Back Before Thrifting was ruined

Bearcat22

New Member
Used to be you could find inexpensive and even rare things in thrift shops. Predatory resellers and desperate upper middle class
shoppers have ruined that forever.

Years ago I took up the hobby of playing board games, and sometimes wanted to try one but could not find it still in print or could
not afford to buy it, so I started buying games at thrift shops.....something a person got as a gift, sat in a closet for years and finally donated.3
Some real hidden gems.

Then I took up the hobby of making my own copycat versions of out of print or expensive games by hand, very rewarding and fun. The website BoardGameGeek has wonderful
advice and resources to help you do this if you're interested.
 
Used to be you could find inexpensive and even rare things in thrift shops. Predatory resellers and desperate upper middle class
shoppers have ruined that forever.

Years ago I took up the hobby of playing board games, and sometimes wanted to try one but could not find it still in print or could
not afford to buy it, so I started buying games at thrift shops.....something a person got as a gift, sat in a closet for years and finally donated.3
Some real hidden gems.

Then I took up the hobby of making my own copycat versions of out of print or expensive games by hand, very rewarding and fun. The website BoardGameGeek has wonderful
advice and resources to help you do this if you're interested.
I feel this. I love to sew and when the kids were small I used to go thrift shopping for clothes to cut up for the fabric. Now, that's a trend and the stores get swamped with people emptying the racks as soon as the stores open. I went recently looking for fabrics to use for sewing clothes for my Barbies and the sales girl there talked to me a bit about her frustration with this.

Oh, well. It was fun while it lasted, anyway. (I did manage to find some nice fabrics that day; not a lot is needed for Barbie's clothes.)
 
I feel this. I love to sew and when the kids were small I used to go thrift shopping for clothes to cut up for the fabric. Now, that's a trend and the stores get swamped with people emptying the racks as soon as the stores open. I went recently looking for fabrics to use for sewing clothes for my Barbies and the sales girl there talked to me a bit about her frustration with this.

Oh, well. It was fun while it lasted, anyway. (I did manage to find some nice fabrics that day; not a lot is needed for Barbie's clothes.)

Greed is destroying the world. Private Equity is killing off places such such as Jo Ann fabrics, where you used to be able to buy remants for cheap.

I am age 64 now and I remember my stay at home mom making and mending clothes on her sewing machine that had been passed on from my grand mother. Butterick patterns and a fabric store in Concord NH, I think it was called Britts.
This was before the era of dirt cheap imported clothing. When people consciously bought "made in America".

In the early seventies, the high school my older sister went to changed it's dress code and girls could wear pants. My mom sewed my sister a polyester leisure suit to wear, and she got her photo in the paper as the first girl not to wear a skirt to school.
Girl Scouts used to teach girls how to sew.......if they even still exist now, what do they teach? How to get a tattoo and a nose ring?
Do girls even play with dolls any more?
 
Greed is destroying the world. Private Equity is killing off places such such as Jo Ann fabrics, where you used to be able to buy remants for cheap.

I am age 64 now and I remember my stay at home mom making and mending clothes on her sewing machine that had been passed on from my grand mother. Butterick patterns and a fabric store in Concord NH, I think it was called Britts.
This was before the era of dirt cheap imported clothing. When people consciously bought "made in America".

In the early seventies, the high school my older sister went to changed it's dress code and girls could wear pants. My mom sewed my sister a polyester leisure suit to wear, and she got her photo in the paper as the first girl not to wear a skirt to school.
Girl Scouts used to teach girls how to sew.......if they even still exist now, what do they teach? How to get a tattoo and a nose ring?
Do girls even play with dolls any more?
I was sad when our Jo Ann's closed. :( Loved that store.

I was a Girl Scout Troop leader for my daughter and what we taught was kindness and friendship, mostly.

I play with dolls so, yeah, they do. ;)

That must have been fun for your sister (and your mom). :)

Welcome to SF.
 
Girl Scouts used to teach girls how to sew.......if they even still exist now, what do they teach?
Current badges one can earn include...
  • STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Math): Space Science, Robotics, Coding, Cybersecurity, Automotive Engineering, and STEM Career Exploration.
  • Outdoors: Camping, hiking, nature observation, horseback riding, archery, paddling, and tree studies.
  • Life Skills: First Aid, cooking, personal finance (budgeting/investing), and sewing.
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    But the Scouts really didn't "teach" anything. It was not school with a professional teacher.
    It was more about team-building and camaraderie, and how to be a good citizen.
 
Our local thrift store that I shopped at for over 30 yrs closed. Ok for me, I have everything I need but young people starting out won't be able to benefit like I did.
I miss Joanne's too!
Young people used to get set up with things their grandparents no longer needed, or they got married and set up house with practical
wedding gifts.
 
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