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: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: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
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it. Don't your kids grow? The girl who wears UGGs for two years? Really? My kids change grow 2 shoe sizes in one year. That's why I buy the $10 and $20 shoes at Target. They don't need to hold up that long.
As for clothes, I have 2 girls, 3 years apart. The older one gets all hand me downs from her cousin. Those get passed down to the younger daughter. Occasionally if I buy something new, I get it from Children's Place and it usually lasts long enough for both girls to wear. Not the highest quality, but not expensive if on sale.
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.
Anonymous wrote:I have two daughters but find that the only brands that I can hand down are tea/Hannah or boden. No way is an old navy tshirt going to last past one season but a Hanna tshirt will.
Anonymous wrote:Morally wrong to shop at a thrift store? Unbelievable. How about environmentally aware? Since when is being part of the recycling process morally wrong?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Still, buying chidlren used clothing from a thrift shop, that is for people on welfare and foodstamps. I actually think if you are shopping for kids clothes at thrift shops and you are not truly poor, what you are doing is kind of morally wrong. There are people who really need those items and you are buying it instead just to be "thrifty".
Wow - that is unbelievable. Thrift stores are not like food stamps where you have to qualify with a certain lower income in order to participate. The funds used for thrift store purchases help the community, the items purchased help the environment, and if I am able to afford any clothing I want but instead buy items for $1/each and instead am able to fully fund my kids' college education, they are in designer, well-maintained clothes, and I will ultimately be able to leave them tons of money when I die...which do you think is a wiser choice. Oh wait - I don't really want YOUR opinion on it. I want the opinion of someone who is more money-savvy.
Anonymous wrote:Still, buying chidlren used clothing from a thrift shop, that is for people on welfare and foodstamps. I actually think if you are shopping for kids clothes at thrift shops and you are not truly poor, what you are doing is kind of morally wrong. There are people who really need those items and you are buying it instead just to be "thrifty".
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.