Anonymous wrote:Children's Clothes are meant to be bought at thrift stores. Children grow so fast, they get dirty and are supposed to drag their clothes through the mud, climb on trees and whatnot - I would never buy my children new, expensive clothes...they will be used, worn out clothes after two weeks of wearing them anyway. And I will rather spend the money saved on more important things that NEED to be great quality like shoes, bicycles, things with safety involved like car seats, strollers...and save money for when the kids get older to be able to buy them more costly items.
Anonymous wrote:I have a confession to make. I have enough high-quality, clearance clothes to keep my 3 year old dressed until he enters 1st grade...maybe longer. I"m so glad to see others do this "I liked x, it went on clearance, I purchased in next 3 sizes". Makes me feel far less like a crazy hoarder.
Ebay-ers...can you tell us more about how you get good quality for sure? How do you know?
Anonymous wrote:I use hand me downs or thrift store purchases for nearly all of my kids' clothing. We have a very high net worth. I figure they'll be happier in years to come with no college debt, parents who have plenty of retirement to support themselves + a large inheritance. But I'm just guessing they'll feel that way.
Anonymous wrote:You know what, there's a used clothing store for children in my generally very high-income neighborhood. I go there all the time and find good bargains for high-quality brands. They're not cheap (common to find shoes for $10, for example), but they're massively discounted, built-to-last stuff. We go there often. Mostly it's that I like to recycle.
One of the many, many benefits of living close to $$ is that you can get their used stuff.
On the other hand, a visit to Value Village a few miles away requires a lot of patience, if the goal is to find something of high quality. Rare to find very good things in a sea of less-great stuff, and snapped up very quickly.
So I'm not averse to used, but I do want to get things that'll last, rather than landfill stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Seriously. How much are you saving buying used underwear? I get like a pack of 8 or 10 with characters on it my kids' like for like $10. So in the end, are you really funding a lot of your college fund by using used underwear? I'm the poster who negotiates her bills, but seriously, used underwear?!
Anonymous wrote:One of the many, many benefits of living close to $$ is that you can get their used stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I would consider people who shop at thrift shops poor, not cheap.
Please keep thinking this. Please also keep donating your almost-new brand-name stuff to the thrift stores. Because if you didn't, then I couldn't buy it. Thank you!
+1
Our annual HHI is $200K but many of our clothes and household items come from Value Village.
+200
I'm the original poster who said I think people who shop at thrift shops are poor and not cheap.
We currently have a HHI of $700k+. However, we were at $200k a few years ago before DH started earning. I went to a thrift shop once and I felt dirty just being in there. I would not be proud shopping at a thrift shop. Fine if you do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You put Target and the Dollar Store in the same category?
Yeah I do. Target stuff is cheap as hell, IMO.
