PLASTIC-FREE LIVING
Published: September 8, 2020
Updated: May 31, 2025
Blueland was founded with the hopes of a future free of single-use plastics, and in honor of that mission we've decided to round up some of our favorite sustainable swaps. They’re better for both you and the environment. Ditch the one-and-done plastics, and check out all the new ways you could easily live a little more green.
Straws make up about 4 percent of all the plastic trash that hits our waters every year. On top of breaking down and leaving microplastics into the waters, they also pose a direct threat to dolphins, whales, fish, aquatic birds, and sea turtles who are attracted to their colors and try to eat them. But there's an incredibly easy fix: reusable metal, glass and silicone straws!
Plastic bags are another well-known pollutant. They start out as fossil fuels and end up as waste in landfills and the ocean. Birds often mistake shredded plastic bags for food and eat the debris, and fish eat thousands of tons of plastic a year, transferring it up the food chain to humans as well as bigger marine mammals. Tote bags, on the other hand, are typically made from eco-friendly linen or cotton, are plastic-free, reusable, and can be quite stylish. And since most clothing stores, grocery stores, and even furniture stores have them, they aren’t hard to find!Â
It takes roughly 10 liters of water to make a single sheet of standard 8Ă—10 letter paper, and it takes about 1,320 gallons of water to make a single book. Not to mention producing paper books also leads to trees being chopped down all over the world. So if you're an avid reader, it's worth switching over to an e-reader! Studies show the CO2 emissions created by a single e-reader equate to roughly 100 books, and that if allowed to reach their full life-cycle and capacity, e-readers could reduce emissions of up to 4 trillion pounds of CO2! Bonus—you can read your newspapers and magazines on them too! Â
According to the EPA, 1.6 billion disposable pens end up in landfills every year. Very few places recycle pens, as they are hard to separate into different components, and they usually come packaged in plastic. That's a lot of metal and plastic that's not decomposing in a landfill! So, instead of buying a new set of plastic pens every few months, try a refillable fountain pen! They are easy to use, and you can refill them over and over again with ink that comes in a glass bottle!Â
Did you know most single-use bandages are made from plastic? The adhesive sheet may be made from plastics like PVC, polyethylene, or polyurethane. These plastics don't break down, are single-use, and have to be incinerated to be disposed of. That's why it may be time to look for an alternative way to cover that cut. Thankfully, bandages from Patch are crafted with 100% organic bamboo fiber, activated charcoal, aloe vera and coconut oil.
Many disposable beauty masks are made of nylon, plastic microfibers, and polyester. They contribute to the 2 million metric tons of plastic waste the beauty industry puts into our oceans every year. Thankfully, brands like Follain and Loli make non-toxic, plastic-free face mask creams to exfoliate your face and our oceans!
Manufacturing the synthetic resins, plastic films, and pulp products used in adhesive tapes consumes significant amounts of electricity and energy, leading to greenhouse gas emissions. Sticky residues and tape left behind by adhesives hinder recycling, the burning of tapes releases harmful air pollutants, and the plastic tape itself is almost never recycled. That's why EcoEnclose makes plant-derived, renewable, and naturally biodegradable tape. It's water-resistant, dependable, and will help you seal up your boxes guilt-free.
An estimated 20 billion disposable diapers are added to landfills each year, creating about 3.5 million tons of waste. According to the EPA, disposable diapers might even introduce pathogens into the environment—but you can help wipe away this mess by switching to cloth diapers! Cloth diapers are cheaper in the long-term, minimize exposure to unknown ingredients, and keep disposables from filling up our landfills.
The US alone uses 6,500,000 tons of paper towels every year. Making 1 ton of paper towels requires 17 trees and 20,00 gallons of water, and when these towels end up decomposing in landfills they release methane into the air. Enter Marley's Monsters Unpaper Towels! Made from 100 percent cotton flannel, these cloth towels are colorful, washable, and absorbent alternatives that even cling together if rolled up on a paper towel roll! You can also make your own unpaper towels out of old fabric you have lying around.
Plastic wrap not only contributes to the 150 million metric tons of plastic currently in our oceans, but it can also leave behind harmful microplastics. This includes on your food, in your drinking water, and in our oceans as well. A better alternative? Beeswax wraps made from 100% cotton, beeswax, pine tree resin, and jojoba oil.Â
Plastic cutlery is one of those items that won't get recycled, even when you put it in the recycling. It's too contaminated, small, and lightweight. 40 billion plastic utensils made per year end up in landfills, which is why you should take a look at some reusable wood silverware like the ones at EarthHero and reusable to-go silverware sets. Sleek, green, and easy to take on the go, reusable utensils will help cut down on your plastic waste.Â
Canadian researchers published a study that found that steeping a single plastic tea bag releases about 11.6 billion microplastics and 3.1 billion nanoplastics into each cup. This is because a plastic polymer called polypropylene helps tea bags keep their shape. Not all tea bags are made from plastic, but many have glue or other components that make it hard for tea bags to completely decompose. But if you switch to buying large bags of tea and reusable metal or silicone steepers like the ones at TopicTea, you can brew tea even greener than before!
The average American family uses 500 plastic snack bags a year! These bags are mostly made from polyethylene, do not decompose in landfills, and can contaminate your food with BPA. You can easily do away with plastic snack bags, though, if you switch over to Stasher Bags, reusable produce bags, or ZipTops! These silicone bags are endlessly reusable and keep plastics out of our foods and oceans.
Many people confuse the loofah and the pouf, but they are actually very different. The pouf is made of colorful synthetic materials that are gathered into a fluffy ball, and are meant to be thrown away, which means they ultimately sit for hundreds or even thousands of years in a landfill or in the ocean. Like many other plastics on this list, they can also release microfibers down the drain and into local water sources. Loofahs, on the other hand, are made from the luffa plant. They can be re-grown, making them especially sustainable, and can be composted when you are done using them. So make the switch with natural loofahs like the ones at Nature's Garden!
1 billion plastic toothbrushes are thrown away every year, 50 million of which end up in landfills. The production of the fossil fuel-derived materials used to make toothbrushes creates very potent greenhouse gases and can kill marine and avian life that try to eat them. So why not opt for a bamboo toothbrush? Made out of bamboo and castor bean nylon, these brushes keep plastics out of oceans, out of your mouth.Â
The Environmental Protection Agency estimates 2 billion razors go to waste every year. 163 million consumers use only disposable razors, going through roughly 60 razors a year. Consider the fact that disposable razor production requires fossil fuels, and these numbers sound even worse. Do your part by making the switch to high-quality, reusable razors from Oui the people of Leaf.
Refill is the New Recycle
The perfect way to start cutting out single use plastic from your home.