Anonymous wrote:There is this one mom in our neighborhood whose husband is a partner at a law firm. His specialty area is energy/oil (constantly flying to Houston). And she is CONSTANTLY selling every. single.thing on the neighborhood listserv. Honestly, I can't help but judge. Every time I see her post I think "can't you give ANYTHING away lady?" It just seems so greedy and tacky.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my Bethesda neighborhood people just give things away. Nobody wants to deal with the work of washing, sorting, photographing, dealing with emails. Not worth it for the money. Either people donate to a charity or give to neighbors to reuse. In my former Moco neighborhood,, which is less wealthy and where I'm still on some lists everybody sells everything still. Guess they value money more and time less.
+1 I live in a rich neighborhood and no one sells children’s clothes, it’s all on Buy Nothing.
Why are rich people doing buy nothing groups? I mean other than self righteousness.
To have people come and get their stuff instead of having to drive to goodwill. Convenience is king. I do it too.
Seriously having the ability to just put stuff out on your porch and someone comes and grabs it is easy peasy
Anonymous wrote:I buy used clothes at kids consignment shops in NOVA (Bellies & Babies, Blossom & Buds, 529, Lemon Lane, etc.). I think they have great, well-priced selections.
Like others mentioned, my area (Old Town) has a very active Buy Nothing group where I have gotten great clothing (and it’s where I give away all our clothes). So never a need to look on marketplace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my Bethesda neighborhood people just give things away. Nobody wants to deal with the work of washing, sorting, photographing, dealing with emails. Not worth it for the money. Either people donate to a charity or give to neighbors to reuse. In my former Moco neighborhood,, which is less wealthy and where I'm still on some lists everybody sells everything still. Guess they value money more and time less.
+1 I live in a rich neighborhood and no one sells children’s clothes, it’s all on Buy Nothing.
Why are rich people doing buy nothing groups? I mean other than self righteousness.
To have people come and get their stuff instead of having to drive to goodwill. Convenience is king. I do it too.
Anonymous wrote:People definitely expect too much for most of their used baby clothes. I made the mistake of buying a few things off a neighborhood list serve and once they arrived I could see they had stains and other signs of wear but were sold as "like new." Since then I only buy or sell from reputable consignment shops where you get less as a seller (because they take a cut) but the clothes are pre-screened for quality and I think with the higher percentage you get for store credit is a better way to get high quality clothes on the cheap