24 Feb 2008 12:33:15 | Cheryl Johnson
Reducing the clothing budget was a serious challenge for me.
Two pre-teen girls and a teenage girl certainly didn’t make life
any easier. My son wasn’t much of a challenge. Thank goodness,
he’s not “fashion conscious”.
The girls on the other hand were greatly disappointed in the
new methods of clothing acquisition. Freebies, thrift stores,
yard sales, consignment shops, and clearance items weren't
exactly their style.
I found that changing the way I approached them on the subject
made things a little easier. For instance we don’t buy “used”
clothing. We buy “previously owned, unwanted, or gently worn”
clothing.
I strongly believe that knowledge is power. And, if you want to
save money on anything, you must do your research! Informed
consumer = More Savings, that's my motto. It took some shopping
around for me to locate the best clothing value for my money. I
did eventually find the one place where I consistently find
excellent values with a great variety of choices.
I find most of my clothing “treasures” at a thrift store about
15 miles from my home. It’s well worth the drive considering the
great values I come away with! My cost per item averages about
$3. I rarely spend more than $5 and once in a great while I’ll
splurge on a $6.95 item (usually new with tags still intact and
a super value compared to the original price)
The thrift store where I shop is owned and operated by the
National Children’s Center , a local organization that provides
educational services, early intervention preschool, and child
care to infants and young children with and without
developmental delays.
You will find that many of your local thrift stores are
non-profit and support worthy charities.
I get a terrific value on name brand clothes popular with my
girls peers, (Old Navy, Zana di, Paris Blues, Angel, Lei, Guess,
Levi, Bubblegum, Mudd, limited Too, Adidas). Well there’s not
much I haven’t been lucky enough to find at this store.
As a bonus my purchase also supports a worthy cause. And let’s
not forget that recycling these “unwanted” clothes is
environmentally friendly. Everybody wins with these kinds
of purchases. These are important benefits that ease the
embarrassment children sometimes experience when they
shop at thrift stores.
If your children are informed of all these benefits, they have
the power to explain why they shop at thrift stores, if
it ever comes up, and it doesn‘t have be for financial reasons.
The wonderful part is, it will probably never come up in a
conversation with their peers. My children have never had to
explain themselves. Most items are of good quality and only
gently used.
You would never know we are enjoying a frugal lifestyle with
a wardrobe like this!
In fact, with their closest friends the girls freely brag about
the terrific deals we get on clothing. Some of their friends are
even envious because of the wide selection of popular brand name
jeans the girls are fortunate to own.
They have come to the realization that five pairs of name brand
jeans at the thrift store is a whole lot better than one at the
department store price.
I have found many brand new items with tags still
intact. No way for friends to know where these great clothes
came from. They probably assume they shop at some expensive
department store or specialty shop.
We actually have fun shopping at the thrift store now. I have
even caught a hint of excitement in them from time to time.
Maybe my excitement for saving money is rubbing off.
Not! I think it’s just the fabulous clothes we find! I know the
saving thing will kick in later. That’s what counts, teaching
them how to be financially independent in life.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Besides visiting your local thrift stores you should check out
these other great resources for low cost clothing.
Clothing needs change so often for children. When you consider
they grow so rapidly at certain stages in life, it just makes
good sense to reduce cost on clothing.
Spending $30-$50 on one pair of jeans is just wasteful.
They will only get a few months of wear before they grow out of
them or decide they don’t like them anymore!
Yard sales are great resource for anything you might need. It
may be a little more time consuming to go this route, but the
rewards can be great.
If you plan your yard sale trips correctly you can save a lot of
time. As you become an experienced yard sale consumer, you will
learn where yard sales are frequent in your area.
Combine this information with advertised yard sales in the local
paper and on roadside signs and organize your trip to minimize
your travel time.
You will sometimes find bags of clothes for a great "take all"
price. Even if everything isn’t usable you will usually get
enough useful clothing to make the purchase a good value.
Make sure the clothes are in the right size range or are
something they will grow into within a reasonable amount of
time. If you have the time and purchasing items individually is
an option, go through the bag. Purchase only what you know will
be useful. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Consignment shops are rapidly becoming popular. Not only can you
find some bargain purchases here they may be a valuable resource
for you to turn your unwanted items into money. You let them do
all the storing, selling, and paperwork, all you have to do is
collect your money! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I have a friend who sells all of her unwanted “designer”
clothing on the E-Bay auction site. I have not ventured to
purchase clothing on ebay myself as of yet, but have purchased
many other items such as books, movies, and gifts.
Ebay is a great resource for new and pre-owned items, including
clothing. Especially if you are geographically limited as far as
shopping goes.
Of course there are other auction sites where you might find
clothing. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In conclusion your best defense against overspending is
information.
In the end the best value for you is what works best for you.
And, what's available to you in your area. Investigate all your
options and determine where the best value is based on your own
needs. Yes, I'm going to say it again! Sorry.
Informed Consumer = More Savings
Happy Savings! Live Debt Free to Be Free. You Deserve It!
About Author :
Cheryl Johnson is a mother of four helping herself and others
become and stay debt free. Publisher of Simple Debt Free Living
at
http://www.simpledebtfreeliving.com- A self-help plan,
ideas, and resources for debt reduction, personal budgeting,
frugal living, and extr
a income opportunities