This! |
So much privilege in this thread. Don't return (even when your body is hard to fit!), don't buy clothes more than once every decade (who cares if you gained 100 lbs!), don't buy cheap fast fashion (spent $100 on a t-shirt to wear to work from home). My thighs wear holes in pants every 6 months. Should I patch them every time and wear my leggings until they're see-through, to just keep them from a landfill? Nonense. |
Quite the opposite. Lots of people on here who are too scared or too good for thrift stores. |
It would be cheaper for you to buy high-quality items once that you won’t have to constantly replace. |
Then let them save the good clothes for people who need to thrift to afford anything approaching quality clothes. |
There is no shortage of clothes. |
No thanks |
I have had really good experiences with the Mint Condition off King Street in Old Town. Current Boutique used to be good but now they send most of their "good" stuff to their online store, so you don't really find treasures at the store and it's kind of disappointing/boring if you shop in-store. |
Yes, and it's also the consumer who needs to replace her entire wardrobe (or a large chunk of it) every "season." |
Most people over the age of 12 don’t gain 100 lbs in a decade. I still have clothes that I bought ten or more years ago that have held up pretty well and I still wear. |
I would like for there to be more options for clothing recycling. My kids often wear holes in their pants, so does dh. For my son, I do cut off his pants and let him wear the jean shorts, but dh often wears out the butt and the jeans just aren't reusable. |
I think the “learn to mend” advice is so often overlooked. I know it can’t help when a garment is actually worn out. But I have been mesmerized by the YouTube videos that show you how to mend holes in wool sweaters. My 20+ years old cardigans live on thanks to being able to mend them! |
Keep a rag bag. Cut your old clothing up into large squares and use instead of paper towels. |
Those accounts are super fun, yes. But also fake. Most sweaters do not get holes in cute places where darning looks fun. They get shrunken, stretched out beyond repair, or they never fit well in the first place. Most pants don't get holes in cute places. At least for me, I wear out the thighs of my jeans first. There's no cute way to patch that. I DO have a darning loom now, lol, and I have patched a few kid pants and shirts that are super cute. But I hardly think it's a solution and probably all the stuff I've bought for mending is more harmful in the end than whatever extra use I get out of those pants. With all of these types of problems we should always be highly suspicious of any solutions involving buying anything, even darning looms. It's the reusable cotton tote of it all. |
H&M takes textile recycling. |