Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s too hard for me to do that. They are still growing and need clothes at times or need something for a certain occasion. Instead, I stopped doing seasonal of back to school shopping at once. I buy a few things at a time as they need them. If they want something unreasonable, I say no. Within the next couple of weeks DD and DS will look at their clothes and see if they have enough to start the year with that fits and in decent condition. Then they will likely pick out more online a month or so into the school year. It’s still hot when they start so they wear summer clothes at the beginning.
The biggest decisions and sometimes cost can be with shoes. They will want to see what others are wearing even though they don’t admit it.
Same here. Size changes are hard to anticipate. I would instead say “you need X number of shirts, shoes etc., and we will get them from target or h and m, and anything above that you will pay for.” Something like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD will be a freshman this year. We are a little out of practice with back to school shopping after all the time at home, and her body and tastes have obviously changed. For those of you with kids who don't wear school uniforms, what's your seasonal budget for clothes? My plan is to set a number and for anything over, she pays from her own money. But I'm honestly not sure what to budget for a teen fall wardrobe in 2021. would love some perspective from other parents here.
that depends on your overall budget. There are teens with thousands to spend and teens who rely on donations. I don't understand how you could crowdsource a budget for a wardrobe because every situation is unique
OP here. Good point- I guess I was looking for overall approaches on how people budget but if there are others in a situation specifically similar to ours, some more info might help. NOVA suburbs, public school, dual income >$700K. Affording stuff for DD and DS is generally not an issue. Trying hard not to raise spoiled kids though, so striking a balance between how much we can vs how much we should spend on stuff, activities, etc is always on our minds.
Anonymous wrote:Fast-fashion? The environment?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD will be a freshman this year. We are a little out of practice with back to school shopping after all the time at home, and her body and tastes have obviously changed. For those of you with kids who don't wear school uniforms, what's your seasonal budget for clothes? My plan is to set a number and for anything over, she pays from her own money. But I'm honestly not sure what to budget for a teen fall wardrobe in 2021. would love some perspective from other parents here.
that depends on your overall budget. There are teens with thousands to spend and teens who rely on donations. I don't understand how you could crowdsource a budget for a wardrobe because every situation is unique
OP here. Good point- I guess I was looking for overall approaches on how people budget but if there are others in a situation specifically similar to ours, some more info might help. NOVA suburbs, public school, dual income >$700K. Affording stuff for DD and DS is generally not an issue. Trying hard not to raise spoiled kids though, so striking a balance between how much we can vs how much we should spend on stuff, activities, etc is always on our minds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD will be a freshman this year. We are a little out of practice with back to school shopping after all the time at home, and her body and tastes have obviously changed. For those of you with kids who don't wear school uniforms, what's your seasonal budget for clothes? My plan is to set a number and for anything over, she pays from her own money. But I'm honestly not sure what to budget for a teen fall wardrobe in 2021. would love some perspective from other parents here.
that depends on your overall budget. There are teens with thousands to spend and teens who rely on donations. I don't understand how you could crowdsource a budget for a wardrobe because every situation is unique
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s too hard for me to do that. They are still growing and need clothes at times or need something for a certain occasion. Instead, I stopped doing seasonal of back to school shopping at once. I buy a few things at a time as they need them. If they want something unreasonable, I say no. Within the next couple of weeks DD and DS will look at their clothes and see if they have enough to start the year with that fits and in decent condition. Then they will likely pick out more online a month or so into the school year. It’s still hot when they start so they wear summer clothes at the beginning.
The biggest decisions and sometimes cost can be with shoes. They will want to see what others are wearing even though they don’t admit it.
Same here. Size changes are hard to anticipate. I would instead say “you need X number of shirts, shoes etc., and we will get them from target or h and m, and anything above that you will pay for.” Something like that.
Anonymous wrote:DD will be a freshman this year. We are a little out of practice with back to school shopping after all the time at home, and her body and tastes have obviously changed. For those of you with kids who don't wear school uniforms, what's your seasonal budget for clothes? My plan is to set a number and for anything over, she pays from her own money. But I'm honestly not sure what to budget for a teen fall wardrobe in 2021. would love some perspective from other parents here.
Yep, too hard with size changes. It depends how much they need.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s too hard for me to do that. They are still growing and need clothes at times or need something for a certain occasion. Instead, I stopped doing seasonal of back to school shopping at once. I buy a few things at a time as they need them. If they want something unreasonable, I say no. Within the next couple of weeks DD and DS will look at their clothes and see if they have enough to start the year with that fits and in decent condition. Then they will likely pick out more online a month or so into the school year. It’s still hot when they start so they wear summer clothes at the beginning.
The biggest decisions and sometimes cost can be with shoes. They will want to see what others are wearing even though they don’t admit it.
Same here. Size changes are hard to anticipate. I would instead say “you need X number of shirts, shoes etc., and we will get them from target or h and m, and anything above that you will pay for.” Something like that.
Anonymous wrote:It’s too hard for me to do that. They are still growing and need clothes at times or need something for a certain occasion. Instead, I stopped doing seasonal of back to school shopping at once. I buy a few things at a time as they need them. If they want something unreasonable, I say no. Within the next couple of weeks DD and DS will look at their clothes and see if they have enough to start the year with that fits and in decent condition. Then they will likely pick out more online a month or so into the school year. It’s still hot when they start so they wear summer clothes at the beginning.
The biggest decisions and sometimes cost can be with shoes. They will want to see what others are wearing even though they don’t admit it.