Showing posts with label in the news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label in the news. Show all posts

Tuesday, 23 October 2012

The Canberra Times is looking for garage salers...


"Dear I op therefore I ammers, 
I hope this email finds you well. 
I am writing from the news desk at The Canberra Times. Currently, I’m researching a story on garage sales in the ACT. We’re looking to do a small article on the community surrounding garage sales and are particularly interested in chatting to people who are regular garage sale devotees. 
I’m contacting you in the hope of finding someone who would be interested in talking about their interest as well as garage sales in the ACT in terms of whether they are becoming a trend off the back of the trend towards reusing and recycling."

(If you're interested in being part of this story please email I Op Therefore I Am and we'll supply you with contact details...)

Thursday, 16 February 2012

Canberra Weekly cover!

Have you picked up your copy yet? And do you fancy sharing a picture and story of your fave op shopped outfit on the blog?

(Behind the scenes photos can be found here)

Sunday, 5 February 2012

Behind the scenes with Canberra Weekly

This morning Taph, ToF and I met with Katherine and Teagan from Canberra Weekly at Vinnie Tuggeranong.

The challenge? To style Katherine for a cover shot using the contents of one op shop (and, luckily for us, one back room)
Katherine looks worried that we're going for the Ugly Betty lookbefore perusing the racks of newly unpacked stock.
Teagan finds a jacket she loves.
And ToF helps the assistants with their unpacking
while we narrow down our choices into quality, workable outfits.

Saturday, 16 April 2011

In the News : Revolve ordered to leave site and cough up costs

The Revolve saga continues....

From The Canberra Times online.

BY NATASHA RUDRA AND PETER JEAN

16 Apr, 2011 12:00 AM

The lack of any Aboriginal involvement was just one of the flaws in recycling operator Revolve's failed bid to avoid eviction with a native title claim, ACT Supreme Court Master David Harper said yesterday.

Master Harper said the case, which attempted to prevent an eviction and did not involve any Aboriginal person or group, was ''scarcely a suitable vehicle'' for determining native title. He described the application as ''not entirely intelligible'' and said the claim of native title was ''misconceived''.

''If I understand the argument sought to be put to the court, its acceptance would cast doubt upon all grants of Crown leases by the Commonwealth in the Australian Capital Territory over almost a century,'' he wrote.

He dismissed the application and ordered Revolve to pay the ACT Government's costs.

While the court dismissed Revolve's attempt to halt eviction from its disputed Hume site, Master Harper gave the business another two weeks to leave the premises.

The Government has been trying to evict Revolve from its leased site in Hume since March 2010 and there have been protracted disputes over the eviction and the payment of $101,880 in rent.

The Supreme Court had previously decided that the territory should take vacant possession of the site, Revolve should pay outstanding rent and the recycler would stop taking donations of second-hand goods.

In February, Revolve filed an application to stop the eviction, arguing that the territory had no right to grant the land at Hume in the first place because it had not addressed ''common law native title''.

Revolve was represented in court by the organisation's president Gerry Gillespie.

Mr Gillespie said the organisation tried to raise ''common law native title'' because the issue had not been resolved in the territory's courts. ''It was not raised to waste the court's time. It is a very serious constitutional issue which we need to resolve in the interests of the entire community,'' he said.

''Common law native title is the fundamental basis of traditional title claims for private property which have existed in common law for centuries.''

Department of Land and Property Services chief executive David Dawes said the Government welcomed the decision and said he hoped it would mark an end to legal battles between the two parties. ''This is just the latest in a number of court decisions about the Hume site that have gone against Revolve and I trust that this will be the end of the legal proceedings brought by this organisation,'' Mr Dawes said.

''The ACT Government is the landlord for hundreds of community organisations and all of them are expected to pay their rent on time.''

Mr Dawes said Revolve had to accept the court's decision to vacate the Hume site and should also pay the Government its outstanding rent.

Revolve is involved in two other legal cases over its recycling operations and returns to the Supreme Court on April 28.

Tuesday, 15 February 2011

Co-ordinated Rubbish

With an elegant home full of eclectic, antique gems, Red Hill dressmaker and bargain hunter Teresa Zarlenga says she would never walk into a shop and buy something new.

"I can't imagine anything different in my home," she says of her collection of timeless, classic furniture and accessories, or "co-ordinated rubbish", as she calls it.  "I'm not interested in going into a shop - all the furniture there seems to be the same.

"I'd much rather have something with history that has just happened to come my way.  It means so much more to me."

"Teresa says she loves the thrill of finding an item, be it an elegant chaise, a painting, a hostess trolley or a nest of tables that perfectly match her "look" and the feel of her home - particularly when it sets her back around $5."

Read more of this article, "Tireless Teresa's hunt for treasures" by Kathryn Vukovljak, City News, February 10-16, 2011, p. 4 on City News online version...