on the shoulders, worn as a hood over your head or as a scarf and all of the above. Check out a Hamilton-made Cambridge drop stitch extra long cowl by YarnOverMovement

 

Leggings - Another fashion staple that goes the extra mile by enabling the fashionista to wear them a gazillion ways. Not for you? Think again! ELLE Canada has legging fashion tips for all shapes and sizes. Check out Mondor's leggings. Find a retailer near you here.

 

Bold shoulder jackets - Pair one with fitted, straight leg pants and a faux or vintage fur snood or just with leggings, thigh-high boots and a-line tunic. This jacket is by Thieves.

 

One can not forget the ultimate feeling of a beautifully fitted skirt suit. Buy Canadian First member Tristan has a beautiful selection of mix and match pieces this fall. You should check out their collection. All their Made in Canada pieces are clearly identified too (we love that about them!) . 

 

What is your must-have piece that you just have to get for your Fall wardrobe?

14
May
2009
18:59:56

Forget the Playoffs! Let's go outside!

By / Par: Andrea Willowcat - St. Jean Baptiste, Manitoba

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

How is summer in your region of Canada? Summer in Manitoba is awesome! We will pretend that the sweltering heat and humidity, mosquitoes at dawn and dusk and the wasps of August do not exist. May has begun beautifully, the winds are warm, the air is fresh, the sun is shining and  the water is going down. Soon our small little ‘Island' will be available to the rest of Manitoba once again. If you must wait until the playoffs are over I understand, you may stay behind, but everyone else lets go.

Dust off your super-duper-green-machine and give it a spring tune up! Your bicycle is not only a carbon free way to scoot about town but is great exercise. Where to start well you can get a spring tune up at a bike shop starting at around $25.00 but if you are a diy type of person here is a spring tune up how-to. If you are like me and are without a super-duper-green-machine, don't be alarmed, Buy Canadian First members Guru are here to help. Whether you are looking for a road bike for racing, custom design triathlon bike, a mountain bike to fly, jump and race the mountain trails, or an urban bike to tour throughout the city, one of these Canadian bicycle manufactures has the perfect fit for you.

The regular Joe may not need special shoes or clothing to go for their bike rides but everyone should protect their head from injury with a helmet. If you are uncertain of how to choose and wear a helmet here's a little help from the nation's Capitol city.

I love the water but am a little leery of boating and envy those who seem to be at ease in their sea legs. Despite my apprehension I still enjoy being near the water splashing in a cool lake and enjoy the songs of the wetland at dusk. Water is everywhere in Canada and it is highly probable that no country in the world has as much of its surface area covered by freshwater as does Canada, we also can't forget our 3 oceans that surround our borders. With all this water in abundance it is understandable why canoes and kayaks have a rich history in Canada, as shown in this book entitled The Canoe, by John Jennings (Buy Canadian First member Bear Mountain Boats).


Seaward Kayaks have a great collection of Kevlar, fibreglass and thermoform suited for the beginner hobbyist or the seasoned kayaker, Seaward has shown excellence for over 2 decades. Whether you wish to travel in twos or with whole family, have a look at Buy Canadian First member Clipper Canoe as they have the products to fit your needs. Clipper Canoe makes of over 30 styles of canoes, both big (up to 12 meters) and small; you can customize the colours and accessories of your canoe.

 

Where there is water there must be safety and awareness. Salus Marine, another wonderful member, is the maker of PFDs (personal flotation devices) or life jackets has the Gjoa Kayak Sports Vest, Nimbus Children's Vest, Comfort Fit Life Vests and even one for you dog. All of their vests are designed to protect and save lives so be sure you and loved ones are wearing them on your boating adventures. Please visit the Salus Marine website to browse though all their products.

Get out and get moving with the supplies made by innovative, smart and respected Canadian companies. They are giving us the tools to create our own amazing summer adventures. If you're still watching Hockey, ahh well, there'll still be plenty of summer left when the season is done. 

What is your great summer adventure planned for 2009?

13
Mar
2009
18:59:56

Three hot spring looks - Catwalk inspired trends from Canadian designers

By / Par: Andrea Willowcat - St. Jean Baptiste, Manitoba

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Have you seen the spring and summer fashion forecast for 2009?
This spring is sure to tantalize and tempt because this season is sexy, feminine and glamorous! If you wish to emulate the high fashion trends with the undeniable talent of Canadian fashion designers, then keep on reading.


Go sailing in blue, white and red with a nautical look inspired by Dolce and Gabana. Slip into these cotton high-waist jeans by Jennifer Glasgow along with her Hooded Tee (pictured below). Finally a pair of bejeweled sandals and sunglasses and you'll be set for sea. 

Photos: Jennifer Glasgow

 

Let's go on a sultry safari with a wardrobe inspired by Ralph Lauren. Rugged and feminine start you look with the Thomas Dress by d a c e , adorn it with the LTM6 Airflo hat by Tilley Endurables and sling the Roots Club Pouch Lux over your shoulder (all pictured below). Finish the look with a simple heeled sandal.

Photos: Dace, Tilley Endurables, Roots

 

Sunday afternoon window shopping never looked this good with this outfit inspired by Anna Sui. This stunning feminine look begins with Jayn Simpson's Flounce Silk Dress, Eco-Handbags' ReBag Petite Bag and the gorgeous Leafy Leather Cuff by Hollyhawk (all pictured below).  Let your hair down and adorn your feet with some jeweled sandals to complete the look.

 Photos: Jayn Simpson, HollyHawk, Eco-Handbags

 

The color palate for the spring runs the gambit from soothing nudes and neutrals to vivacious saffron, orange, yellow, chartreuse, coral, pink, fuchsia, turquoise, electric blue... certainly with these colors anything goes. Spring and summer will be hot, hot, hot. What must-have items are on your list? We want to know!

09
Feb
2009
18:59:56

Made-in-Canada changes lives

By / Par: Guest bloggers

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

I've gotten into the habit of asking the people in my life if because they know what I do for a living (and that I can't shut up about it) has impacted the way they themselves shop. The resounding answer I got was “Yes, damn you!” Evidently, like for everyone who works at Buy Canadian First, it seems that all our friends and family can no longer pick-up a product while shopping and not look at the country-of-origin label. They care about what the label says.


When I'm at the grocery store, I try to only buy produce that is grown in Canada. Regardless of season. Obviously this is difficult right now, but I am still amazed at what produce does grow in Canada - even in February. And what lacks in fresh, I can find frozen, which to me, is just as good. In some cases I have not had any choice but to buy food from other countries, but I consciously try to limit my radius to the US. I'm that stubborn about it now. It's a lifestyle choice I've made and I can't say I'm bored or hungry at all. Since the start of winter I have consistently gone home from the supermarket satisfied with my bags full of fresh Canadian-grown produce and other products of Canada and felt that my choices have contributed to the growth of our food manufacturing businesses.

As far as consumer goods are concerned, I won't lie and tell you it's easy to only buy Canadian. Some products are really hard to find. It would help if retailers would train their staff to know which of their products or brands are made in Canada because most times they just shrug and say they don't know. This is especially true when you walk into large retailers. How do I go about it? I do research online first: I find the manufacturers and their websites and then check out the “store finder” pages. Then, if the products I'm looking for aren't sold in Montreal or the GMA, I'll consider buying them online. After a while though, you develop a feel for it. It becomes a habit. Even before I joined Buy Canadian First, I already knew of a couple dozen brands that were made here. Now obviously I know of hundreds more, but I have my favourites I stick to.


Of course there is what I buy when I shop and what my boyfriend buys. He tries really hard to buy Canadian most of the time but he's not as obsessed about it as me and that's perfectly OK. Last fall, he went out of his way to find a made-in-Canada snow-brush, scraper and shovel for me, as this was going to be my first winter driving my very first car (I am the proud owner of a Canadian-made 2009 Toyota Matrix). He was pleasantly surprised to discover that the type of brush and scraper he would purchase for himself was made by a Canadian manufacturer (Mallory Industries). So he was supporting Canadian-made without even realizing it, simply because he never paid attention to labels before...Not until he met me ;-)

I'm sure if you scour your home for everyday items you will be happy to see how many Canadian-made products you already endorse, without knowing it. That's how I first discovered that Le Chateau manufactures in Canada; that Tristan has a Canadian-made collection; that Roots still manufactures some apparel in Canada; my super comfy pillow was made by Montrealers at LBC ; that my favourite bath products by Canus and Lush were made in Canada and not to mention all the "Products of Canada" that were already in my pantry. 

Believe me, once you start seeking out to buy Canadian intentionally, you will not be able shop like you used to ever again...and I don't think that's a bad thing. Suddenly the country of origin becomes a big deal. You will proudly add “AND it's made in Canada” to your answer when people ask you “oh where did you get that?” But you will also get frustrated in your quest to find your canadian-made equivalent of a readily available foreign-made product and at times you will postpone your search or even give up. Some days you will also acquiesce to the foreign-made item. But the best thing you could do is walk into a store, find the manager and specifically ask the question “do you sell an xyz that is made in Canada?”

We the consumers have so much power. If we all started to put more pressure on our merchants to carry more canadian-made goods or suffer the loss of business, what do you think would happen? ESPECIALLY now, in these tough economic times. By buying Made in Canada, you are supporting manufacturers, helping them to stay in Canada or to simply stay in business. You are being socially and environmentally responsible but more importantly, what's on everyone's minds these days is that you are ensuring the livelihoods of hundred of thousands of Canadian workers. Statistics Canada has estimated that over 300,000 Canadians are at risk of losing their job this year. This past January, we already saw 129,000 jobs disappear. This drop in employment exceeds any monthly decline during the previous economic downturns of the 1980s and 1990s.

Out motto here at Buy Canadian First has always been that it's not about buying Canadian always...it's about considering Canadian-made first. We built this website to help consumers find those Canadian-made products and to make it easier for manufacturers to find their end-users. My wish is that one day I will receive hoards of emails and comments stating just one thing, and I will know what it means: "Damn you! ;-)"

Are you up for the challenge?

Image source: Flickr Creative Commons - christopher.woo, ralphbijker

Author: Melissa Thibodeau

29
Jan
2009
18:59:56

Cool new Canadian-made gadgets

By / Par: Tina Chicki - Langham, Saskatchewan

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

We all like a good gadget, don't we?  Well, I know I do and my husband loves to watch infomercials and see all the new and exciting gadgets out there too.

Today, I am going to tell you about two new and exciting Canadian-made gadgets - the Rim Roller and the Powerstick.

Have you tried and tried to roll up those rims on cups for those contests?  I know I have... I even resorted to tearing it up with my teeth.  Well, thanks to a handy new gadget called the Rim Roller, those days are now over!  The Rim Roller, is a great invention from Paul Kind, the owner of Novel Solutions.  The Rim Roller was even featured on the CBC television show Dragon's Den on October 6, 2008.


The Rim Roller is so simple to use too...just push and pull!  It even has a handy key ring attached so it can be with you all the time. 

The Rim Roller is a great Canadian gadget - invented by a Canadian and even manufactured in Canada.  Why not pick one up for your favourite Aunt or Uncle?

Another great Canadian gadget is the Powerstick.  The Powerstick is a portable charger for mobile devices such as mp3 players, mobile phones, BlackBerry, PDAs, ipods, iphones and other mobile devices.

 

The Powerstick was the winner of the CES Award for best innovation.  It is a green charging solution...there are no disposable batteries or wall chargers involved.  It is charged on any USB port, including those found on a laptop.  It is the size of a stick of gum so it is very portable and convenient as well.

The Powerstick is another great example of a cool Canadian gadget.  To find out more about the Powerstick, visit their website here.

These are just a couple of great Canadian gadgets we have discovered, and we here at buycanadianfirst.ca are always on the look out for fantastic new products.  Stay tuned!

Tags / Balises: Awards, BuyLocal, Consumers, Gifts, Technology
23
Oct
2008
18:59:56

Diamonds in the rough

By / Par: Guest bloggers

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

 Blog post written by: Joseph Wilburn

 

I'll be honest from the get-go here, I don't normally deal with diamonds. No, I normally let Jeeves do that for me because leaving the manz is just a lot of work.

Nevertheless, I've done some digging on some interesting diamond information that I'd like to share with you all.

Canada's diamond industry is growing by leaps and bounds. This is great, because that just helps to add to the already long list of commodities that Canada produces and exports. It helps our northern commmunities begin a path towards economic growth and development. First Nations, Inuit and Métis benefit from the royalties and the new jobs created in the north. There are 4 major diamond mines in Canada: Ekati (NWT), Diavik (NWT), Snap Lake (NWT), Victor (ON). Of note, the Snap Lake and Victor mines were just opened last month by Debeers (of South African fame). There are also other projects waiting to come online between 2012 and 2015: Gascho Kué (NWT), Foxtrot (QC), and Fort-à-la-Corne (SK).

 

From a technical background, Canadian diamonds aren't just stunning to look at, they are actually some of the best in the world. Now, I know that we cannot control that aspect, it's just a nice perk that they happened to form under the ground that is under our country.

Now that you know all this good information about Canadian diamonds, don't go thinking that you can just fly up north and pick up one off the ground to take home. That's illegal. No matter, why go through all the trouble of cutting, polishing and setting that stone when there are jewelers and fine retailers you can go where all that has been done for you. When it's all said and done isn't it great to just be able to go and pick out a beautiful rock for that special someone in your life?

The Shopping Channel now sells Canadian diamonds and they tell me they have been overwhelmed at the response they've gotten from their consumers. You can have a look at their stunning collection here. With the Holidays approaching, don't you think they would make an awesome gift for that special someone in your life? 

 

Photo credit: CNW Group; Photo Location: Snap Lake Mine, NWT, The Shopping Channel

14
Sep
2008
18:59:56

A uniquely Canadian gem

By / Par: Guest bloggers

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

 Blog post writen by: Joseph Wilburn

 

When you think of Alberta, I'll bet images of endless grassland prairies, the Rocky Mountains, cowboys and oil rigs enter your mind. You'd be correct for thinking of those things, for they do exist there, but I bet you didn't think of Ammolites, a true Made-in-Canada gem!

What exactly are ammolites? They are an organic gemstone found primarily in Alberta south of Lethbridge near the St. Mary River. Ammolites are the fossils of ammonites, an ancient, nautilus-like sea creature that cruised the depths of the Western Interior Seaway. The Western Interior Seaway (also called the Bearpaw Sea) was a shallow sea that covered present-day Alberta during the mid-Cretaceous period, 145 to 65 million years ago.

To date, ammolites are only mined in Alberta, by
Korite International. It's also interesting to note that Korite employs local Blood Tribe First Nation's locals in the area. That makes these gemstones truly a Canadian phenomenon. Ammolites are the rarest gemstone in the world. They are commonly used in Asia where it has a strong market presence. There it is called the "seven colour prosperity stone" for feng shui purposes. It's beautiful, iridescent glow comes from the substance aragonite, the same substance that gives mother-of-pearl similar qualities. Very cool, don't you think?

Over the several years I lived in Alberta, I actually had never heard of ammolites. I wish I had. They are not only an unusual and eclectic gem but they are also a piece of prehistory. I've been continually amazed at the natural beauty and gifts of the Wild Rose Province and ammolites are just one more thing to be in awe over. Now, you might not be able to get you own bit of the Alberta oil sands delivered to your house, but you can check out our website's jewelry section (come back often as we are adding more and more of these beauties to the catalogue). Check out this beautiful selection available at The Shopping Channel.

Tags / Balises: Aboriginal, Alberta
03
Aug
2008
18:59:56

What's the Dope on Canadian Soap

By / Par: Guest bloggers

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Blog post written by: Judy Brown

 

I confess, I'm a soap junkie. This morning I went online looking for Canadian-Made bath products.

I found Ella's Botanicals in Ontario. A trained herbalist and aroma therapist, Ella uses organic Canadian biodegradable ingredients. My soap choice looks good enough to eat! Morning Buzz. Coffee and oranges! The coffee grins exfoliate, and the scent of orange and rosemary is going to rejuvenate me as well as soften my skin. Can't beat that.

Carmel Soaps in Alix, Alberta has more fruit to go with my coffee. The Cucumber and Melon soap is great. The goat's milk soap really lathers up nicely. They have an assortment of 4 bars for $20.00 - a good price for handmade naturals. They also sell balms, oils and hand-poured candles.

Okay, I've had my coffee and fruit, let's see what I can find for dessert. Aha, right in trendy Yaletown, Vancouver there's Beauty Mark. And here's my dessert, Buttercream Frosting Hydrating Shower Syrup. Hmmm, who would have thought you could get hungry shopping for soap and bath items?

On the site, you can put your birth date and find out what your Chinease Astrology sign is. I'm a 'wood personality.' It tells me: Don't let yourself be lost in a vast forest, an anonymous tree among millions of others. Make your mark on the world, don't be shy. I'll have to think about that one, shy is not a term that has generally been used to describe me.

You can visit the store and get make-up lessons, or have make-up applied by an expert; this would be a great gift to give someone who is hard to shop for. I'll have to tell my son (who lives in Vancouver) to check out Beauty Mark when he is wondering what to get me for Christmas.

All of the products mentioned above can be ordered online and shipped. This is one of the nicest things about shopping online; you can get all these Canadian-made products no matter where you live.


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