simple matters 12: gina stovall.

November 28, 2018

gina stovall | simple matters | reading my tea leaves

GINA STOVALL | TWO DAYS OFF

Gina Stovall is a climate scientist turned researcher and practitioner, living in Los Angeles, California. During the day, she connects climate researchers who have mitigation and resilience solutions to city and state decision-makers who can implement these solutions in their communities. On nights and weekends, she works on her new sustainable clothing line, Two Days Off. Here, her perspective on city living, climate change, a simple wardrobe, and representation in the slow living and sustainability space.

gina stovall | simple matters | reading my tea leaves

ERIN: Let’s start with you sharing a bit about yourself with RMTL readers who might not be familiar.

GINA: A year ago my partner and I left New York City, our jobs, and lovely studio apartment overlooking the Hudson River for the dream of living a slower, quieter existence. Over the past 7 years I have considered myself a minimalist, not just in the things I own but in how I choose to cultivate a simple uncomplicated life that allows me the space to do things that make me truly happy. I am originally from New York and have always had a love hate relationship with my city and although I loved my life there, it didn’t fulfill all of my needs. We took a week off to visit LA 6 months prior to our decision to move there. During our short stay we felt at ease and the nagging feeling that we should just go for it didn’t fade.

gina stovall | simple matters | reading my tea leaves

I am a geologist by training and specialized in climate change related impacts research and modeling. In graduate school I truly began to understand the urgency of climate change and decided to redirect my career from the hard sciences to the applied. Since, I have worked with city and state governments help mitigate their emissions and implement new policies and projects that build resilience in their communities. While I have always found so much meaning in my work, I have also had an itch to create a purposeful project of my own. Likewise my partner was beginning to consider starting his own architecture firm and couldn’t envision it in NYC. We both felt we needed to leave the city, its long winters, and its constant stimulation to have the mental space to pursue our goals.

gina stovall | simple matters | reading my tea leaves

At the start of 2018, I launched Two Days Off, a sustainable clothing line that had been knocking around in my head for a couple of years. Each garment is designed by me and handmade to order. I have been exploring slow fashion in my own wardrobe for years and it excited me to enter into a highly unsustainable and at times grossly unethical industry like fashion and rethink the model form the perspective of an environmental advocate and scientist. Two Days Off has a mission much greater than just clothing, it is a statement on consumption and our environmental impact. I intend to grow the business slowly and thoughtfully and show that beautiful design, business, and sustainability can work in harmony.

It was hard opting out of the picture perfect life that we spent so many years building, but our lifestyle now aligns with and supports our goals and we have never been happier.gina stovall | simple matters | reading my tea leaves

ERIN: A lot of folks who I tend to look toward online are concerned about climate change and vocal about their impact on the environment, but few of them are as intimately involved in that work as you are. How does your day job—being a climate researcher—intersect with the work that you share online and with your new clothing line?

GINA: My work can, at times, be highly technical and if I am honest, a bit boring. I track and analyze policy, I evaluate the science for nuances and talk a lot about statistical probabilities, and most of that is not very relatable or interesting. That is why online I like to zoom out to the big picture, why it matters and what we can do. Talking about climate change and the behavioral changes each of us as individuals can take reinvigorates me, and I believe empowers others. I also talk a lot about mindfulness and being present because I believe a lot of the environmental problems we have come from over consumption and mindless consumption that doesn’t add much value to our lives. If we become more intentional in all aspects of our lives, I believe that can only have a positive effect on our planet and the most vulnerable among us who feel the impacts environmental degradation the hardest.gina stovall | simple matters | reading my tea leaves

Two Days Off is a direct manifestation of my love for sewing and design and knowledge of sustainability. I consider every decision in the process from growing fibers to create textiles, to how it is transported and manufactured, all the way to how it will arrive into someone’s hands and how long it will be worn and loved. I try to make the very best decision I can each step of the way, and that means we are growing slowly, but intentionally. I intend to create as much value with this business as I can.

gina stovall | simple matters | reading my tea leaves

ERIN: What kind of advice do you have for folks who might be overwhelmed or feel helpless in the face of climate change? So many of us know that we need policy to shift course, but that means it’s easy to feel powerless. How do you find hope (and take direct action)?

GINA: Climate change is a huge and complex issue, so it is natural to feel overwhelmed and small in the face of it. But the thing to remember is you don’t have to take it all on your shoulders, doing one small thing is better than nothing at all. I suggest starting by considering two things: your political representation and your own behaviors and impact. If you care about climate change, but your local, state, and federal representatives don’t, write them, call them, petition them and if things don’t change, vote them out of office. Then look at your own personal impact. Choose one thing you can improve and be discerning each time you spend a dollar. “Does this brand represent my values?” I rarely spend a dime unless I know can answer this question in the affirmative. And lastly, know sustainability is a learning process. I by no means am zero-waste and 100% renewable. I still have paper towels in my kitchen but I will tell you a roll lasts a whole lot longer now and they are made from 100% recycled materials.gina stovall | simple matters | reading my tea leaves

ERIN: You recently launched Two Days Off, a small sustainable clothing line. Can you talk a bit about what getting dressed simply mean to you—in terms of both form and function?

GINA: In my twenties I was one of those women with an overflowing closet and “nothing to wear.” Much of it was thrifted and vintage, but still went to waste hanging in my closet as if they were museum pieces. Spending so much time hemming and hawing each morning was such a waste of my energy and time. It wasn’t until I decided to go to graduate school that I realized I needed that time back. I began being more honest with myself and what I actually liked wearing versus what I wish I wore. Yes, a blazer and a perfect pair of pumps would look nice, but what I actually loved wearing was oversized tops and a great tapered pant. Getting dressed simply is about feeling like myself. Wearing clothes that I don’t have to think about through the day but that still make me feel beautiful and confident. That’s what I design for Two Days Off: modern easy pieces made from good quality fabrics. I like natural fibers that breathe and wash well, Items that you don’t have to fuss with to get on, and that you don’t even need to iron, and pieces that will integrate into your wardrobe but add a subtle interest. My dream wardrobe is one that I can reach into with my eyes closed and no matter what I pull out, it will make an outfit I am excited to wear.

gina stovall | simple matters | reading my tea leavesERIN: This fall you participated in the fall 10×10 wardrobe challenge. Can you explain a little bit about the challenge for folks who might not be familiar and talk a bit about the #10x10representationmatters hashtag—created by J. Ito and Bo Kim as a way to center marginalized voices in slow, ethical, and sustainable fashion spaces—and what it meant to you?*

GINA: The 10×10 is a 10-day challenge to mix and match just 10 items of clothing in hopes of becoming more creative with and appreciative of what is already in your wardrobe. It is best known in the slow fashion world on Instagram and it supports the ideas of quality over quantity and investing in versatile pieces that you will love.gina stovall | simple matters | reading my tea leavesAs a multiracial woman working in STEM, I have never existed in a space where I felt represented. Although born in NYC, I spent most of grade school in North Carolina where, as you can imagine, I always felt like the “other.” An otherness that up until recently, even my government regularly reinforced with check a box that said so on every form I ever completed. There is a silent dialogue that happens when a person enters a physical or metaphorical space that indicates to them that they don’t belong. It is uncomfortable and at times hurtful enough to make them leave altogether and submit to that exclusion. That is why #10x10representationmatters was so important this year. The slow fashion movement, like the sustainability movement as a whole, exists in predominantly white spaces. In this way, when only white women are shown in the clothes of ethical and sustainable brands, it tells people of color that these products are not for us—that the movement and/or lifestyle is not for us. This hashtag featured women sharing their thoughts and stories on why inclusion is important and made a call to brands to think and act more inclusively. We all deserve a healthier, more inclusive, and more sustainable society, and we all must take part in creating it.gina stovall | simple matters | reading my tea leaves

ERIN: You’re coming up on your year anniversary of leaving New York City for Los Angeles. I find that a lot of folks equate living simply or mindfully as being synonymous with living in the country, but I find that in some ways city living feels simpler to me. What’s been your experience?

GINA: I can see how living in the country can seem simpler, but I think simple is subjective. It all depends on the lifestyle that suits you. For me, living in cities makes my life simpler because I am closer to the things that fuel me: museums, good restaurants, and a variety of cultures. In New York, I arranged my entire life around a 20-block radius from my apartment downtown and now my radius is even tighter. Simple for me is not having a commute to work (for the past 5 years I have either walked to work or worked from home), it is having a coffee shop that knows my order, or a favorite spot to sit at the park. Simple for me having easy access to an international airport if I want to get away, or a beach if I want to stay close to home. It is a gallery or bookstore I can pop into without any prior planning or checking of hours, and a small home, filled with only the things I need, that requires little maintenance. So at this stage in my life, city life is definitely the simplest option.gina stovall | simple matters | reading my tea leaves

//

To see more of Gina’s work, head to Two Days Off.

To keep up with Gina’s everyday goings on, follow @ginastovall and @twodaysoffclothing on Instagram.

Photos courtesy of Gina Stovall.

*Editor’s Note: This question has been edited to include more context about the #10x10representationmatters hashtag.

The Simple Matters Series is inspired in part by curiosity piqued while writing my book of the same title. I wanted to know what simple matters were for other folks. And why simplicity mattered to them in the first place. My own Simple Matters story came out in January of 2016. It’s still available where most books are sold. (Signed copies are available locally at Stories Bookshop!)

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31 Comments

  • Reply Dlaine November 28, 2018 at 11:15 am

    Wow! This interview is so inspiring. Thank you.

    4
  • Reply Sid November 28, 2018 at 11:48 am

    Beautiful and thoughtful interview. Thanks for sharing!

    2
  • Reply Sam November 28, 2018 at 12:44 pm

    It’s nice to hear from a geologist who can work on the environmental policy side of things. My brother has a geology degree due to interest in the science and the field study and as an environmentally aware person has found it depressing that most of his career opportunities are in petroleum drilling or varying levels of destructive mining industries. Great interview!

    3
  • Reply Robin November 28, 2018 at 1:23 pm

    This was a really interesting read, thank you. I liked the part about why she finds city living to be simpler. I live in a small town and find it to be very supportive of a simple lifestyle. For example, our grocery store is closed by 7 pm, so if you are missing an ingredient for dinner, you simply make do with what you have. There is no running around to the specialty shops, no traffic lights, and quiet, empty forests are only a few blocks away from any point in town. Meeting with friends is so easy since everyone lives within 5 minutes of each other. I had always thought of city lifestyles as congested and isolating, so I appreciated this other point of view. City life sounds good, with every conceivable amenity right there, including international travel. I do end up driving the 400 km route to the nearest city center about once a month.

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    • Reply ERIN BOYLE November 28, 2018 at 1:28 pm

      Yes! Her embrace of city life resonates so much with my own and it was so lovely to hear her put it into words!

      2
  • Reply Kathleen Kennedy November 28, 2018 at 1:29 pm

    Love this interview series. Gina is inspiring and makes gorgeous clothes. Also nice to hear from someone who works in the natural sciences and is doing her part to understand climate change.

    3
  • Reply KB November 28, 2018 at 1:46 pm

    Thank you for sharing! I love how thoughtful and engaged Gina’s perspective is. Like a typical american, I am surrounded by over-consumption and find I need inspiration like this frequently!

    2
  • Reply Kelly Libby November 28, 2018 at 2:13 pm

    So much of this. I never could really put into words why i live in the city (Boston) and why it is simple for me. Suburbia SUFFOCATES me and I cannot handle DRIVING everywhere. And country living seems so hard to me. If i could just get a handle on ways to deal with the NOISE of the city, i’d be the happiest gal around. A white noise machine is in my future on the days when it’s all too much.

    “I can see how living in the country can seem simpler, but I think simple is subjective. It all depends on the lifestyle that suits you. For me, living in cities makes my life simpler because I am closer to the things that fuel me: museums, good restaurants, and a variety of cultures. In New York, I arranged my entire life around a 20-block radius from my apartment downtown and now my radius is even tighter. Simple for me is not having a commute to work (for the past 5 years I have either walked to work or worked from home), it is having a coffee shop that knows my order, or a favorite spot to sit at the park. Simple for me having easy access to an international airport if I want to get away, or a beach if I want to stay close to home. It is a gallery or bookstore I can pop into without any prior planning or checking of hours, and a small home, filled with only the things I need, that requires little maintenance. So at this stage in my life, city life is definitely the simplest option”.

    2
  • Reply Nathalie November 28, 2018 at 2:15 pm

    Very nice interview! I am a climate scientist as well and I would have written the same about my work 🙂

    3
  • Reply Laurie November 28, 2018 at 3:14 pm

    Lovely post & so excited to know about her clothing line! Also…. do you think Gina would be willing to share where she got her rug (in the picture with all the shadows)? It’s really beautiful!

    3
    • Reply Gina Stovall November 28, 2018 at 11:57 pm

      Hi Laurie, thank you so much and yes I am happy to share! I got the rug from All Modern and it is called the “Ciara Hand-Woven Wool Area Rug.” I am not sure they still have it in stock but maybe you can find it elsewhere online. Fingers crossed!

      2
      • Reply Laurie November 29, 2018 at 10:46 am

        Thank you so much, Gina! I appreciate it! 🙂

        2
  • Reply Katie November 28, 2018 at 4:25 pm

    Great post! I really enjoy this series. With her focus on climate change and being in touch with the origin and impact of the things we consume, I would be interested to hear Gina’s (and your) take on the ethics of eating animal products. In a time when we know what a huge negative impact these these products have on the environment, isn’t it our duty to stop buying them?

    Also looking forward to checking out her clothing line!

    3
    • Reply ERIN BOYLE November 28, 2018 at 5:16 pm

      So glad! I’ve touched on this a bunch of times in the past, but my general stance on the ethics of animal products is the same as the ethics of all kinds of consumption—that we should all do our very best to mitigate our impact on the environment in the best way we know how. The ethical superiority of one kind of consumption over another, or one product over another, is *always* going to be a tricky one to parse. What’s worse: butter procured from cow milk or coconut oil whose cultivation might be responsible rainforest degradation? Leather from animal skin or synthetics made from plastic? Wool from sheep or down from geese or polyester that pollutes our oceans? Bacon from pigs or protein from monocrops like soy? Milk from cows or milk from almonds that require more water than California has to offer? It all gets pretty murky fast, doesn’t it? What I do think is clear is that drastically limiting our consumption of meat would be a universally climate positive act, so that’s what my family has done. Still, I don’t think there’s one easy answer and I do think it’s crucial that we bear in mind the privilege of being able to make these choices in the first place.

      2
      • Reply Emily November 28, 2018 at 10:03 pm

        I love the point you make about the privilege of the choices we have. I can’t even begin to express my gratitude for my incredible local grocery that carries local, ethically raised organic meat that I am able to afford. It can be so easy to take for granted.

        2
      • Reply Sasha L November 29, 2018 at 11:53 am

        On the point of almond milk vs core (or any of the alternative milks vs cow), the podcast Science vs did a great story on this very issue. And found that almond milk still comes out ahead, even with the water issue.

        Also, it’s easy to avoid soy if vegetarian, or use only organic and non GMO.

        Everyone, you do you, but on the topic of whether animal consumption is better for the planet than veganism, the science really isn’t as conflicted as most think. You’d be hard pressed to make a case against veganism. If you consider ethical and health concerns too, well, people like what they like but shouldn’t be arguing that they’ve got science behind the fact that they don’t want to give up bacon.

        I fully realize most of us are just doing our best. I live in a place that necessitates a lot of gas consumption, and I drive an SUV. I’m very far from zero waste. Even though I know many of my choices aren’t the very best I could make, I still make them, and admit I know better. I know for many animal consumption is the same and I get that. I just don’t like it when it’s presented as a choice that’s environmentally conscious.

        2
        • Reply ERIN BOYLE November 29, 2018 at 1:07 pm

          Thanks for your note Sacha! Excited to listen to that podcast. Really agreed with a lot of what you say. Both, that the science is certainly clear that limiting meat consumption is something that everyone should be doing. And that most of us are still making all kinds of choices that have a negative impact on the environment, wittingly or not. (We’re all using the internet, for starters.)

          1
        • Reply Lauren November 29, 2018 at 1:13 pm

          “Even though I know many of my choices aren’t the very best I could make, I still make them, and admit I know better. I know for many animal consumption is the same and I get that. I just don’t like it when it’s presented as a choice that’s environmentally conscious.” Yes yes yes. P.S. Didn’t hear that Science VS episode on almond milk! I’m surprised, though I do still avoid it (and non-recyclable cartons) most of the time.

          3
  • Reply SarahN November 28, 2018 at 5:38 pm

    I really echo her thoughts on a city working for her – I am 100% sure cities are my place, not the country etc. I like the pace, the people, but also creating the community within that.

    4
  • Reply Dana Leigh Lyons November 28, 2018 at 10:05 pm

    Loved this one! Thank you, Erin & Gina! Especially, for these lines: “It was hard opting out of the picture perfect life that we spent so many years building, but our lifestyle now aligns with and supports our goals and we have never been happier.” “I believe a lot of the environmental problems we have come from over consumption and mindless consumption that doesn’t add much value to our lives. If we become more intentional in all aspects of our lives, I believe that can only have a positive effect on our planet and the most vulnerable among us who feel the impacts environmental degradation the hardest.”

    2
  • Reply Dana November 28, 2018 at 11:35 pm

    Thank you for sharing this perspective. I appreciate learning about how different individuals define “simplicity” for themselves.

    1
  • Reply Lizzy November 29, 2018 at 4:59 am

    What an incredible woman! Environmental sustainability can feel like a lost cause sometimes, but reading posts like this refuels my determination to play a part in the solutions.

    1
  • Reply Fanny November 29, 2018 at 6:57 am

    Beautiful interview and I resonate with so much of what Gina shares. Great simple hands-on ideas on how to make a change. Thank you!

    2
  • Reply Mackenzie @organicbutterflyblog November 29, 2018 at 12:45 pm

    Beautiful and inspiring interview 🙂

    1
  • Reply Rhoda Ismail November 29, 2018 at 1:07 pm

    What a lovely interview, I purchased a few items from Two Days Off and love everything Gina makes and what her company represents! Her mindful approach to life, ethics, and motivation are what we need in our current society, keep up the great work!

    2
  • Reply Sarah December 1, 2018 at 10:03 am

    Lovely interview. Is that a cup of whipped cream that you are about to pour coffee over? Yum!

    2
    • Reply Another Sarah December 8, 2018 at 8:38 am

      A little late to comment, but looks like it could be an “Affogato”, vanilla ice creme with espresso?

      1
    • Reply Gina December 20, 2018 at 1:30 pm

      even later comment but “another Sarah” is right. It is an affogato! A super delicious luxury coffee ☕️

      1
  • Reply J. Ito December 5, 2018 at 5:49 pm

    I love this interview and appreciate the feature of Gina and her amazing work!! It would mean a lot to name and credit where the #10x10representationmatters hashtag came from as it didn’t just emerge— but was a deliberate and thoughtful choice and effort on my part and the part of Bo Kim. As womxn of color who are passionate about slow, ethical, and sustainable fashion, we felt like inclusive representation was missing and created the hashtag as a way to center marginalized voices and experiences in these white fashion spaces. Her Instagram is @linednotes and mine is @little_kotos_closet .
    The hashtag caught some attention because of the collective efforts of many womxn of color and marginalized folx who resonated with the need for these conversations and accountability on the part of makers and influencers— to be more inclusive. Thank you for listening!

    3
    • Reply ERIN BOYLE December 5, 2018 at 6:29 pm

      Sure, of course! Nothing happens in a vacuum—so glad to know more about the origins. Instagram makes it so difficult to follow the thread on these things! Glad to to be in touch and will add a note when I’m at my computer!

      2
      • Reply J. Ito December 5, 2018 at 10:07 pm

        Beautiful, thank you!!

        1

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