Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’d donate the clothes to goodwill or take new things to consignment and have an estate sale for the rest.
Please do not donate crappy stuff. DH recently dropped off a few bags of clothing that were gently used, washed, folded nicely, and organized to a donation center. He said the woman exclaimed about his thoughtful it was, and expressed her gratitude.
I’ve worked at donation sorting sites, and it is a waste of time to trash books that are falling apart or soap you got from a hotel in 1982.
Or stained, damaged clothing and furniture. So many people donate trash, that trash removal is one of every charity's largest costs.
There is a lot of confusion about rag recycling and charities.
My town's fabric recycling bins at a big municipal recycling center were from a charity's website that originally said they take any clean fabric items. But then they changed the newer bins at places outside the center to read something more like resaleable items only.
H&M says they take any clean fabric items for recycling but a journalist found that H&M's collected items were being dumped in trash piles in another country.
I walked into my local Salvation Army and asked 3 staff people if they wanted/would accept imperfect clothes for rag recycling. Things like kids' jeans that had intact knees when purchased, holey when outgrown.
Or faded and pilled. I couldn't get a straight answer out of any of them. They said to donate the stuff and let them figure it out.
Now I just throw all worn fabric items in the trash.