Month: July 2023

The State of the Thrift

Summer is my peak thrift adventure season, so it’s a good time for a check-in about the State of The Thrift. What’s new, what am I seeing, what’s happening? Well, a few things; let’s unpack.

By now, I assume everyone knows that the parent company of Value Village (Savers in the US) is the Walmart conglomerate. What you may not have heard is that the Savers Value Village company, as it was recently renamed, issued its own IPO and is now trading on the stock market. And doing well, it seems. What this means for thrifters remains to be seen. The linked Globe & Mail article talks about plans to expand “boutique” stores in Canada, which is a concept I hate. Goodwill already jumped on that idea years ago, and their execution has been abysmal; thrift stores simply don’t have the knowledge and quality control to offer a well-curated secondhand shopping experience. They’re thrift stores, not consignment stores, and should stay in their lane.

As far as impact of the IPO on VV prices, who knows? I always assumed that, even before going public, the profit motive was strong at VV because of its connection to Walmart. It’s probably even stronger now because they have their own shareholders to please. I did notice a general price increase trend at VV a few years ago, but prices have actually been coming down (in my experience here) in the last year or so. Contrast that to Goodwill, which seems to be aiming to take their prices to the moon. That’s not to say that VV doesn’t thrift grift – i.e. arbitrarily jack up prices on some more “desirable” items – too, but it’s not as egregious as Goodwill, in my experience.

I think it comes down to this: thrift stores have to find the right balance between getting as much money on each item as they can, and moving a lot of inventory quickly (because so much stuff gets donated all the time and there is only so much space in a store). Price too high, and things sit too long. Price too low, and your profit margins shrink.

My sense – and this is just my gut – is that VV tends to favour volume of sales over price margins a little bit more than Goodwill. I find this especially true for housewares. Books, on the other hand, are an infinitely better deal at Goodwill currently; they are flat-priced at $2 a book, whereas VV prices books individually and often for more than they sold at retail (you can still see the original stickers sometimes which annoys me so much). Clothing-wise, 6-7 years ago, Goodwill offered much better deals than VV; now, they are generally on par except when it comes to Goodwill’s list of “premium brands” that are priced individually and way too high without regard for actual condition, quality or style. It’s also worth noting that, in Edmonton, Goodwill’s prices now start at $7 per item (tank tops, regardless of brand) and go up from there. At VV, it’s possible to find clothing items as low as $3-4.

So, yes, it will be interesting to see what happens with thrift prices over the next year or so. Increasing prices have been a trend across North America, if thrifting sub-Reddits are any indication. I am hoping this trend starts to reverse (or at least stabilize), particularly given what I am also seeing as far as the quality of inventory. Let’s talk about that next.

2018-2020 was peak Thrift Times in Edmonton. The amount of high end designer clothing you could find on a regular basis was INSANE. All of my best thrift scores are from that era. Nowadays, designer stuff is vanishingly rare and what can be found is generally a tier or two down from premium. Think Nordstrom Rack, not Neiman Marcus. Moving down the scale, even nicer mall brands in good condition – Anthro, Aritzia, J. Crew, etc. – are getting rarer. Zara and H&M are now some of the “best” trendy pieces to be found on a regular basis. Meanwhile, Shein is becoming more and more ubiquitous. Some of this can be attributed to what I call the Poshmark Effect – more people are selling their nicer pieces rather than donating – and some of it just reflects the clothing retail market. Shein and its ilk are suffocating the fashion industry (not to mention the environment).

Right now, the best bang for your buck, IMO, is the vintage 90s and early 2000s stuff that can still be found from time to time, assuming that suits your aesthetic. The quality is phenomenal when compared to current day items pretty much across the brand spectrum – and I am talking about non-fancy stuff like Gap, Eddie Bauer, Liz Claiborne, and so on. But this won’t last. I think we are seeing the last of these vintage remnants. In a few more years, people will have run out of 90s clothing to donate. The problem is that the quality of clothing started to go down beginning in the late 2000s, so what will get donated will be lower and lower quality as time goes on … until thrift stores will be nothing but racks of Shein.

This applies to housewares too, by the way. Lots of boomers are currently downsizing, so there is a steady influx of mid-century modern stuff making its way to thrift stores. Furniture is harder to come by, mostly because I think that gets sold on Facebook Marketplace or snapped up at estate sales (always worth checking!). But, again, as time goes on, I think we will see a trend of mass produced, cheap goods replacing the quality of yore.

Am I being too pessimistic? Maybe. But my advice right now is: get out and thrift while you can.

Aja Barber recently made a post on Instagram where she talked about how luxury fashion is more sustainable simply because people treat their expensive purchases differently than cheap ones; they buy less, wear more and take better care of the “nice stuff”. Yes, this is inherently classist. But the point is that anything can be more sustainable if you treat it like it. Decent quality can be found at various price points (including fast fashion brands like H&M) but you need to be able to recognize it and, once acquired, to know how to take care of it so it lasts.

You might think that thrifting contributes to an everything-is-disposable mindset, but in my experience that hasn’t been the case. I appreciate the clothes I thrift because it takes more effort to find them than walking into a retail store and picking something off the rack. In a way, each item is a “one off”. Even though I spend comparatively little money on each piece, I take a lot of care to maintain them in good shape so that, if and when they no longer serve me, I can donate them back knowing that they can be used again. My goal is to donate things in a condition where I would not be embarrassed to offer them to a friend. I think people who treat thrift stores like a garbage dump tend to be people who don’t actually thrift themselves, and that’s a shame.

And that’s my pitch for why thrifting is a great way to increase the sustainability of your closet: it’s not only a form of recycling, but it can encourage an attitude shift that also contributes to circularity. Win, win. So, what are you waiting for? Thrift, baby, thrift!

What I Wore: July 2023, part one

Details: Desigual jacket (thrift), Maeve skirt (Poshmark), BR belt (thrift), Stuart Weitzman shoes (thrift)

Thoughts: I know patterns can be intimidating especially when colourful, but for myself, sometimes the best way to “confront” a bold pattern is by adding another one. In for a penny, in for a pound, as they say. The key is picking patterns that share colours, so the palette is consistent — it keeps the outfit looking harmonious. With a skirt like this — a true Technicolour affair — pretty much any other pattern will meet that criterion. So why not add another truly bonkerballs one? This Desigual jacket has EVERYthing on it … including a whole-ass tiger on the back. It’s not really my style, normally, but it has a kind of chaotic 90s Versace energy that I admired so I got it anyway.

Details: YAS blouse, United Colours of Benetton vest, Urban Outfitters pants, Ferragamo shoes (all thrift)

Thoughts: This ended up being a little bit more matchy-matchy than I typically go for, but it’s nice. I borrowed another one of my husband’s ties; it’s one of my faves, featuring William Morris’ famous Strawberry Thief motif. I was debating whether to choose something more contrast-y, but the print love won the day.

Details: Kaliyanna top (thrift), Gap skirt (swap), unbranded necklace (thrift), Stuart Weitzman shoes (thrift)

Thoughts: I love the oversized houndstooth pattern of this top; I wish I could find something similar in black and white. This was a pretty basic outfit, but it’s elevated by the details. The chunky, oversized necklace works well with the pattern, and together these things make the outfit look more “high fashion” (to me). Big, bold pieces always read as edgier to me than dainty things. I guess I am not subtle, hahaha!

Details: Re/Done tee, J. Crew blazer, CoH jeans, Isabel Marant belt, Stuart Weitzman shoes (all thrift)

Thoughts: Hey, look: it’s my favourite tee making an appearance again, finally! It’s been a while. This tee still bangs. I love it so much. I am forever on the hunt for another one in this same style, but no dice. I’ve been wanting to try this combo of corduroy jacket + graphic tee for a while, but I had to wait for a cooler day to do it. It was worth the wait, this was a good outfit day.

Details: Farm Rio top (Poshmark), Cartonnier pants (thrift), J. Crew shoes and belt (retail), Rafael Alfandary necklace (thrift)

Thoughts: Bookending this post with another pattern-on-pattern combo, but a more subtle one this time. Hmm, I guess I *can* rein it in sometimes. Here, I’m just sticking to geometric patterns — including the necklace (squares and circles). A little clever, if I say so myself. I also got a bit cheeky with the other accessories, not matching the colours. The belt is skinny, so it’s just a hint of a different colour, but I wanted to avoid being too colour-coordinated.

This and That: Birthday Edition

The prospect of another birthday brings many feels with it. First and foremost, I am grateful. Grateful to be here, grateful to be healthy, grateful for family and friends and this whole wonderful life. There is also a note of uncertainty. My 40s have been an unpredictable rollercoaster ride; I have no idea what comes next, and if I’ve learned anything these past 3 years, it’s to not strive to try to predict what comes next, but remain open and curious (and brave). So we grapple with uncertainty and not let it get us down.

And finally, yeah, not gonna lie: I’m excited for the opportunity to indulge myself.

I am not especially strict with myself the rest of the year (hah!) but a birthday is the socially-sanctioned occasion for selfish splurging. Right? Right.

Selfish but not senseless, though. There is something really satisfying about choosing your indulgences carefully. In this, as in every other area of life, value is personal and subjective. For example, I don’t enjoy birthday parties. In principle, I like the idea of being the center of attention at a social gathering; in practice, not so much. I always end up worrying if people are having fun, which quickly spirals into wondering whether they like me, which eventually leads to me staying up till 3 AM to ponder every single verbal and non-verbal interaction to decipher whether I said or did something that could be perceived as offensive, weird, or both. No, thank you.

I also don’t enjoy celebratory dinners at fancy restaurants. I do not have a fancy palate; my idea of a special occasion meal is eating sushi and/or steak and mashed potatoes until I am slightly uncomfortable and then going straight to the couch to have a lie down. Bonus points if I have a good book in my hands and nobody bothers me for the next hour.

For reasons I won’t bore you with, birthday spa days and birthday trips are also not my jam. I could go on, but why. What I’m getting at is simply this: one of the perks of getting older is achieving the freedom to embrace your own quirks without worrying about what other people will make of them. It’s those quirks that make us who we are, and that’s what I want to be celebrating on my birthday.

My indulgences tend to be material things … but, specifically, material things wrapped in an experience. So, for example, a trip to a (used) bookstore to buy a book (or three), rather than being handed the same book in a gift-wrapped package. The experience of being in the store, browsing the shelves, stumbling on some book I never knew I wanted … that’s equally as important as the book(s) I end up taking home. Lately, another favourite thing is antique shopping with my husband; I love finding an inexpensive, overlooked gem, but the part where we drive together to some random part of the city is the real special bit – it’s a chance for us to be alone together for an hour and it feels like a mini road-trip adventure. Especially if we stop at McDonalds for a large Diet Coke on the way. That’s extra level.

What I love about material things wrapped in experiences is that the things become tangible memories. I can look around my house and be surrounded by my happy memories. I find that very comforting.

It so happens that this year we’ll be going to Calgary for a long weekend around the time of my son’s birthday (and just before mine). Family trips epitomize the concept of compromise, so we’ll be doing lots of things I don’t enjoy (but someone else in the family does, like going to the zoo), but also plenty that I love. In no particular order:

  • the first hour and a half of the road-trip before the approved song playlist ends and the inevitable “are we there yets” begin. That sense of optimism and adventure should be bottled.
  • stopping at the Donut Mill on Gasoline Alley. I don’t like donuts that much, but nothing tastes as good as going through the motions of something you’ve done for 30 years. It carries a “rightness” that is unparalleled.
  • taking the kids to Fair’s Fair Books and letting them loose with $30 to spend to their heart’s content. Mostly so I can buy my husband and myself an hour’s quiet browsing (am I being too optimistic? probably … a mother can dream).
  • stopping in at Cody & Sioux to look at pretty turquoise jewelry that my husband can “surprise” me with for my birthday. This is my version of being a kid in a candy store, but I plan to touch EVERYthing.
  • a pilgrimage to the Polo Ralph Lauren outlet store in CrossIron Mills, which is the closest I’ll get to experiencing Papa Ralph’s spirit in person. I’m not sure I’m going to buy anything; I just want to imbibe the atmosphere, as it were.

It’s all wonderfully indulgent and, apart from the fact I’ll be away from my bed for a few nights, a pretty kickass (early) birthday. They do say to start the year as you mean to go on …