Recycled Glass Barware Seattle WA

All you need to do is ask for it. Conscious consumers have created a demand for these products so now they are available. Turn your home bar into an eco-friendly serving experience by using glassware that’s made with 100% reused material. Please scroll down to learn more and get access to the home and appliance stores in Seattle, WA listed below that carry these brands.

Asian Plaza
(425) 455-4859
1032 S Jackson St
Seattle, WA
 
Unicdf
(206) 506-6940
Third & Pine
Seattle, WA
 
Jcpenney Co Inc
(206) 361-2500
475 Northgate Mall
Seattle, WA
 
Nordstrom
(206) 364-8800
715 Northgate Mall
Seattle, WA
 
Pearson Tax Service
(206) 506-6974
Bon Marche
Seattle, WA
 
Nordstrom
(206) 448-8522
1601 2nd Ave Ste 410
Seattle, WA
 
Westlake Center
(206) 467-1600
400 Pine St Ste 24
Seattle, WA
 
Macy's Northwest
(206) 506-6000
3 Pine St
Seattle, WA
 
Bentall US
(206) 624-8800
1420 5th Ave Ste 450
Seattle, WA
 
Fred Meyer One Stop Shopping
(206) 433-6411
14300 1st Ave S
Tukwila, WA
 

Toasting Handmade, Recycled Glass Barware

Toasting Handmade, Recycled Glass Barware

August 19, 2009   Melanie McGee Bianchi

In the beginning, there was the “appletini,” which lured the classic cocktail away from a simple gin-and-vermouth preparation. And now that such fallen delights as pomegranate, caramel and white-chocolate martinis are par for the first course, could exotic glass barware be far behind?

La Mediterranea’s Bedside Bottle and Glass ($16) is a marvel of invention. A two-piece set that comes in two subtly different styles, it is small-batch crafted of 100% reused material (the company’s parent distributor, bluehouse, is a carbon-neutral operation). And while the bottle-and-glass twosome is both rustic and arty in its design, it is nevertheless passionately functional. The vessel holds the spirits, the jigger acts as a cap when the drinking’s done. This is stealth refreshment of a high order — think Dorothy Parker, not Otis of Mayberry.

Those with less to hide will opt for Anchor Hocking Everton’s 6-Ounce Champagne Flutes ($29.99), a wedding-toast staple in a set of 12. Rare for bar glass, they’re dishwasher-safe, and they get extra points for being made in America. In a recent online statement, the company — which has trademarked the slogan “Raise a Glass to Planet Earth” — said it plans to redesign its packaging to be more eco-friendly, and that it currently claims 25% of its waste glass to reuse as furnace fuel.

Speaking of sustainability, the Rosanna Venetian Red Wine Glass ($73.40), an eight-ounce goblet which comes in a set of six, is handmade of recycled glass. Though fashionable in their craftmanship, their look is retro. And not mid-century modern, either — more like oh-no-is-that-hemlock medieval. Heavy and serious, done in a fetching vampiric shade, they beg to be displayed on an antique oak sideboard and should be filled with high-end Barbaresco.

Wine carafe...

Click here to read the rest of this article from The Lazy Environmentalist