Back in August, ReStore announce its second Upcycle Challenge where people competed in upcycling and transforming items found on the sales floor. Each participant was given up to $50 worth of merchandise or material. The goal was to use your creativity to build anything you could imagine. No limits! Sadie had heard of the first ReStore Upcycle Challenge and decided this time, she was in!
All Freestyle Flip Upcycle Challenge entries on display
When Sadie signed up for the challenge, she had already had a bunch of Pinterest inspiration and projects she wanted to complete someday. When she walked through ReStore to find the base material for her project, she knew immediately that a particular end table was a perfect fit. She grabbed it and took it home.
When all of the upcycled entries were submitted, they were featured on the ReStore Facebook page where everyone was encouraged to use "likes" as a way to cast a vote for their favorite. Sadie had the most likes and won first place! When asked why she thought her project won, she humbly thought another project was going to win. "People like dogs," she said, so perhaps that had some influence.
Sadie's winning dog bed
Sadie originally found ReStore when she was sourcing materials to build a set for a theatre as a part of her freelance work. Unused decking, became the floor of a set design she was working on. She would also find materials to build props and most often utilized the affordable paint found at ReStore to decorate. Items destined as trash, are now being transformed into something new thanks to her hard work and resourcefulness.
"Every time you buy something new or from a craft store, it's more expensive," Sadie explains, "and sometimes the message is in the medium." As you can see from some of her work, everyday items have a new perspective.
Sadie's design for Around the World in 80 Days at Lakeshore Players
Next year, Sadie's work will yet again be featured in the public. She is designing the set for Around the World in 80 Days at Lakeshore Players Theatre and has been commissioned to create a women's suffrage portrait for the Ramsey County Historical Society that will be made from bras and other recycled material. Winning the upcycle challenge wasn't her first win and by the sound of what she's currently working on, this is definitely not her last.
When we asked Sadie for tips for the first-time upcycler, she said "just go for it. Some people have an idea and hold back. The more you do something the better you'll get. Just do it."