Albuquerque Journal
N.M. “Obamanos Coat” bound for Smithsonian
By
Kathaleen Roberts / Journal Staff Writer
June 3, 2011
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SANTA FE – The day after the presidential election, Nancy Judd went Dumpster diving and turned out a coat.
Now the coat – pieced together from 2008 Obama materials, specifically paper door hangers that canvassers left on door knobs – has morphed from trash to treasure as part of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture.
Using one of the president’s New Mexico campaign slogans, she calls it the Obamanos Coat.
The Santa Fe environmental artist and educator joined the Barack Obama for president campaign for six months before the election, organizing volunteers and canvassing her neighborhood. On Nov. 5, she scoured the trash bins at campaign headquarters across Santa Fe and Albuquerque, going home with yard signs, posters, decals and paper door hanger photo cards.
She picked up a vintage 1950s men’s coat at a consignment shop, then started cutting 1- by 3-inch strips from paper door hangers emblazoned with photos of the candidate and his volunteers.
“I attempted to size it to fit the president,” she said. “I went online and tried to find his dimensions. I found somebody who claimed to be his tailor. I literally had about 30 volunteers in my studio. The coat itself took about 400 hours to make.”
Santa Fe environmental artist and educator Nancy Judd created her “Obamanos Coat” out of recycled 2008 Obama campaign print material. The coat will soon become part of the permanent collection at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture. (COURTESY PHOTO)
The garment formed part of a trio of “Change Couture” that included a cocktail dress pieced from plastic yard signs and a “Voter Swingcoat” in honor of New Mexico’s political status as a battleground state.
“It’s made of voter registration photos cut into quarter-inch strips woven into material,” Judd said.
The series traveled to the Green Inaugural Ball, as well as a reception honoring the New Mexico congressional delegation and the New Mexico Inaugural Ball. The publicity landed her a front-page story in The Wall Street Journal and international coverage from Mexico City to Paris and Kuwait.
Crafting garments from garbage is nothing new to Judd. The one-time coordinator of the Santa Fe recycling program, she initiated her own company called Recycle Runway and helped launch the city’s annual Trash Fashion contest and Recycle Art Market. Today, she gives workshops on recycling and other environmental issues throughout Santa Fe’s schools and youth organizations.
Her Recycle Runway traveling exhibit (now in Atlanta) has been showcased at airports around the country. It debuted at the Albuquerque Sunport in 2007. She’s made a flounced flamenco dress from fanned pieces of junk mail, a cowboy skirt and vest woven from phone book pages and a flapper dress sparkling with teardrop-shaped “sequins” sliced from aluminum cans.
Judd submitted the “Change Couture” series after her sister heard the Smithsonian was collecting campaign memorabilia. She learned the Obamanos Coat had been accepted when she got a call from a Smithsonian curator.
“I think it was just shock,” she said of her reaction. “For an artist to have a piece in the permanent collection of the Smithsonian is really a dream come true.”
She threw a little “bon voyage” party with the “sealing of the shipping crate” this week at Astilli Fine Art Services in Santa Fe.
She said more alchemy is to come.
“I’d love to do a project for the first lady,” Judd said. “A compost dress.”
The biodegradable garment would be made from fruit and vegetable peels from the White House garden attached to cheesecloth.
“I’d use the cheesecloth to make layers and layers of lace,” she said, adding, “Our immediate environment is our body.”
UpFront is a daily front-page news and opinion column. Comment directly to Kathaleen Roberts at kroberts@abqjournal.com or 505-992-6266 in Santa Fe. Go to www.abqjournal.com/letters/new to submit a letter to the editor.
— This article appeared on page A1 of the Albuquerque Journal
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Designer and environmental educator Nancy Judd creates wearable art out of recycled materials
Obamanos Coat
Part of the Smithsonian Institution’s permanent collection!
Door hangers from the 2008 Obama campaign were cut into 2 inch strips and machine sewn to panels made from canvas scraps. The panels were hand stitched on the vintage man’s winter coat. This voter gear took 25 volunteers over 400 hours to complete. It was created in 2009.
The Obamanos Coat is part of the Change Couture Collection which was showcased at numerous inaugural balls in Washington D.C. in 2009 for the presidential inauguration of Barack Obama.
The Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture has added the Obamanos Coat to its permanent collection and is considering its inclusion in one of the initial exhibitions when the museum opens on the National Mall in 2015.
Change Couture Collection
This collection of garments fashioned out of discarded campaign materials, is made up of three garments: the Obamanos Coat, the Obama Cocktail Dress and the Voter Swing Coat. The Collection is a celebration of the millions of people who worked countless hours to assure the election of Barack Obama as the President of the United States.
Nancy Judd of Recycle Runway was a devoted volunteer in the Obama/Biden Campaign in Santa Fe. She organized hundreds of people in her neighborhood and inspired friends and relatives across the country to volunteer. This collection is a documentation of her experience being part of this exciting campaign.
The day after the election Ms. Judd went “dumpster diving” behind Obama Campaign headquarters in northern New Mexico. She filled her car with historic campaign materials that she transformed into elegant garments with the help of over 25 dedicated volunteers in two months!
Ms. Judd brought the Collection to the 2009 presidential inauguration in Washington D.C., showcasing it at the The Green Inaugural Ball, the reception to honor the New Mexico Congressional Delegation, and the New Mexico Inaugural Ball.
The Obamanos Coat has been accepted into the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture!
International Media Coverage for the Change Couture Collection
Wall Street Journal, January 13, 2009
Metro Paris, November 2009
Metro Santiago, November 2009
Metro Mexico City, November 2009
Metro New York, November 2009
Albuquerque Journal Video, Jan 9, 2009
Planet Green, January 20, 2009
Tree Hugger, January 19, 2009
トップ > ライフ・カルチャー > ライフ, January 19, 2009
Agence France-Presse (AFP), January 19, 2009
YahooNews.com, January 19, 2009
Kuwait Times, January 19, 2009
Las Vegas Sun, January 18, 2009
Media Fax Photo, January 18, 2009
Forbes.Com, January 18, 2009
Fox New.com, January 18, 2009
Santa Fe New Mexican, January 4, 2009
KSFR Radio, December 30, 2008
New Mexico Business Weekly, December 23, 2008
Channel 4, KTOA, December 23, 2008
Voter Swing Coat
Leftover voter registration posters get the vote for this suit!
The coat is made from voter registration posters cut into half inch wide strips and woven together. This “paper fabric” was adhered to canvas remnants and the finished coat pieces were hand-sewn together. The collar, outer sleeves and bottom edge of the coat are accented with “lace” which was cut and punched from recycled matching voter registration reminder cards. This coat was made with the help of 10 volunteers in 200 hours. Created in 2009.
The Voter Swing Coat is part of the Change Couture Collection which was showcased at numerous inaugural balls in Washington D.C. in 2009 for the presidential inauguration of Barack Obama.
Los Angels Times, Culture Monster
Obama cocktail dress, from dumpster to fashion runway
By Suzanne Muchnic
May 27, 2009
Nancy Judd, a 1990 graduate of Pitzer College who heads a company called Recycle Runway, will return to her Claremont alma mater Saturday with a one-day exhibition of fancy garments made from trash and ingenuity.
Judd makes outlandish clothing from castoffs such as phone book pages, junk mail, plastic bottles, aluminum cans and cassettes. But the star of the show at Pitzer’s Nichols Gallery is likely to be the “Obama Cocktail Dress.” It’s a slinky, body-hugging number crafted from the president’s campaign posters. As the “fabric” winds around the body, from above the knee to below the armpits, white letters form a crisp graphic pattern on a black background and the name “Obama” pops up over and over.
The eye-popping dress and other couture fashions in the show are products of a company that aims to transform waste into a valuable resource. With a goal of changing “how the world thinks about the environment,” Judd says that “making garbage beautiful, glamorous and sexy” may entice people to redefine their concepts of rubbish.
The Obama dress got its start the day after the election, when Judd harvested armloads of plastic posters from dumpsters. She soon turned the refuse into a line of garments dubbed the Obama Campaign Collection, which debuted at the Green Inaugural Ball in Washington, D.C.
The Claremont exhibition will coincide with a ceremony at Pitzer, where the artist will receive the college’s 2009 Distinguished Alumni Award. The gallery will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Planet Green
Discover Trashion (Trash Fashion) at the Green Inaugural Ball
By Heather Sperling
January 20, 2009
Trash + Fashion = Trashion. Simple, right? Not necessarily—one of Nancy Judd’s winter coats, made from Obama fliers, took 200 hours to cut, paste and sew.
The Wall Street Journal has a slide show of some of Judd’s work, which will be modeled at the all-organic Green Inaugural Ball in Washington, DC, on the 20th. The vintage-inspired pieces are clever and ornate, if not user-friendly (you can’t sit down in them, says Judd). A personal favorite is the glass evening gown, which has a ruby slipper-like appeal with an edge—literally—thanks to 12,000 pieces of crushed glass from the City of Albuquerque Recycling Program.
Judd’s “Recycle Runway” pieces are exhibited at airports around the country with the hope that they’ll inspire travelers to personal action-to think twice before throwing out that old sweater, or at least put their coke can in the recycle bin. Because who knows—it could be turned into something chic!
You’ll see Judd’s designs if you pass through the Pittsburgh airport this year. They’ll be in Orlando airport in summer 2009, and in Atlanta in 2011.
Read article on Planet Green website
Agence France-Presse
Dumpster couture makes foray into Obamaworld
January 18, 2009
By Olivia Hampton
WASHINGTON (AFP) — It was the day after Barack Obama’s historic November 4 election win, when environmental artist and educator Nancy Judd went dumpster diving behind the Obama campaign headquarters in Albuquerque, New Mexico, desperate to collect any salvageable materials.
“I made a mad dash around town. In many cases, they had already started throwing things in dumpsters and I was pulling material out of dumpsters,” Judd told AFP.
“I started seeing posters and decals and I was finding drawings by children and all kinds of amazing materials that I felt like I just wanted to save … then it was just an obvious next step: since I make clothing out of trash, I am going to make a collection of garments and take it to the inauguration.”
Judd unveiled her “Campaign for Change Couture Collection” Saturday at the Green Inaugural Ball that drew about 1,000 environmentalists, an event among dozens in Washington honoring Obama’s inauguration.
The centerpiece was “Obamanos,” a 1950s vintage men’s coat adorned with countless 1.5-inch (4-centimeter)-long strips of Obama campaign door hangers that Judd said took 200 hours to make.
“I interpret it as we are Obama, we are this movement. It’s a tribute to the millions of people who worked for him,” she said.
Even Obama’s defeated opponent, John McCain, has his place on the coat — under the right armpit. Although the suit was tailored to fit Obama, wearing it would not be an easy affair.
“There’s a little bit of movement back and forth, but he can’t wave,” Judd explained.
At the ball, Judd wore an “Obama cocktail dress,” fashioned from campaign yard signs sewn in overlapping layers on a recycled sheet.
A model showed off the “Voter Swing Coat,” made from voter registration posters for New Mexico, a swing state, cut into strips and woven together into a paper fabric adhered to recycled canvas. A paper lace from punctured voter registration cards covered the coat’s collar and outer edges.
Crafting a single one of her handmade garments usually takes about six months to make, Judd said. But with the help of some 20 people in her studio, she wrapped up all three pieces in just two months.
She is also selling tote bags made from discarded yard signs to help finance her trip to Washington, where she will present her Obama-themed collection again on Monday at a reception for a New Mexico delegation and will organize workshops for local students.
Judd, 40, is no stranger to “trashion.” She first started making clothing out of discarded materials a decade ago and made her hobby into a business, Recycle Runway, two years ago.
Among her dumpster chic are a faux fur coat with thousands of loops of cassette and video tapes and an evening gown adorned with some 12,000 pieces of crushed glass — both of which took 400 hours to make.
“When you can engage people in a really positive way that is fun and playful and makes them smile and is creative, I feel like the message can be stronger than the doom and gloom, we’re all going to die kind of thing,” Judd said.
Judd’s hopes are also echoed in the energy and environmental policies of the incoming administration. Obama has called for an effort to overhaul US energy policy on the scale of the Apollo project that first landed a man on the Moon.
His plan includes unleashing 150 billion dollars over 10 years to create five million new “green” jobs, an 80 percent reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 and ensuring that 10 percent of US energy consumed comes from renewable sources by 2012 and 25 percent by 2025.
“This time must be different,” Obama said in December when referring to his environmental and energy policies.
“This will be a leading priority of my presidency and a defining test of our time. We cannot accept complacency, nor accept any more broken promises.”
The Wall Street Journal
SANTA FE, N.M. — In the world of trashy fashion, designer Nancy Judd has hit the big time.
FRONT PAGE
January 13, 2009
By Stephanie Simon
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Ms. Judd spends her days in a studio here crafting clothing from castoff plastic bags, electrical wire and old cassette tapes. Now, her Dumpster couture has caught the eye of environmental activists, who plan to showcase her work in Washington at Saturday’s Green Inaugural Ball honoring President-elect Barack Obama.
The star piece: A man’s coat made from Mr. Obama’s campaign fliers. She says it took her 200 hours to cut and paste and sew it.
Showing her stuff in the nation’s capital is a big step for a woman who used to put on a furry blue costume and sweat her way through parades as Carlos Coyote, Santa Fe’s recycling mascot. Working for the city trash department, Ms. Judd did the coyote gig for years. She also ran workshops and recorded radio ads urging New Mexicans to recycle. But she worried that nobody was paying attention.
Ms. Judd began to wonder whether she could spark new interest in solid waste by making garbage glamorous.
Ms. Judd, who is 40 years old, has no training in fashion. She can’t sketch. She gets design ideas from old paper dolls. Still, she figured out how to craft a saucy cocktail dress from a shower curtain and aluminum cans. She fashioned a slinky black gown from canvas scraps and hundreds of rusty nails. When worn, it clinks alluringly.
She once spent 400 hours, she says, unspooling cassettes and crocheting the crinkled tape into a fake-fur coat.
As attire, the outfits have their limitations. An evening gown sparkling with 12,000 bits of glass tends to shed; a fitted jacket cut from the vinyl top of a convertible is so well insulated, it doubles as a sweat lodge.
Also, says Ms. Judd, “you can’t sit down in any of them.”
What steps are you taking to live “green” or protect the environment?
.But these aren’t meant to be wardrobe mainstays. Ms. Judd conceives of them more as wearable sculpture. “I like the idea of making aluminum elegant, or rusty nails sexy,” she says.
Turns out, she isn’t alone.
A decade ago, when Ms. Judd was making her first rescued-from-the-landfill dress — a somewhat revealing number made of bubble wrap — recycling had already hit the mainstream. Manufacturers were turning plastic bottles into fleece outdoor wear.
But the world of environmentally conscious designers was small, says Delia Montgomery, founder of Chic Eco, an “earth friendly” fashion consulting firm. “Now I can’t keep up,” she says.
Woven Candy Wrappers
Artisans in developing countries sell purses woven from candy wrappers. Online boutiques market belts made from the inner tubes of bicycles. A designer in Chile recently announced she had pulled apart the filters in cigarette butts and woven them into a coarse thread to crochet vests.
By necessity, most of this experimentation is small-scale. It takes a whole lot of time to scrub the coffee residue from empty Starbucks bags, then snip out the mylar lining for use in a gown. “Anyone trying to mass-produce this throws their hands up in the air,” Ms. Montgomery says.
But for boutique designers, the niche market is enough. “The sheer weirdness of it — people just love it,” says Robin Worley, a fashion designer in Seattle who studs her clothes with gears from discarded watches.
The concept has infiltrated pop culture on cable television, thanks to the Bravo reality series “Project Runway,” which has challenged aspiring designers to construct outfits from recyclables.
Two years ago, Ms. Judd decided to try to capitalize on the emerging trend by turning her hobby into a full-time job through a business she calls Recycle Runway.
She doesn’t sell her work; she markets it as an educational tool. She wants to use her Dumpster couture — otherwise known as “trashion” — to illustrate talks about the solid-waste problem and to raise awareness through instructive art exhibits.
“You can’t be didactic or shaming or all gloom-and-doom” when talking about sustainability, or the audience may tune out, Ms. Judd says. “So you sneak in the back door” with fanciful fashions.
The concept intrigued curators at the Pittsburgh International Airport, who organized a show on Concourse C this past fall. When she came to set up the exhibit, Ms. Judd also spoke to several youth groups.
“The children were amazed to see that something so beautiful could be created out of something we would normally throw away,” says Pat Bluett, assistant executive director of a suburban Boys and Girls Club. The club’s recycling volume has since doubled, she says.
The educational theme also appealed to Jenna Mack, co-producer of Saturday’s Green Inaugural Ball. The all-organic, $500-a-ticket event is expected to draw 1,000 environmentalists. Models will show off Ms. Judd’s fashions on platforms in the lobby.
“Maybe the mental image of that dress made from glass might make people think twice before they throw out a bottle next time,” Ms. Mack says.
The whimsy factor also gives Ms. Mack bragging rights on a party-packed weekend with dueling environmental-themed galas. The other Green Inaugural Ball has Al Gore. This one has Ms. Judd’s canvas-scrap dress embroidered with shiny flowers cut from Coke cans.
Glad as she is to be heading to Washington, Ms. Judd won’t make any money from the show. (In fact, she’s selling tote bags made from recycled Obama signs to cover her expenses.) In general, she has found profits don’t match her passion; these past two years, she has been living mostly on savings and a small-business loan. But she is undeterred.
The morning after the November election, Ms. Judd hoisted herself into a Dumpster outside an Obama campaign office and scooped up armfuls of posters. She collected a precinct map, a phone list, a pink flier advertising sweatshirts, a child’s drawing of the Obama logo as a scoop of ice-cream, over the slogan, “Yum We Can.”
Dumping it out on her studio floor the other day, Ms. Judd gazed at her loot. Some of the paper was crumpled and torn; there were footprints on one sign, and smears of paint. “Won’t it be so fun to use this?” she asked.
She has already made three items of Obama-wear: A sun dress stitched from plastic yard signs; a suit woven from strips of voter-registration posters; and the man’s coat, made from stiffly lacquered door hangers.
Ms. Judd looked up Mr. Obama’s measurements and tailored the coat for him. She wishes he would stop by to try it on. After some trial and error, she figured out how to hinge the sleeves to give him some measure of mobility. “He can’t wave,” she says. “But he can shake a hand.”
The New Mexican
Campaign couture: Recycle Runway owner to show off Obama fashions at inaugural ball
By Dennis J. Carroll
January 03, 2009
Nancy Judd, Santa Fe’s Dumpster fashionista, will be strutting her environmentally correct ensembles made from recycled materials — from crushed glass and audio cassette tapes to soda tabs and campaign signs — Jan. 17 at The Green Inaugural Ball in Washington, D.C.
Judd, 40, owner of Recycle Runway, also has been invited to the inaugural party hosted by New Mexico’s congressional delegation on Jan. 19, the night before the Barack Obama’s presidential inauguration.
Green Ball producers said “every facet of The Green Ball is designed to reduce the impact on the environment.” Catering will be 100 percent organic, and the bars will feature local and organic beverages. Food waste and floral arrangements will be composted and bottles will be recycled. Lighting systems and decorative features have been designed to be energy efficient.
The event is expected to be attended by about 1,000 individuals and representatives of environmental organizations. The ball will be held at the Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium.
Judd, a former waste-management manager for the city of Santa Fe, is sewing, gluing and stapling 24/7 to complete what she calls her Campaign for Change Couture Collection to be showcased at the event.
The outfits — “you just can’t sit down” — include a 1950s-style cocktail dress made from Obama yard signs, a man’s winter coat covered with paper campaign door hangers, a woman’s “swing” coat stitched together using voter-registration materials and a ball gown made from campaign posters.
The man’s coat “is essentially the feeling of the campaign,” Judd said, featuring many of the people who supported Obama and worked on the campaign.
Judd said it took about 200 hours to make the coat and 25 hours for the dress.
What probably won’t be noticed is a humorous jab at Republicans — a photo of John McCain under the coat’s right armpit.
Judd said live models will be showing off the pieces on pedestals set up in the lobby entrance to the Mellon Auditorium.
Jenna Mack, one of the ball’s producers, described Judd’s collection as “beyond fabulous,” and said Judd was invited to the ball because her work fit so well with the theme of the ball and many of the president-elect’s expected environmental and conservation policies.
She said Judd’s work “makes a statement to remind people” of the necessity of recycling and conservation and “gets the dialogue started” among people who view Judd’s creations.
Judd also expects to be conducting conservation workshops at Washington, D.C.-area schools.
Judd said that the day after the Nov. 4 election she went campaign Dumpster diving in Santa Fe and Albuquerque, retrieving such items as posters, yard signs and even original artwork done for the Obama campaign.
To finance her trip, Judd hopes to raise about $25,000 from corporate sponsors and through the sale of Obama tote bags, $50 each, made from recycled yard signs.
Judd also has been using Santa Fe’s WESST Corp. to help her organize the project, and Southwest Creations to make the tote bags.
Many of Judd’s outfits are on a road tour of sorts at airports around the country.
“Elegant garments created from recycled materials are exhibited in high-traffic airports to grab travelers’ attention and inspire personal action,” Judd says on her Web site, www.recyclerunway.com. She also conducts environment and recycling workshops for children in the cities where her airport fashion runways are on display.
Recycle Runway also has drummed up sponsors as diverse as Toyota, Coca-Cola and the Glass Packaging Institute.
The airport displays include a faux-fur jacket made of with thousands of loops of cassette and video tape; a dress train made of origami junk-mail fans, sewn together like fish scales; and an evening gown glittering with thousands of pieces of crushed recycled glass.
Judd’s creations have been on display at the Pittsburgh International Airport since August.
Her first airport show was at the Albuquerque International Sunport in October 2007.
Judd’s outfits combine elements of art, fashion and politics (she was a volunteer for the Obama campaign).
“I don’t make them to resell them. I don’t make them to mass produce them. They are wearable sculptures. That’s how I look at it. I don’t have fashion background.”
Judd started Recycled Runway seven years ago while working as the recycling coordinator for the city of Santa Fe. She was subsequently executive director of the New Mexico Recycling Coalition.




































