I really liked this video by A to Zen Living about her thrift shop tips:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jZLYOhoQ69MThe tip that surprised me was that she recommends covering the items in your cart while you're shopping, because thrifters can be ruthless and will just take stuff from your cart if you're not looking. Wow. I've never experienced that.
The tip that had me nodding vigorously was that she said always look up the retail prices of the items you're considering, because thrift stores aren't always the bargain you think they are. YES. This is actually why I mostly don't thrift anymore, and why I basically am boycotting Goodwill.
As long as I'm here, talking about how scammy Goodwill feels to me lately, here's a massive digression about thoughts I've been having on the topic of consumer goods in America currently:
My kids and I like to watch classic episodes of
The Price is Right. It's streaming on Roku. We're talking 70's/80's Bob Barker
Price is Right. Tell you what, the show is a trip. The fashion/hairstyles! The games!
But the craziest part is the price of many products...so many prices are basically the same now as they were thirty/forty years ago. I think I saw a washer/dryer set on there that was $900. You can buy a washer/dryer set NOW for ~$900. It'll be a barebones model, but still. And tvs! And furniture! It's like inflation just never happened...which makes me realize that actually consumer goods back when I was a kid were really, really expensive. People must have had to save up for ages to buy their stuff. Having to buy a new washer/dryer must have seemed catastrophic for a lower/middle class family back then. Whereas for me, if my dryer craps out, we buy another one and don't even have to go into savings for it.
The fact is that "crap" and clothes of the sort you find at thrift stores is just dirt cheap nowadays to buy new. The quality is typically pretty poor, so thrifting is often not really a great deal, because by the time most items wind up there, their lifespan of usefulness is effectively over.
Want more of a digression? This has led me to better understand an interesting phenomenon I've been noticing for years among the boomer parents of me and my friends. The boomers so frequently have a completely different relationship to clothes and stuff than the attitude among my (Gen X/Millennial) cohort.
Until last summer, when she finally brought herself to downsize into a 2 bedroom apartment, my mom had an attic full of stuff that she could hardly bring herself to even consider letting go of. Lots of it was antiques from the 19th century. Slowly but surely she was able to sell some of it to dealers and on ebay, which I was proud of her for, because so many of my friends' parents can't even do that much. My friend's mom still has all the carseats/pack n plays from when my friend was a baby! My friend is 39 years old!!!
Meanwhile I'm over here decluttering things the SECOND my kids give me the okay. Sometimes I actually pay my kids to donate their toys. My mom watches me and is horrified. "What if you want another kid?" she'll ask, while I ruthlessly donated strollers and onesies and all the clutter of babies/toddlers. "I bought all this stuff at the kids consignment sale or my friends gave it to me and I could probably replace all of it for under $200 if I needed to. Out it goes!" And my mom is like..."You just don't seem to get attached to stuff..." She's kind of horrified by me. I think it feels really wasteful to her.
And I think that's because stuff used to be so much more expensive, people felt way more precious about their stuff. And now as a culture we're absolutely awash in stuff. It's now actually more of a flex to have a simplified, organized, minimalist home.
Anyway I mostly avoid thrift shops (and don't even get me started on things like Ross or TJMaxx--thrift shop quality for ridiculously high prices) because I'd rather save money by buying as little as possible, and what I do buy, I buy new of the highest quality I can find so I don't have to replace it for as long as possible. Although I do still love the kids' consignment sales.