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River's avatar

It sounds kinda counterintuitive, but something I’ve tried to do recently is avoid donating or just dropping off clothes that I don’t need whether they don’t fit or no longer appeal to me, especially when those clothes have rips or stains. My reasoning is clothes are much more likely to go into land fills when you drop them off at the Goodwill or your local thrift shop. These places frankly aren’t as good at keeping clothing in a closed ecosystem as they blame to be. Sure if you have very nice clothes, you can sell them, but the goal would be to buy nice things you wouldn’t want to let go of, and even then you can’t guarantee they will be tossed. Thrifting feels like the solution, but walk into any random thrift and you’ll see thousands of clothes that are probably months away from going to the trash. Really giving away is a last resort because I’m sure most people here have walked into an absolutely washed Crossroads or Buffalo Exchange packed to the gills with Zara and Shein.

Instead, when something of mine rips or stains and I can’t fix it (Suay LA is great for bringing new life to stuff like this), I try to repurpose it. Maybe I’ll keep it for fabric to turn patch things or sew some crazy mismatched fabric down the line. Or even more recently during the holidays, I’ve been cutting old shirts into squares and using them to wrap gifts furoshiki style. It’s honestly saved so much hassle with wrapping and it results in unique ways to give someone something special (just don’t use some nasty garments of course). So now my loved ones get to unveil their presents from a sick bright yellow, fish-print linen cloth that didn’t work so well as a shirt, but looks great as gift wrap and decoration!

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Ju Rolo's avatar

My personal journey which may or may not be niche/relevant/of interest is that I'm a long time thrift only guy for whom this sletter has softened my in retrospect sometimes asshole-ish unconscious bias against new garments (obviously the vast majority in general are cancerous but the good stuff) allowing me to appreciate the care + thought in the hearts of their makers. If I see some good shit that speaks to me I'm still always going to try recreate secondhand first but I have greater empathy for their economy all round

Also real talk, thrifting is a grindset and its dirty secret that you perhaps gesture towards here is it is just as easy if not more so to fall (by virtue/sin of cost savings, implicit holiness and repetitive gamification addiction) into the same dead end bug eyed consumerist "State of Shopping" as any swagless chaser of high end clouts

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