
Designers Plants and Coffee
We’re three women—Zahiyya from Cover Me Chic, Naima from Fearless Threads, and LaTisha from Keeping You in Stitches—sharing our journey as designers, educators, and creative entrepreneurs.
Sewing, sipping, and staying rooted—join us for real conversations on creativity, fashion, community, and building handmade businesses with heart.
Designers Plants and Coffee
Sustainable Fashion: Upcycling Denim
Sheree, the owner of Shredded Blues and an expert in upcycling, shares her journey of creating denim bags from old jeans, a venture inspired by her desire for a unique bag and supported by her daughter’s creative input.
Initially hesitant to produce more bags despite interest, she now sells them on Instagram and is considering expanding to a website or Etsy, emphasizing sustainable fashion through thrifting and donations. The design process is spontaneous, though she has yet to name her creations.
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Website: designersplantsandcoffee.com
YouTube: @designersplantsandcoffee
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Facebook: @designersplantsandcoffee
Hosts websites:
Naima: lovefearlessthreads.com
LaTisha: keepingyounstitches.com
Zahiyya: covermechic.com
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Welcome to the Designers Plants & Coffee Podcast, where we discuss how to succeed as a designer
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while staying true to yourself, finding peace in the process, and making money doing what we love.
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Subscribe on YouTube and wherever you get your podcasts.
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Today, we have upcycling expert, DC native, Sheree is the owner and creator of Shredded Blues.
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Welcome to the show, Sheree. Hello, everybody. Hi.
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So I think I want to start out with the most obvious question to ask you.
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How'd you get the name Shredded Blues? Oh, okay.
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So one day, me and my daughter was trying to find a name for my business.
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Of course, she came up.
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She said she came up with the whole thing, and I owe her 10% when I make it. Okay.
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And is it a meaning behind it?
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Or she just was like, that sounds cool.
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I'm always shredding up denim, just taking it apart, putting it back together.
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So she called it Shredded Blues and everything. Denim is blue.
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So how did you get started with upcycling?
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Upcycling came about when I wanted a denim bag and I couldn't find one.
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So I had some old pair of jeans and I just took them and I cut them up and I just started putting
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stuff on them and I made a bag.
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So along the way, I added more stuff to the bag and I just started creating that bag.
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And everywhere I went, somebody wanted that bag and I didn't think nothing of it.
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I was like, okay, I can make you one, but I never did.
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I was procrastinating, but now everybody was like, I want one of those bags.
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So where do you sell your bags?
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Well, I'm trying to sell my bags on Instagram, but I'm looking into getting a website.
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Looking to Etsy, but that didn't work for me, but I'm trying to.
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And also I did a pop-up all night, which is coming up this year.
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So I decided to do that again to see where that go from networking.
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So how do you find the material for your bags?
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I mean, I know you have old jeans, but I mean, it's only so many jeans you can get. So you go thrifting.
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How do you get your materials? Yes. I love thrifting.
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The thrift store is my friend, or I get people to donate their denim.
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Like my girls, when they donate their denim or whatever, I just take it and keep it.
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I'll cut it up or I'll go thrifting because it's cheaper at the thrift and then you can use sustainable fashion.
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So all my bags are made with sustainable fashion. Denim is the way.
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So denim, denim, I've seen your bags.
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Where do you get the idea for the different styles of bags?
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Do you just come up with them?
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And do you also name your bags?
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Well, I haven't started naming my bags, but the ideas just pop in my head as I go along.
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Because when I started doing the bags for the pop-up last year, the ideas was just popping up
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as I was making the bags.
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So I came up with a lot of different styles.
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I mean, I can show y'all some.
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This one is the latest one I created.
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It's a small one because some people like small bags, but I like big bags.
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I do because I can throw everything in it.
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These small bags, I was like, nope, I feel lost with small bags.
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I got to put everything in the bag.
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So I did create this one, a little small one.
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It's like a nap bag.
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And I put a little flower.
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The flowers are my signature.
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I cut all the petals and then I sew them all together.
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And then I put them together.
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So how long does it take you to make like one bag?
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Like that bag that you just showed us?
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This bag, this take me about six hours.
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And how much would you charge for that bag?
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This one, I started off with $50 for this one. Because it's small.
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Oh, also I forgot to say, I did this embroidery by hand.
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I do want my bags to have embroidery name tag, but I did this by hand.
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And this takes a while. Yeah, that's a lot.
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And I'm surprised that it's only 50 bucks.
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I was getting ready to say, we need to talk about that price.
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You need to raise the price.
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Between the hand cut flowers, the hand embroidery, all of that. Yeah.
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Y'all have to help me with the prices because when I, oh, it seemed like I overpriced my bags
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and people say that's too much.
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And then I underpriced it. That's too little. So.
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So what I would say is the way that you market your bags is probably going to be better if you
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say handmade, because when you start hand doing the petals, hand doing the embroidery, and it
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takes you six hours to make the bag, you put that in your marketing so that you can raise the price.
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I'm surprised that Etsy didn't work because Etsy, that's what that is.
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It's supposed to be like a handmade type thing.
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Actually, that's what Etsy used to be.
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Etsy is very different now.
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So, I mean, that you can put that into your marketing when you do get to the point of building
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your website and doing that, that's what you need to put in there and you can charge a lot more
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because I mean, your time is worth a lot. It's the details.
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And I will tell you as a bag maker, the smaller the bag, the more work goes in.
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I always find that with the smaller pieces, it takes me so much longer to do them.
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Another thing that we're all recently working on that might work for you is to show a little
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bit of behind the scenes.
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You know, like when you're cutting out those petals or when you're sitting there and stitching
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your, just take a quick 10 second video and start just putting snippets out since Instagram
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is your platform where you sell.
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Put those details on Instagram because people have to see it to recognize the value.
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Because if you just say, oh, I take old jeans and make them into bags, they'd be like, well,
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I'm paying for somebody else's old jeans.
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And I'm cutting 150 rose petals and I'm taking some silk thread and I'm embroidering my logo on it.
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That's the stuff actually you should, you should show.
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Just get like a little small tripod, put your phone to it and just do like a time-lapse.
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You know, you don't have to say anything.
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You don't have to explain yourself.
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All you have to do is show the process that you're doing and just speed the whole thing up and make it a clip.
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Don't give away your entire process. Leave out some, yeah.
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Like the petals because, and especially because the flower is your signature thing for your
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bag, you should really do that for every bag. So show your process.
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Three seconds of you cutting something out, two seconds of you going up and down with your needle and thread.
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You know, they want to see it to believe that somebody actually does this with their hands. Yeah.
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And that commands a higher price. Yes.
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And also if you were to do the, name a few of them, maybe one of a kind, like only have like
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the one that you're selling and the, and like the one that you're keeping and say like, this
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is the one of a kind.
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Yes, I can do that.
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I'm going to try to branch out more. I've been trying.
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So, I mean, since this was kind of like, you know, a coaching, do you have any questions for us? Yes.
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Like, like I said, the pricing, I do need help with that because I don't know.
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Some people, they come and look at my bag.
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They were like, oh, these are so, so unique, but then they look at the price tag and like, nevermind.
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So why don't we, why don't we put that challenge to our audience?
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Sheree, we're going to get a really good picture of your small bag and you're going to give
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us a little bit of your behind the scenes and we're going to put it to our audience and ask
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them, how much would they pay for that bag? Okay. That will be good.
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Like the big bag, like I can show y'all one of the big bags, this one, but this is one I did.
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They don't understand this takes work and that's the bag with the embroidery on it.
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So what's the price on that one?
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I said four, but somebody said it was too much.
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No, you have to show behind the scenes for each bag.
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So people understand the work that goes into it.
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I mean, I do a lot of work.
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Maybe that's why I probably don't have a lot of products because it takes work. It takes time.
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I be trying to recruit my children, but they be like, I don't know how to do none of that.
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So I see there's clothing behind you.
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Do you also do clothing and garments besides the bags? Yes. For myself. Yes, I do.
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I wanted to do clothing for other people, but then, you know, grown folks kind of difficult.
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So I'll make some for teens, but older people, I just make it for myself.
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This means so much to me that y'all even thought about me.
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Oh, we love to have, listen, we love to have anyone that is creating and doing their own business.
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We love to support people doing their own thing because it's hard. It's hard, you know?
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So it was just like, yeah, it was hard.
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So anyone doing something positive and creative and stuff is good, you know?
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Of course you want to share it, yeah. Thank you. Thank y'all.
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There's enough to go around.
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So is there anything else you want to share with our audience? Any words of encouragement?
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I know when I was reading your bio, you had a little quote in there, which your ultimate goal is.
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Do you want to share that?
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The ultimate goal is to get people to buy sustainable fashion.
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Also, I would like to see sustainable fashion in a department store, a major department store. I really would.
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Because that was my goal when I first started creating bags.
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I was like, oh, I wonder if I can get inside of Macy's or Nordstrom's.
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I would love to see that.
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And I want to ask, I see your earrings. Did you make those? Oh, yes. I made this.
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I'm going to give you another piece of advice.
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Things like the earrings and the smaller pieces, like earrings, maybe hair things, stuff like that.
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That's going to be where you make your money.
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Because it doesn't take as long.
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That's going to be where you make your money. So you got what?
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A couple of weeks before art all night? Make earrings.
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Have those earrings out there, because that is what is going to draw people in.
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And once they start to buy and wear those smaller pieces, it's going to bring your people who
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want to invest in those bigger pieces.
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Because quite honestly, I never wanted to make jewelry.
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But when I started wrapping these earrings, they became my bread and butter. Okay. That's all for now.
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I'm Ziya from Region Design Lab, along with Letitia from Keeping You in Stitches, Naima from
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Fearless Thread, and our guest today, Sharae from Shredded Blues. See you next time.