Clothing
Donations
When I can't find anything to wear, sometimes I like to browse the
local clothing donations at the neighborhood Goodwill or free box You
see, I am a very finicky shopper. It is very hard for me to figure out
what I want to wear, and half the time I barely care at all anyway. I
try to take some pride in my appearance, but it is hard for me to
justify the expense of buying new clothing when instead I can buy
clothing donations for a fraction of the price at some thrift store.
After all, I might like a shirt enough to pay 5 bucks for it, but I
just don't care about clothing enough to get 25 or 45 dollars of usage
out of that same shirt, even if it is newer or fancier.
The best place to look for donated clothing is still the free box. If
you live in a city without free boxes, you don't know what you are
missing! Basically, people put all kinds of clothing donations in the
free box, and then take whatever they themselves want. For most of
these boxes, the stuff is pretty fresh and clean – less stale
smelling than the junk they sell down at the Goodwill, or the Salvation
Army store any day. Of course, with free box clothing donations, it is
kind of hit or miss, so you can't go there expecting to find a specific
kind of thing like you can at one of the bigger thrift store.
That is why I like buying my clothing donations at Goodwill sometimes.
Near where I live, we have a huge Goodwill, filled with all kinds of
styles from ridiculously outdated and somehow retro-cool to almost
modern, and therefore lame. If you are a t-shirt and jeans guy like I
am, you can't go wrong there. You will invariably find exactly what you
are looking for among the aisles and aisles of clothing donations that
these well-stocked thrift stores carry.
The one thing that you should do at all cost is avoid the trendy used
clothing stores like Buffalo Exchange. These don't even take clothing
donations, but instead pay people for their old threads. Boy do they
charge a pretty penny at these places. I've seen people's old work
shirts on sale for 20 or 30 dollars in some of the more fashionable
thrift stores. What a rip-off!
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