walkitout: (Default)
[personal profile] walkitout
Actually, it’s a very old kind of outlet store.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-07-07/liquidators-become-shopkeepers-to-peddle-pandemic-s-unsold-goods

There’s one in Natick, apparently. Basically, we’ve got some empty department stores with the racks and everything still in place, and we’ve got mountains of 2020 goods that sat unsold in locked down stores. Two of those companies that do liquidation sales got together to bolt those things together.

I have no idea how long this will last, but it makes sense that it is out there now. Better that than going to a landfill, for sure.

My daughter says I’m pretty mean when I blog (look, she is in NO WAY wrong), and I explained that I write stuff in my blog so the people I actually care about don’t have to hear it in person unless they really want to. Anyone who objects to my blog gets even worse, until they go away, or I break down and block them (<== rare, but it happens). (Obviously, if I say something factually incorrect, I will make an effort to correct it when I realize that.) Anyway, I figured I’d make an effort here to write something that was not mean. It won’t last.

My sister has been thrifting lately, and her kids are enjoying the hell out of it. She’s always tended to thrift rather than buy new, and lately she’s been getting a kick out of buying to resell on eBay and similar. She’s got a better than average eye for what might resell for more, and of course she’s found a bunch of tools to help her out with the pricing and has figured out how to search sold items on eBay to figure out what is currently moving. I get the appeal; my own spot on the time / money tradeoff chain is such that it’s not a sport I’m going to be engaging in any time soon. But we were raised on garage sales and used furniture stores, and pinching pennies until they scream for mercy is multigenerational kick in our ancestry. My dad tells fond stories of the deals his dad got on like-new toys in the early ‘30s; we are in no way too proud to benefit from the downfall of others.

Several trends were already intersecting to make re-commerce a thing even before the pandemic. Linkage to follow.

https://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/rise-re-commerce-everything-old-new/

Article from Jan 2020 about Rent the Runway, thredUP, with a focus on consumer guilt. “He said it features high-quality attractive photos, clear information and sophisticated functionality so it resembles retail platforms rather than platforms selling items people are getting rid of.” I was surprised to learn that “thredUP has been forming partnerships with large retailers such as Macy’s and J.C. Penney, and it is now operating over 100 store-in-store collaborations.” That’s eye-poppingly similar to that point in time when bookstores, trying to stave off the threat from then-bookstore Amazon, resorted to selling new and used in the same stores. More rapid turnover (new things arriving more frequently) gets more people in the door (this is, after all, a pre-pandemic piece). My sister has noted differing levels of crowds in the different towns / shops she has thrifted, so it’s something she is sensitive to and thus probably an indicator of effective pricing strategies. Other interesting item in this piece: Rent the Runway got started by trying to regularize the “Buy” expensive dress, wear expensive dress once, return expensive dress in a department store behavior. Ha! Totally makes sense — did not see that coming at all. Interesting discussion at the end about whether buying used is okay for a gift.

https://econreview.berkeley.edu/rise-of-thrifting-solution-to-fast-fashion-or-stealing-from-the-poor/

More things to feel guilty about! One of the criticisms of things like Imperfect Foods or Misfits Market is that selling ugly produce at a significant markup to the privileged diverts food from the Poor Who Need It to Be Cheap. I’m never sure whether there is any validity to this kind of argument (seems sus, when my friends who volunteer at food banks are still telling horror stories of all the perfectly good food they wind up throwing away every week), but here it is with clothing! The popularity of thrifting is apparently especially bad to the extent it drives up the price of used plus size clothing. *blink*

See, this just seems weird? I mean, if the price of the used item goes up, people take a hard look at it to see if there is an opportunity. Donation generates a lot of thrifted supply, but resell from original owners is a component as well. Just like with cars, as used prices go up, someone who can afford to buy new will do so more frequently, if they can extract more value earlier from the earlier purchase. But, you know, whatever.

https://www.statepress.com/article/2020/09/specho-the-noxious-progression-of-thrifting-culture

Nice amount of detail about Depop, more angsting about lack of plus sizes at thrift stores, prices going up at thrift stores (supply / demand / duh), the deployment of gentrification terminology and all kinds of other stuff here.

Skinny people buying plus size to rework garments is apparently a Thing that as attracted some Ire as well. https://medium.com/emfatic/buying-plus-size-clothes-at-thrift-stores-is-a-pain-in-the-a-7b2de2f6af83 This article has links to more examples of the people-buying-big-stuff-for-the-fabric, but more relevantly, it has this:

“one pair of cute as hell, brand new (still had the tags and the baggie with the extra button) $60 gray dress pants in my size for $5. There was just one problem: when I tried them on, they fit perfectly around the waist but were more than a foot too long”

!!!

OK, so, first, learn to fucking sew hems on pants. That’s not even that hard. Cost is a needle and color compatible thread and either tape or pins. Over and under and tie a knot. OK, scissors or a knife, too. Fine. It’s classier if you iron it, but not totally necessary. Second, in a pinch, you can just fucking tape the legs; I’ve done it before for someone in a hurry and it works fine. Third, if you can’t sew and won’t sew and won’t get some tape, then make a friend who sews. If I knew you, I’d do it for you.

I think I’m just about done here. I will either be back with another link or N, or I’ll start another post.

Above average summary: https://www.popsci.com/story/environment/thrift-second-hand-shopping-sustainable-ethical/

I’m still mulling over the But You’ll Price the Poor Out argument. If we’re mostly shipping stuff overseas and only the cherry-picked stuff is landing on the floor, one would assume they could replenish easily. Also, and more relevantly, the charity shop exists to extract cash for the cause — it’s only partly there to supply the Poors with clothing. In any event, plenty of middle class folks have been shopping thrift forever to avoid paying more money; they could have, but they didn’t want to. Goodwill probably would like it if they could drift their prices up; they could use the cash for their causes. Also, some amount of pandemic price rises in thrift stores must have reflected broad increases in operating costs due to pandemic changes (need for additional cleaning, ventilation upgrades, PPE, etc.).

Date: 2021-07-21 03:23 am (UTC)
ethelmay: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ethelmay
The main reason there aren't enough plus-size clothes in thrift stores is that there aren't enough plus-size clothes made for the market. And that lady did say she could have had the pants hemmed, but she decided to leave them in case there was a tall woman in size 26 who needed them the way they were, because there was so little selection. I might or might not have decided the same way myself, but her reasoning makes sense to me.

I do run into cases of charity stores that started out selling cheap and turning over their stock a lot where some of the volunteers decided they should be classier and charge more, and it was a bust - they lost a lot of custom because they weren't good at picking prices. Not so much that it was bad to jack the prices up at all, but that they underestimated how much skill and time it takes to process clothes and differentiate prices by quality and condition. There are a bunch of different good ways to do secondhand stuff, and I've paid widely varying prices depending on the venue without a murmur, but people shouldn't do the ones they're bad at.
ethelmay: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ethelmay
If you shop for certain stuff at thrift stores all the time, and you know there is high demand for something there's never enough supply of at thrift stores, yeah, you know there's a fair chance a taller woman will come along (or else someone who is willing to hem the pants). But at the end of a long frustrating day going to multiple stores, "these are really good but I'd have to hem them" was enough to tip her over to "fuck it, I'll buy new." Basically she's saying for her, they aren't the perfect pants, and it's not at all unlikely that for someone else they will be, and as there's a constraint on supply, she's going to be a pal and leave them for someone else.

Incidentally, I recently got free pants off Buy Nothing that I had to hem. I hemmed them once, and they were still too long because I misjudged. I took that hem out and hemmed them again and they were pretty good. The other evening I was walking barefoot in the sand and the pants were dragging, so I turned them up the width of the hem, which was a good two inches. They were still only just above my foot. (I can't explain it. B. says maybe I am just getting stumpier.) I will probably have to hem them a third time. Not to mention my hems don't always look good enough to be appropriate at work. It doesn't matter for pants that I love because they have breathable hiking fabric and eleven pockets, rather than for their looks, but it would for office pants.

I think the idea is to reduce the demand as well as the supply for clothing (people not buying way, way, way more than they need), and to have rather more inventory, or more consistently available inventory, in larger sizes (larger people getting to buy as much as they need). Those don't seem at all incompatible to me. The more you get people what they actually need, the more they use the thing they bought and the less waste there is.
ethelmay: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ethelmay
I wasn't at all talking about how we get to the supply/demand balance needed. I was just saying it could work if it did get there. But you were just talking recently about companies reducing production due to the pandemic, which does seem like reducing supply due to lack of demand (albeit not "in the face of excess supply").
ethelmay: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ethelmay
Totally agree about water and fossil fuels, but also, what about wages and working conditions? Eliminating child labor, the worst sweatshops, etc., would likely bring supply down, and should be done anyway.

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