Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, you allow your daughter to post pics of herself in dresses so this can hardly seem as shocking as you're making it out to be.
How many 17 year olds do you know not posting things? Just curious. I don’t know any.
Anonymous wrote:When I ask why she can’t wear “the blue one” we just got and she’s worn once, she says “I already posted that one!”
Is this actually a thing? I told her I am not buying disposable, one-wear dresses. She is usually pretty reasonable so this came as a shock to me. She agreed but acted really disappointed. This is clearly coming from the peer group which is irritating.
Anonymous wrote:Get her subscription to rent the runway for her birthday
Anonymous wrote:Come on op. I was in high school in the early 90s. You didn’t wear a dress twice back then either. We might borrow from a friend, but not wearing the same dress to two homecomings or proms if the same people are there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is a dress worn six months ago, in summer, appropriate to wear now? You said every occasion but this is pretty rare.
OP here. One was a family event in early Sept. The next is a school trip to Florida coming up with none of the same people. Totally reasonable to rewear the Sept dress. In fact the dress she showed me she wants to buy is crazy similar.
Anonymous wrote:How is a dress worn six months ago, in summer, appropriate to wear now? You said every occasion but this is pretty rare.
Anonymous wrote:My DD is like this, and I'm frugal, so I get your pain. But with her peer group constantly wearing new things, I understood her feelings. We found a couple ways to make us both happy. First, she has a few cute tops and skirts that she can mix and match to make a "new" outfit from the same clothes. She also shares clothes with friends which also makes something seem new (again) when the friend returns it. She's good about scouring sales and Amazon for inexpensive dresses. Finally, she works and relatives often give her $ gifts, so she can use her own money.