March
30th 2011
Mimimyne is appearing at the Meanwhile Space just off Brick Lane on Monday 11th April!

Posted under Events Mimimyne

I’m very excited because I’ve been given a day at the Meanwhile Space just off Brick Lane in London’s Whitechapel. There will be a free Mimimyne eco bag for the first 20 people to visit the Mimimyne stall and we will also offer you the chance to sign up for our newsletter and have a chance to win a fantastic prize at the end of the day! We’ll also be handing out information about the Stepney Timebank, which enables organisations and individuals to get to know their neighbours and people in their community by exchanging skills. The Secret Seed Society will also have a stall selling their beautiful vegetable growing kits – perfect for Spring – including children’s story books, growing instructions and more. They will also have some giveaways on the day, so don’t miss this. Come and visit us on Monday 11th April between 10am and 6pm!

The address is

3-5 Whitechapel Road

London

E1 1DU

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March
4th 2011
Personalised and eco friendly gifts for mothers this Mother’s Day

Posted under Mother's Day Gifts

It’s Mothering Sunday on the 3rd of April this year, so I thought I’d post a few quick ideas for those of you planning to buy something special. I’ve created a new section on Mimimyne for Personalised Gifts which has some great ideas for personalised gifts that any mother would love! Sally Walton’s beautiful Carry-a-bags can be personalised and for shoe-lovers there is a very cute Shoe bag as well as the perennially popular Mum’s Bag. I’ve also of course got a selection for Eco Gifts for Mum with some other lovely gift ideas.

I’d love to recommend my own mother Jocasta Innes’ wonderful book, The Country Kitchen, as well! Jocasta is happy to add a personal message and her signature when she sends you your copy. There really could be no more special gift for a fan of Jocasta Innes and her cookery books.

Country Kitchen by Jocasta Innes, signed and with personal dedication

Country Kitchen by Jocasta Innes, signed and with personal dedication

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February
11th 2011
New online Daily News Service for Schools Links the Classroom with the Wider World – Guest Post from The Day

Posted under Other news

Visit the Day

An online daily news service linked to different parts of the curriculum that helps teachers bring the daily news alive, has been launched by national newspaper journalists.

The Day aims to highlight the debates behind current affairs and issues discussed in the media and connect them to different parts of the curriculum. It turns current news stories into lively issues, helping teachers engage pupils during form time and in their subjects through the medium of current events, as well as saving time for the teachers themselves.

It is already being used in more than 250 secondary schools across the country as part of a trial.

Editors at The Day choose three stories for every edition, providing a balance of UK news, international, sport, the environment and the dilemmas and issues of the day. It also includes talking points, less obvious stories and a very popular weekly news quiz. The mix is designed to cater for the whole 11 – 18 age range and to include material for a range of abilities.

Schools receive links to the three stories on an e-mail every evening, taking them to The Day’s website where a pdf of each story can be downloaded. A longer online version ideal for use on classroom whiteboards is also available. Subscribers have access to the archive of stories, sorted by curriculum subjects and key words.

The chosen stories are connected to curriculum subjects and The Day’s own graphics department provides drawings, information-rich graphics and cartoons to accompany the stories. There are suggested related activities, debating options, a Q and A, and video links to further information for each one.

Stephen Adcock, who teaches Politics and History at Burlington Danes Academy, says of The Day: “It’s proving a great way to enable students to access relevant stories about current affairs, which also saves teachers from having to sift through thousands of articles themselves to find interesting ones, appropriately written.

“We want our students, many from a tough inner city environment, to have confidence about the wider world, which they often don’t have. The Day meets that need and is going down very well. It is accessible no matter what the age group or background of students.”

Professor Richard Andrews from the Department of Learning, Curriculum and Communication in the Faculty of Children and Learning at the Institute of Education, has also welcomed The Day.

“Debating is vital, and news is a catalyst for discussion that people can relate to,” he says. “It is important to recognise that at the heart of each school subject is a series of debates. History, for example, is in many ways about the process of digging down to the point of dispute. That is how you open up being critical and thoughtful”

Recent editions have covered the floods in Queensland, the turmoil in Egypt and a campaign by poets to recover St George as an emblem away from the political far right. Each story is distilled and given context to aid discussion and debate. Exceptional unfolding stories, like the protests in Egypt, will be given special live coverage: an Egypt special, free to non-subscribers, is running at the moment.

“Teachers know they can click on an email and reliably get interesting and accessible stories, and that the language will be appropriate for young inquiring minds,” says Philippa Nunn, Headteacher of Waldegrave School for girls.

Waldegrave, which has 1,000 pupils, was last year named top state secondary school without a sixth form in the UK in The Sunday Times Parent Power list of best schools.

“The immediacy of The Day saves busy teachers a lot of research time. It gives kids instant access to news stories to promote discussion about current events, which is very helpful for tutor time. We work hard to broaden the school experience and for that The Day is really appreciated.”

The Day is valuable for promoting the Spiritual, Moral, Social and Cultural (SMSC) development of pupils required in all curriculum subjects. It also directly informs the PSHCE (Personal, Social, Health and Citizenship Education) curriculum which runs though all years of the secondary curriculum.

The Day founder Richard Addis, who has five children, said: “I believe that news makes learning exciting. If you can use your History, Science, Maths and English in conversation it acquires a whole new glamour. You are interesting, informed, opinionated. People listen. And it will help you get into university or get a job”.

The Day also helps schools to encourage pupil interest in English, Maths, Science, History and Geography, as well as offering a topical source for discussion and translation in Modern Foreign Languages, which education Secretary Michael Gove wants to put at the heart of the curriculum. It gives the subjects relevance.

Note to Editors.

The Day costs between £500 to £1,000 a year for a school. Each online edition is sent out in the evening of every school day, ready for teachers and pupils the following morning before classes. There is no advertising.
Partner organisations include Teach First, the English Speaking Union and SSAT
It is edited by Miranda Green, former education correspondent for the Financial Times. Richard Addis is a former newspaper editor (Sunday Telegraph, Daily Mail, Daily Express, The Globe and Mail).

For further information, please contact: Richard Addis – Richard@theday.co.uk, (07899 968427 or Miranda Green – Miranda@theday.co.uk

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February
1st 2011
The Secret Seed Society’s fabulous seed growing kits for kids for a fiver plus P&P!

Posted under Mimimyne eco friendly products news

Mimimyne is happy to announce that we are now stocking the Secret Seed Society’s gorgeous, ethical vegetable-growing gift packs for kids! We are currently offering four seed packs featuring four of their cool vegetable characters, Carla Carrot, Rudi Radish, Chrissie Cress and Mingo Mung. The adorable little vegetable growing packs come with illustrated storybooks, seeds and other goodies to help kids learn to grow up green and grow their own tasty vegetables. The Secret Seed Society also runs a special online Seed Agent Club which children can join to become a Secret Seed Agent.

Chrissie Cress pack from Secret Seed Society

Chrissie Cress pack from Secret Seed Society

Secret Seed Society from Rosa van Wyk on Vimeo.

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January
17th 2011
Mimimyne is live on MyIce.com! Get reward points every time you shop sustainably

Posted under Mimimyne eco friendly products news

I’m happy to say that Mimimyne’s entire range is now live on MyIce. They’ve got some fantastic shops and products online, including virtual farm shops and all kinds of sustainable goodies.

Ice is a new, flexible customer reward programme. They identify sustainable products and services, present them to you in a one-stop shop and reward you generously when you buy them via Ice. Their mission is to mitigate climate change via mass consumer purchase power. By changing small things we do and buy every day, together we can minimise harm to the environment, help mitigate climate change and preserve the ice caps. They appreciate budgets can be tight and firmly believe you deserve to be rewarded for making sustainable choices. They put ‘climate change cash’ in your pocket in the form of Ice credits, a generous, flexible reward that you can spend combined with cash to get a discount or used to pay in full when you buy sustainable and energy saving products and services.

Sounds good, doesn’t it? What it means is you can get up to £15 in credits for every £100 you spend on sustainable products – which could be a return ticket to Paris on the Eurostar, for example. There are some great gardening, home and interior, fashion and beauty products on the site as well as sustainable building supplies, hire cars from the Green Tomato Cars and so on. You have to fill out a registration form and then you can basically shop from the main site, collect Ice on each transaction and then either save it or spend it straight away, if you want! So if you’re interested in buying sustainable and ethical products, it’s a good way to save money on some shopping – definitely worth checking out I think!

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December
27th 2010
Virtual Business Awards results – Shortlisted!

Posted under Mimimyne news

Just a quick post to say thanks to all my newsletter subscribers, Facebook fans and Twitter followers who voted for me in the Virtual Business Awards – I was shortlisted along with many other fabulous companies but sadly didn’t get a prize this time. I really appreciated all your votes and will definitely enter again next year! Thanks again and I hope you had a wonderful Christmas holiday – and I’d like to wish you a Happy New Year as well!

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December
27th 2010
Organic Clothes

Posted under Other news

The term ‛organic’ has become increasingly prevalent in recent years, from food to clothing. But what does it mean and do organic products really live up to the hype? Organic clothing is becoming more and more readily available and many parents are choosing it for their children, but is there actually a benefit?

To be certified organic, neither the growing nor the manufacturing process of clothes can use any harmful chemicals and none of the plants can be genetically modified. Cotton is one of the most common fabrics used to make baby clothes, however cotton production is one of the most chemically intensive processes in modern agriculture; because it is not a foodstuff there is no restriction on the amount and type of pesticides and herbicides used on it. Manufacturing cotton into fabric also uses thousands of tons of chemicals such as bleach, which in some cases can be poured back into the environment.

The result of this is that up to four kilos of chemicals can be used in the manufacture of just one t-shirt. But these chemicals do not just affect the environment – they can also damage the wearer, especially if that wearer is a baby. A newborn baby’s skin is thinner and more porous than an adult’s skin, so absorbs these chemicals more readily. From conception to age three is when babies’ bodies and brains grow the fastest, making them even more vulnerable to environmental toxins, which can stay in the body for years. Moreover, babies’ delicate skin is more susceptible to skin allergies, which can be caused or irritated by the range of herbicides, pesticides, chemicals and dyes used in the manufacture of clothes. Organic clothing is hypoallergenic and does not contain any harmful chemicals or toxins.

The amount of chemicals used to process traditional fabric also mean that it is less durable. Conventionally produced cotton is bleached, softened, dyed and coated in chemicals in production, all of which weaken the fibres and mean that a garment will begin to break down after 10-20 washes. The production of organic fabrics results in a product which is much more resilient, although no less soft and can withstand up to 100 washes before it starts to break down – especially important for messy babies!

Despite all these benefits, organic clothing is still seen by some as unstylish and boring. However, this is no longer the case. Organic clothing can be made from many different materials such as wool, cotton, hemp, soy and bamboo, so it is available in a wide range of styles and designs. And it is not all beige, either : safe dyes made from natural sources in a whole rainbow of colours are used to make organic clothing as colourful as any other clothing you could buy. Pregnant fashion is only one example of this new stylish organic clothing for babies.

To some, organic baby clothing may seem like a fad, but those who choose it can be safe in the knowledge that they are saving money with more durable items and protecting their baby from harmful chemicals and toxins in their clothes. The modern world is full of damaging pollutants, but organic clothing is one way that parents can protect their children.

(This is a Guest Post from Yummy Mummy Fashion)

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November
12th 2010
Merry Mache Eco Friendly Nativity Set great gift for under £30

Posted under Eco Christmas Gift Ideas up to £30

The Merry Mache Nativity Set is fun for the whole family to decorate. It makes a lovely Christmas gift, or you can buy it for your own family to enjoy year after year as part of an eco-friendly family Christmas. This is made using recycled and recyclable materials and comes in a reusable wooden box.

Papier Mache Nativity Set ready for decoration

Papier Mache Nativity Set ready for decoration

Recycled and Reusable Nativity Set made from Papier Mache

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November
12th 2010
New stocking filler for foodies: signed and dedicated edition of the Country Kitchen by Jocasta Innes

Posted under Eco Christmas Gift Ideas up to £20

Country Kitchen by Jocasta Innes, signed and with personal dedication

Country Kitchen by Jocasta Innes, signed and with personal dedication

This book, available exclusively from Mimimyne, is by well known author Jocasta Innes and explains how to smoke fish, dry meats and vegetables, can fruits, and make pasta, beer, bread, butter, ice cream, cheese, sausages, and wine. The author is also offering to personalise each paperback with a personal dedication and signature, at no extra cost! The perfect stocking filler for a foodie or Jocasta Innes fan.

From the author:
“Anyone who values my Pauper’s Cookbook might like to own its successor, the Country Kitchen, which takes the challenge to eat better for less a stage further. I wrote it during the 1970′s craze for self-sufficiency and can say hand on heart that every recipe and technique described here was tested and tried by my family – for example, we smoked meat in a converted fridge in our back garden! Country Kitchen recounts in detail the processes traditionally used to deal with seasonal gluts and occasional bounty such as meat, fish, game, fruit, vegetables, funghi – even milk – to ensure they lasted the winter, deliciously and safely.

So the book features how to’s for smoking fish, making rillettes and sausages, drying apples and mushrooms, making soft cheeses or country wines and ginger beer is all there and much more with a wealth of recipes. dried Argentine chorizo (a family recipe) is a winner, and the marmalade recipe I used is the best ever. This is the book professional foodies like Tom Jame rate most highly of all the ones I’ve written and the one I am proudest of.”

The RRP is £7.49 but we are offering it at just £5.50 plus delivery as an imaginative Christmas present for anyone who takes cooking seriously and has to cope with the overflow of a vegetable patch, orchard or allotment. Jocasta Innes was one of the leading self-sufficiency, cookery and interior design and home-making gurus of the 1970′s and 1980′s and I should know, I’m her daughter and a lot of these recipes and techniques were tested out on me! I remember wearing smocks, playing with papier-mache toys and helping to create a beautiful Christmas tree with decorations all made by my mother.

As a taster here is an appropriately festive recipe for brandy snaps, reproduced with the permission of the author:

“Brandy Snaps

These look impressive with their lacy texture, but they are easy to make. You don’t have to use brandy, they are tasty without – some people fill them with whipped cream.

50g (2 oz) butter
50g (2 oz) castor sugar
50g (2 oz) golden syrup
50g (2 oz) plain flour
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon grated lemon rind
1 teaspoon brandy (optional)

Melt the sugar, syrup and butter together in a pan, then stir the flour, ginger, lemon rind and brandy and mix well. Drop the mixture a teaspoon at a time onto a greased baking sheet, leaving a space of 7cm (3 in) between each. Bake in a cool oven (150 degrees Centigrade, 300 degrees Farenheit, Mark 2) for about 10 minutes. Leave on the sheet to ‘set’ for a few minutes, then detach and roll round the handle of a wooden spoon to make the characteristic tube shape. Cool before storing”.

Copyright Jocasta Innes, all rights reserved.

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November
10th 2010
Don’t Put Baby in the Corner and the Force is Strong in this one! Perfect gifts for an eco baby

Posted under Eco Christmas Gift Ideas up to £20

Have you seen Twisted Twee’s wonderful “Nobody Puts Baby in the Corner” and “The Force is Strong in this One” T shirts? These beautiful T-shirts are custom-printed by Twisted Twee for their film buff fans on organic cotton and would make a wonderful Christmas present for a style-conscious and retro baby boy or girl. Twisted Twee T-shirts all are very popular presents and make wonderful eco gifts for new dads and mums and their gorgeous and very stylish babies! At £16 plus £3 delivery these come in at well under £20 and are always very popular gifts.

Nobody Puts Baby in the Corner

Nobody Puts Baby in the Corner


The Force is Strong in this One Organic Baby T Shirt

The Force is Strong in this One Organic Baby T Shirt

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