Best Practices Bookmarks (Free Download)
Sustainability for all the places between the buildings.

These bookmarks are free to download and available to customize for your use. Each one has a different overarching theme with a different set of practices. I encourage you to print these on salvaged paper (like the white space left on those holiday cards you just got) and make these to be used as paper only and printed again when you need another one!

Creative Commons License
"Best Practices Bookmarks" by Green Girl LDS is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. In short: You can't make money on these, but you can use and distribute them as is or modify them for use for other non-commercial purposes that you license under a Creative Commons license for use by others.

Title: Happy Bird

Theme: Cats & Windows

Download pdf
Title: Night Life

Theme: Lighting

Download pdf
Title: Homes for All

Theme: Nutrient cycling & habitat

Download pdf
Title: Plant something everywhere.

Theme: Stormwater

Download pdf
Title: Tiny Twiny Vine

Theme: Well-being & slow living

Download pdf
Title: Spiky Sun

Theme: Carbon footprint

Download pdf
Title: Blame it on the sunspots.

Theme: Saving Energy

Download pdf

Download all of them in:

one pdf of bookmarks together on two pages (657 KB)

one pdf file of singles to print on the white space of your holiday cards (1.4 MB).

one PowerPoint file (7.8 MB) if you want to make changes to them.

 

 

Green Web Hosting! This site hosted by DreamHost. This web site was designed with a black background and white text because a rumor was spread by Blackle that it reduced greenhouse gas emissions, but that turned out to be a big fat lie debunked by actual experimentation AND... people had trouble reading my website, so I changed it to white. It's still hosted by Dreamhost, a carbon neutral company. Please consider the environment when printing this or mailing me things or traveling to see me for a meeting or... ohhhh, just do your best and change your practices when you learn something new.

Updated 28 Nov 2010