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ReWINEd: Wine bottle upcycling
by Shireen QudosiEditor’s Note: The Green A-Team continues to expand like a hyper-adept extremophile over the turbulent digital seas with our newest addition, Shireen Qudosi. Enjoy her delicious post!
As the saying has it, “one man’s trash is another man’s treasure.” Yet with a little bit of creative thought, you can turn your trash into your treasure.
That’s exactly what has inspired a new wave of sustainability that goes beyond practicality and into decadence.
The idea of artistic living is a growing trend in an eco-friendly culture, which has already witnessed a significant growth in consumer interest when it comes to modular living and organic decor. Even non-greenies are getting interested now that being green has brought with it a new level of stylish eccentricity.
And what comes more easily in this economy than an assortment of empty wine bottles after you’ve just thrown a smashing get-together? With the preference being on sourcing cheap entertaining ideas, most people now see staying at home with a good meal and great wine as a viable alternative to spending money on restaurants and clubs.
If your home is the newest place to be seen, then ice maker machines are indispensable for cocktails while compact wine refrigerators are an inexpensive alternative to costly built-in wine cellars.
Wine Bottle Ideas:
There are a number of ways to reuse wine bottles. Among the more common ideas are reusing them as water pitchers, votive vases, torches, and flower bed liners. However, there are dozens of other smart options that are rarely explored.
Wine Bottle Cheese Boards – What could be quainter than using a cheese board made out of wine at you next cocktail. Apparently that’s exactly what Vineyard Designs thought when they started offering their custom recycled wine glass boards.
Water Feeders – On a very hot day or when you’re away, fill the bottles of water and stick them into the pot or soil near your plant. The water will slowly percolate from the bottle and into the soil.
Wine Bottle Chandeliers – In addition to the popular row lighting and pendant lighting, Changedminer (pictured) put together an interesting chandelier with wine bottles strung around it. It’s a unique sustainable element in your home and it catches the light beautifully during the day and especially at sunset.
Rewined Recycled Glassware – Get uniquely hued wine bottle glassware made from orphaned bottles left behind at local restaurants and bars.
Wine Bottle Building Blocks – Rather than just one element, your entire home or venue can serve as a creatively designed showcase – a testimony of your creativity and commitment to sustainability.
Wine bottles can be used to create an interesting mosaic-styled wall piece. The most gorgeous of these displays is just outside of Montreal at a place called Bottle Houses, Prince Edward Island.
PEI is known for its lush landscapes and pastoral living, which makes the wine bottle homes stand out that much more, offering a mixture of ingenious modern design paired with an idyllic setting; and the combination works brilliantly.
This theme of bottle wall art has been running strong from coast to coast. Javier’s, an upscale restaurant in Crystal Cove, features bottle-inspired wall art as a key feature in their eclectic setting.
Using wine bottles as building blocks shows creativity and ingenuity that can be carried to stylishly eccentric levels when used in restaurants. Morimoto’s Japanese Restaurant in New York has an entire wall created out of bottles. The result is a dazzling spectacle that has the potential to launch a restaurant. An alternative design is found at the Boa Steakhouse in Hollywood, where rows of bottles are lined along a clear wall.
Wine bottles go beyond just building blocks and have also become integral parts of a building’s thermal dynamics, providing a unit that’s not only appealing to the eye, but also meets our duty to our environment. But if you’re not a wine drinker, you can ask local pubs and restaurants for their bottles, who I’m sure will be more than happy to give you their rubbish to turn into your own treasures. The same ideas can also be achieved with beer, liquor, Pellegrino or other glass water bottles.
For more on wine bottle upcycling, check out some of the following links:
Wine bottle recycling is low – but some bottles getting lighter (Dr. Vino)
A trial project that uses recycled wine bottles filled with water to regulate a building’s internal temperatures (Media-Newswire)
Sleep it off inside a wine cask (Green Upgrader)
Wine Ideas brought to you by Air & Water, Inc.
Photos by Keith Watson, graciella06, aarn!, *~Dharmainfrisco~*, West County Camera, changedminder.
September 10th, 2009 at 2:21 pm
I have made a bunch of these hydroponic wine bottle setups after seeing them on aarn’s blog. very cool set up. as for the cut bottles there is a gift shop by my appt that sells those for something like $30 a set. so good work making them for yourself.
September 10th, 2009 at 4:02 pm
AWESOME!!!! This is my new winter project. Thanks for dropping by!
September 14th, 2009 at 10:58 am
Loved the hydroponic idea too – i’m lazy and terrible at remembering to water plants =)
Now i’m on the hunt for an awesome set of wine bottle glasses in sheer colors.
September 14th, 2009 at 11:48 am
That cheese board looks totally wicked, as does that chandelier. I never knew that wine bottles were good for anything except storing wine. Seriously, this is mind-boggling.
September 14th, 2009 at 11:55 am
What a great article. I will definitely use some of these ideas after the holidays are over and I have a collection of empty wine bottles.