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John on New York
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    2 starsjlam | Shared With: Everyone - May 18 2007 | graphic design, art, New York, recycling, fashion, bags
    Urban Forest Project : Making banners and recycling them into totebags

    Last fall an outdoor exhibition The Urban Forest Project took root in New York City. One hundred eighty-five celebrated designers and artists levered the idea or form of the tree to make a powerful visual statement in banners displayed throughout Times Square.

    “The tree is metaphor for sustainability, and in that spirit the banners from the exhibition are being recycled into totebags designed exclusively for the project by Jack Spade. Profits from the sale of the totebags benefit Worldstudio AIGA Scholarships and the AIGA/NY Mentoring Program to sustain the next generation of design talent.”

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    3 starsjlam | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 19 2006 | food, agriculture, horticulture, harvest, plums, Prunus maritima, Cornell, Cornell University, Cornell Beach Plum Project, Tom Whitlow, Ithaca, New York
    Cornell takes wild beach plums from coastal dunes into kitchens —Cornell Chronicle

    At Cornell Orchards, beach plums, commonly found on coastal dunes but now one of the newest fruits harvested this year, have become an ambitious Cornell project to turn the unusual plant into a crop.

    A thriving cottage industry for jams made from local beach plums demands ever more, but plums remain inaccessible due to small stands, limited access to lands where they grow and government restrictions against “poaching”. Even on Cape Cod where the plants are native, beach plum condiments are gourmet, says Tom Whitlow, associate professor of horticulture and head of the Cornell Beach Plum Project. Last year he distributed puree to several Ithaca area restaurants, which incorporated it into desserts and a sauce for grilled duck.

    In the orchards late August and early September, students picked the fruits, then made jams and syrup with food scientists at the processing plant at the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva NY, which Cornell Orchard Store then sells.

    —Krishna Ramanujan, Cornell Chronicle

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