Walker Family Christmas Form Letter (WFCFL)

You know how there are all those posts this time of year telling us that it’s okay to say no to stuff we don’t want to do? Because we need to make room for joy and all that?

Well, I’m already really good at saying no. My whole world is a no. 😉 Most of that is because I’m an introvert married to an introvert and we are a united front of no. Social obligations don’t stand a chance between the two of us. But one thing we both like during the holiday season: Sending out our annual Christmas card (dubbed WFCFL) with a photo. Because we also enjoy getting that kind of mail. It’s fun. It gives you a chance to see what family and friends are really up to, sans the Facebook shine. How much the kids have grown this year. Who went where on vacation. You know, the important things in life.

No recycled holiday paper, no seeded paper to be had locally ... so this was the next best option.

No recycled holiday paper, no seeded paper to be had locally … so this was the next best option.

Pre-project, I didn’t think much about this. I’d order a photo card off of a website, crank out a letter, and maybe toss it into an envelope with one of those self-stick tabs if that’s what Eric had bought the last time he was in The Store That Must Not Be Named. Everything came shrink-wrapped. That’s just the way it was.

This year, Eric and I have given a lot of thought to our WFCFL. We didn’t want to give it up, but we also didn’t want to just do what we always do, which is accept that this isn’t a low waste project and go about our day.

(I tell you what, having a conscience is hard.)

So here’s what we ended up with:

I really, really liked the idea of seeded recycled paper for our letters as suggested here in the comments. I went online and looked at options. Then I went into town and checked out what we had locally. I asked specifically for seeded paper or recycled paper. No seeded; very limited recycled paper, and nothing with a holiday theme. (No biggie, I’ve got an artist in the house.) Most of my choices were plastic-wrapped papers; I could get single sheets of paper at 40¢ each at the local stationary store, but we send out 50-60 cards and I wasn’t prepared to make that kind of a financial commitment.

Ordering paper online — seeded or recycled — also seemed a bit wasteful, just in the packaging of the product (I did find one that was in paper) and in the mailing of it (more boxes, more packing, more gas miles). And it wasn’t very cost efficient, either.

Back to the local stationary store. My choices: A $14.99 package of 100-precent recycled multipurpose paper, or a $6.50 package of “Sustainable Forestry Initiative” copy paper, both wrapped in paper, both made in the USA, both 500 sheets.

I’m cheap, you guys. I went the $6.50 route. But I accidentally made a really great choice. Reading up on the Sustainable Forestry Initiative, I learned this is an Oregon program focused on forest management. And the quality is great.

Then I printed one letter, asked Johanna to doodle Christmasy stuff around the edges (she chose to draw lights), and then made copies from that.

So that’s the WFCFL. The photo was another ordeal. We decided to forego making a photo collage online and just send a family photo. Eric chose one, put it on a USB drive, and took it to one of those variety stores that are not The Store That Must Not Be Named.

Dear friends and family: Seriously, recycle this whole ordeal.

Dear friends and family: Seriously, recycle this whole ordeal.

We decided to get 50 prints this year to further cut down on waste. And then Eric came back all sheepish, like, I could get individual prints for 39¢ ($19.50 total) OR they had this special where if you ordered 75, they were 15¢ apiece ($11.25), so I went with the 75. I know that’s not very zero waste.

But hey: Thanks to Earth911, I know “modern” photographs are recyclable because science. (Lack of chemicals in modern prints, basically.) Awesome.

But yeah, we didn’t need 25 extra photos. Partial credit only.

Envelopes: Old-timey lick to stick. Recyclable. Stamps: Well, the post office has one option. But according to the USPS website, the adhesives on the stamps is biodegradable and the stamps recyclable. Return labels: St. Jude’s just sent us yet another solicitation letter with snow-themed return labels. So that’s what we used … after I got online and asked to be taken off their mailing list. I felt like a jerk because it’s St. Jude’s, but I was nice about it and cited my minimalist/zero waste ways as the reason and thanked them for their work. (And still felt like a jerk. But it was long overdue.)

But! I think we did pretty well on the zero waste front — we’ve got a 100 percent recyclable (if maybe a little boring) product (which I even explained in my letter and asked everyone to recycle). Cross this year’s WFCFL off the to-do list!

Anyone else send cards in December? Did you make any zero/low waste concessions this year?

Next up: Random update time.