Cruelty Free Beauty
- 8 Vegan Foundations For Every Skin Tone
- Barry M partners with wildlife charity for exclusive new collection
- 5 Vegan Luxuries To Try This Month
- Ian Haste On Fighting Food Waste
- 10 Ways To Give Your Beauty Routine An Eco Overhaul
- 5 ways to stay healthy and radiant on your summer hols
- 3 vegan shampoos we love this month
- Vegan Fake Tans: Reviewed
- Four Reasons to Shop Sustainably at NOAH
- Safia Minney On Embracing Slow Fashion
- Sadie Frost’s Beauty Secrets
- View all
Eco Living
- Simple steps to reduce your ‘food print’
- 8 indulgent ways to celebrate National Chocolate Week
- We’ve got World Egg Day cracked!
- 7 delicious dishes to celebrate World Vegetarian Day
- How to Live Vegan with BOSH!
- Vegetarian butcher takes over popular London shop
- 8 eco-friendly essentials for kids
- Ian Haste On Fighting Food Waste
- 7 essentials for a zero-waste lifestyle
- 3 apps to help you tackle food waste
- 3 simple ways to curb your food waste
- View all
Vegan Recipes
- Classic Watercress Soup
- Winter Trifle with Blackberries
- Brussels Sprout, Chestnut and Sage Risotto
- Jack Stein’s Pulled Jackfruit Burgers
- Orecchiette with Pumpkin Seed Pesto and Tenderstem Broccoli
- South African Rum and Raisin Vegan Fruit Cake
- Sweet Potato and Coconut Curry
- Vegan Chocolate Cake
- Mushroom and Bean Chilli
- Spiced Roasted Persimon, Cauliflower and Avocado Buddha Bowl
- Senegalese Yassa Stew with Tenderstem broccoli
- View all
Popular recipes
- Spinach and ricotta quiche vegetarian recipe
- Cheats mushroom and spinach lasagne vegetarian recipe
- Lentil bolognese vegetarian recipe
- Creamy mushroom stroganoff vegetarian recipe
- Malaysian Rendang curry vegetarian recipe
- Feta, Butternut Squash, Caramelised Onion and Cashew Nut Wellingtons
Vegetarian Blog
- 8 Vegan Foundations For Every Skin Tone
- 10 must-cook Christmas recipes for vegetarians
- 9 Essential Recipes For People Who’ve Ditched Gluten
- Why You Should Prepare Your Nuts and Seeds
- 7 Delicious Zero-Waste Dishes
- The Ultimate Recipes For Veganuary!
- World Pasta Day
- 3 Top Tips For Starting A Cruelty-Free Business
- 6 secrets to culinary success: Top chefs tell us their secret tips
- 3 new vegan launches we’re excited about this week
- 10 Vegetarian Christmas Recipes That Aren’t Nut Roast
- View all
6 Steps To Your Best Ever Zero-Waste Christmas
The festive period can still be magical without the waste and expense to the planet – Anna Blewett finds out how you can make simple swaps this season
1. THE WREATH
Your welcome to guests starts here, so a fully-compostable wreath is a great statement of intent. Luckily, tradition is on your side; our ancestors are likely spinning in their graves at the plastic-spun, battery-powered fripperies that adorn modern wreaths. Gathering evergreen foliage, pine branches, berries and seed heads is an easy first step. Weaving a sturdy willow base to poke them into is more challenging, but can be sidestepped with a ready-made option. Dark Natural Willow Wreath Base, £4.84, littlecraftybugs.co.uk
2. THE TREE
According to the Carbon Trust, you’d need to reuse an artificial tree for 10 Christmases before its annual carbon footprint fell to that of a natural tree. If you lack the space for an adult Norwegian Spruce, it’s time to think creatively. This ‘letterbox tree’ magically squeezes inside a cardboard postage box, so you get all the pine needle aroma and decorating decisions without losing important house space. Even better, the living trees can be planted and reused every Christmas. Letterbox Christmas Tree, £32, bloomandwild.com
3. THE DECORATIONS
“All that glitters ain’t gold,” Prince warned us back in 1995. And, Friends of the Earth couldn’t agree more, arguing that the twinkly microplastic, which coats many a bauble, has dangerous consequences for the marine wildlife that ingests it. Biodegradable alternatives made from plant cellulose look just as fabulous, and will add sparkle to recyclable card, glass, wood or salt dough decorations. Try Cosmic Shimmer: it’s not cheap, so embrace the maxim ‘less is more’. Cosmic Shimmer, £4 for 10ml, hobbycraft.co.uk
4. THE STOCKINGS
Whether you put out a wonky stocking that got a B in GCSE textiles or a smartly-printed sack that cost more than you like to let on, check the fabric Santa will be handling. All cloth sneakily sheds microfibres, but did you know the tiny filaments from synthetic textiles make up a big share of the microplastics found in oceans and rivers? Replace outgoing stockings with something worked in naturally biodegradable cotton, linen or wool, like this felted stocking by Gisela Graham. Felted Stocking, £20, tch.net
5. THE WRAPPINGS
Glitter, laminating films and lashings of sticky tape all make for parcel wrappings that can be rejected by kerbside recycling collections. If you’re ready to ditch the plastic from your parcels, Re-wrapped (re-wrapped.co.uk) is a great resource. Its designer-led papers are made using 100% post-consumer waste, and the unbleached papers are printed with vegetable-based inks before being dispatched in recyclable packaging. We love this retro Italian Terrazzo design by Kate Heiss! Italian Terazzo Reyclable Paper, £1.75 per sheet, re-wrapped.co.uk
6. THE TABLE
To the Christmas dinner, and a chance to retire old habits of buying glittered candle holders, glitzy (but unwashable, single-use) charger plates, and faux-berry napkin rings. Not that a zero-waste Christmas should lack the gleam of gold – wise investment buys can bring a flash of indulgence that outlives the feast and will brighten your table for years to come. These hand-hammered brass candle sconces in oak, chestnut, avocado or rowan make the perfect festive family heirloom. Leaf Candle Sconce Rowan, £225, theshopfloorproject.com
More from Vegetarian blog
Looking for the perfect give for your loved ones that won't cost the earth?
Struggling to find the right foundation to suit you? Here are our favourite vegan formulas with hues for everyone!
Content writer Paisley Tedder shares her favourite body scrubs for the winter months
Keep cold and viruses at bay this winter with these essential nutrients...
As we strive to be more sustainable during the Christmas period, we're constantly on the search for zero-waste solutions, and gifts that give back. Now, a new initiative means that even our tree can help us 'do good' during the season.

