Category Archives: Clothing

Weekend Specials

In case Buffalo Exchange wasn’t already awesome enough, this weekend all locations will be holding a $1 sidewalk sale, the proceeds of which benefit the Humane Society. Last year, not only did I get Comme des Garçons pants, a shirt from anthropologie, and a Michael Stars tshirt for a total of $3, there was also a dude dressed up in a shark costume. This sale has everything.

After you pick up a new two-dollar outfit, if you’re in the Houston area, you can also hit up the Houston Public Library Booksale. If you’re a library member and you have your Power Card,* you can get in on the 23rd. Otherwise, everyone is admitted on the 24th and 25th. Check out this flyer for more details. If you’re not in H-town, check with your local library to find out when your local book sale occurs. This is a great place to get books for cheap.

You’re welcome!

love,

thriftstore brandwhore

* Why is it called the power card, anyway? Is it supposed to make the library sound more awesome? Like, OMG, knowledge is totally power! Also, why does it look like an ad for Jamba Juice?

Flea Markets

One of the benefits of this whole economic crisis is the rash of articles about discount shopping opportunities that have been appearing in the news. Today, on cnn.com, there is a link to an article about the world’s best flea markets.

The author of this article is a girl after my own heart: one who sees vacations and travel not as an opportunity to visit landmarks, but a chance to buy things you can’t get at home (at least not as cheaply).

I think, though, that the list unfairly combines two categories of market shoppery that are quite distinct. The first is the all-American flea market, which is essentially a garage sale/craft show/black market scenario, and the Turkish-style bazaar. Here are my personal favorites of each variety:

Canton, Texas. Located near my birth city of Tyler (I hesitate to call it my “hometown,” as I only lived there until I was three and managed to escape the piney woods accent), Canton is a flea market/fair the size of a small city.  Seriously, you could walk around for days, and never see it all. It’s your classic American flea market, with everything from rusty implements that may or may not still function, to valuable antiques and crafts.  I also like its community fairground feel, complete with corn dogs, funnel cake, and lemonade. I always leave Canton full of fried food with some new knick knack in my hand, feeling like I need to go look at some Norman Rockwell paintings or something.

Khan el-Khalili, Cairo, Egypt. Like Canton, Khan el-Khalili has a lot of greasy food, but instead of corn dogs and funnel cake, your choices include falafel or shawarma.  They take bargaining to a new level most Americans have not experienced. All you need to know are a few basic Arabic phrases (which I can’t type here, but they translate to “how much?” and “no, thank you,”) and a little Egyptian bargaining etiquette (don’t ask about something you’re not really intending to buy, unless they ask you first). With a little experience, even an obvious tourist like myself can get some pretty sweet deals. The streets are overflowing with colorful rugs, lamps, clothing, hijabs, spices, and artwork. My best find there was a pair of red leather shoes with yellow and white painted details. Unfortunately, my grandma’s horrible dog ate them…but I paid the equivalent of less than four dollars for them, so at least it only hurt me in the sentimental pocketbook.

If you know of any other shopping meccas of either variety, here or abroad, please let me know…

love,

thriftstore brandwhore

Estate Sales: Not Just For Your Grandma

I’ve heard a few excuses from people who don’t go to estate sales: things are overpriced, it’s creepy buying things from dead people, and they just don’t know they’re happening. If you are held back by any of these excuses, you are severely missing out.

1. Things CAN be overpriced, but this isn’t the mall. Put on your Middle Eastern market shopper panties, and start making some offers. If the estate sale lasts more than one day, try to go in the final hours – this is the best time for negotiation. My personal best was a box of 60 ties, 30 records (including old Enrico Caruso records, for you music nerds), a framed photo, and a kick-ass beret for a total of $30.

2. Dead people are creepy. Yeah, but it’s likely that anything you buy at an antique store was once owned by someone who died…to me, this is no different than a garage sale. Although I did write a poem about this one time…maybe I will share my awful poetry with you in a future entry.

3. I don’t know the sales are happening. Then get on the mailing list. Most worthwhile estate sale companies have mailing lists and websites featuring photos of upcoming sales. My favorite in Houston is Margie Beegle sales (although my personal experience with Margie and her daughter has been less than pleasant, both on the phone and in person. My latest issue with them is that they advertised an upcoming sale very near my house as being “right in the middle of Midtown,” and I most certainly do NOT live in Midtown. Montrose pride!). Setting aside our political and ideological differences, they do get some of the best sales and make some of the best last-minute deals.

love,

thriftstore brandwhore

Heads Up

I would like to interrupt my regularly scheduled posting to let you know about an upcoming event. The Warehouse Sale, which travels from city to city offering designer jeans at huge discounts, is on its way to Houston. The Houston dates are March 16 and 17 – but there are dates in many cities; please check the website for dates elsewhere.

I have not attended this particular event in the past, so I can’t vouch for the quality, but I’ll definitely be there on the 16th. To RSVP, click on the above link, register, and then RSVP for the date you wish to attend. If you RSVP it’s free to attend; otherwise there is a $5.00 cover at the door.

All credit for my knowledge of this event goes to James!

love,

thriftstore brandwhore

Lookin’ Haute

One day, while bored at work, I was trying to think of new websites to browse. I recalled attending a J. Crew sample sale in New Orleans, and decided to search for online sample sales.

During my search, I came across several members-only sale sites, and joined several. I’ve done the dirty work for you, so you don’t have to waste your time figuring out which sites are worthwhile.  Hands down, I vote for Hautelook.com.

Every day at 8:00 AM Pacific time, Hautelook features one to four designer sales, with products ranging from 50% to 90% off. Each sale lasts about two days. Not only do I enjoy the sales for their intended purpose, but I also use this as a resource to discover new designers. I already knew I loved Tracy Reese and BCBG, but if it weren’t for Hautelook, I wouldn’t know how much I loved Eva Franco and Amrita Singh.

Although the sales are great on a daily basis, the best sales are the end-of-the-year blowouts. Unfortunately, I was unable to partake of the discounts this year, because by the time I got to a computer, the site was so busy I couldn’t even log on – then everything was sold out. The competition is stiff, but worth it.

If you’re considering joining, let me know. The site is offering a promotion right now: if you are referred by a friend, we both receive a $10 credit. If you like sales, you’re automatically my friend, so either reply with your email address in a comment or email me at tchoupitoulas@gmail.com.

love,

thriftstore brandwhore

For All Mankind…not just the wealthy

When I was younger, I remember my mom telling me disdainfully about a friend of hers whose children were brats and “insisted that she buy them designer jeans.” At the time, I didn’t really know what designer jeans were, and assumed they were anything better than the ones I had that were on clearance at Sears. I also assumed that anyone with designer jeans was probably a snobby bitch.

I guess I was in college when I realized that nice jeans did not, in fact, make one a snobby bitch, and actually were a great improvement over the Express jeans I was into at the time (at least that was a step up from the Sears clearance accidental highwaters of my youth).  I lived down the street from a specialty jean shop, and I think that started a lifelong habit: trying things on, pretending to be interested, just so I would know the right size to find on ebay.

Now,  I won’t wear anything other than nice jeans. However, I’ve never paid more than $70 for a pair of jeans, and my average is closer to $20.  Besides ebay, I’ve found good deals at resale shops and Craigslist. My only word of caution is to beware fakes on ebay – not because they’re fake, necessarily, but because the quality and sizing can be off.

Happy shopping!

love,

thriftstore brandwhore

Swap Meet

I’ve gone to a few clothing swap events over the last few years, but my friend Kelsey takes it to a new level. Once or twice a year, we drag trash bags full of clothes we no longer want to her house, separate them by size and type (sweaters v. pants v. t-shirts), and then do a little free shopping from other peoples’ closets. This serves a dual purpose for me: not only do I get new clothes for free, but I get to make sure my clothes are going to good homes. My clothes are my babies – I’m not an extremely anal person, but I don’t let anyone else touch my laundry – and sometimes there are things I don’t wear, but I can’t quite bring myself to give them away to just anybody. How do I know they’ll be loved? What if some dumbass tried to wash my beloved red sweater in hot water with inferior detergent? (I’m only sort of exaggerating). This way I can ensure that my clothes go to good homes, while trying not to take home more new things than I brought in the first place.

It seems that the general population is catching on – last month’s ReadyMade magazine featured the clothing swap as part of its article on home gatherings, and Kelsey was recently featured in the letters to the editor section of Real Simple for writing in about our parties (so I’m famous by proxy now, right?).

Of course, other things can be swapped as well – we’ve also had a book swap, and I’ve been to a CD and DVD swap as well.

As a side note – you know how sometimes, when you repeat a word, it starts to sound really strange? Swap is a weird word.

love,

thriftstore brandwhore

Low Clearance

It amazes me just how many people in this world dress like frumpy sacks of crap, when it is completely unnecessary. I mean, if you WANT to wear sweatpants or mom jeans and oversized teddy bear t-shirts, that’s not really my business. But if you’re only shopping at a certain discount superstore because you think you can’t afford to go anywhere else, you’re wrong. I PROMISE you can pay those prices pretty much anywhere you’d like (with possible exceptions such as  Neiman Marcus). The difference between me and Sally McSweatpants is not money – it’s stubborness. I want nice clothes, and I want to pay $9.99, damn it.

Just walk in and head straight for the back of any store. Do not pass go, do not pay $200. Look for the clearance section. The more disheveled, disorganized, and dimly lit, the better. Some stores are too classy for the neon CLEARANCE sign, and others try to hide the sale from you by putting it in the fitting room hallway or something – just ask. If you feel bad asking, pretend like you’re interested in their regularly priced merchandise first.

Also, keep your seasons in mind. The best time to look for a great sale is immediately AFTER the advertisements tell you the great sales are happening. What isn’t sold at the one-day-only end-of-the-season sale is often marked down further and demoted to the Clearance Corner. We’re still in the after-after Christmas sale phase – just yesterday I found dress pants at Banana Republic that are now $12.99. Try to beat that at the aforementioned discount superstore.

love,

thriftstore brandwhore

Discount Destination – Feathers

I’m writing this from Austin, so I thought I would mention one of my favorite Austin stores.

As much as I love vintage clothing, I don’t always love vintage stores. Just because you have one pre-1970 sweater amongst your Old Navy rejects from ten years ago, you are not a vintage store. Don’t try to sell me an ill-fitting t-shirt from 1990 that makes my torso look like a box for more than it originally cost just because you have a trendy storefront. And don’t try to pass off a moth-eaten burlap sack as a fine vintage garment, just because its from 1940. I am not dumb.

Feathers is a REAL vintage store. Of course, the prices are not quite as amazing as you might get on a nice vintage piece you could find after digging at Goodwill, but the difference is, they’ve already done the digging for you. It’s like the owners of Feathers got inside your head, went to all the Goodwills in the country, found everything you would have purchased, and arranged it by color for your convenience. I will warn you, though – don’t go in if you’re feeling weak. If you have any taste whatsoever, you will want something.

Check it out:

Feathers Boutique – 1700 S Congress Ave – Austin, TX 78703

love,

thriftstore brandwhore

There’s a hole in my sweater, dear Liza

Then fix it, dear Henry…

Have you ever spent time excitedly digging through a rack of shirts on sale, only to find that the only one in your size is missing a button/has a tear/has a stain? Don’t be disappointed; this is an opportunity for an even bigger discount. Most stores will give you an additional percentage off due to defects – just ask. Depending on the store, I would expect an offer of ten to fifteen percent. Definitely worth the ten to fifteen minutes it will take you to fix the problem. Here’s how:

Missing buttons.

How to fix it: A lot of clothing comes with extra buttons, either attached to the price tag, or sewn into the seam somewhere. If it doesn’t, chances are you can find something very similar, if not an exact match, at a fabric store (or even Wal Mart). Then, just get a needle and thread and sew it on. Seriously, you can’t mess this up. If you’re severely sewing-challenged, get your grandma or a friend to do it for you. When to pass: If the buttons are really original and there is no spare, you will either have to have non-matching buttons, or replace all of the buttons. If you’re lazy, this is a problem.

Tears.

How to fix it: If there is a rip on a seam, this is an easy fix, too. Just turn the item inside out, and sew along the seam. If you don’t want to do it yourself or if the fabric is delicate, consider taking it to a tailor – a small tear on a seam shouldn’t cost you more than $10. When to pass: Although fabric can be rewoven, this takes a little more sewing know-how, and will cost more at the tailor. Weigh the options – if it’s a cashmere sweater at an amazing price, it’s probably worth the cost of the alterations. If it’s a t-shirt, it’s probably not.

Stains.

How to fix it: One word: Oxyclean. Bonus: if you soak the clothing in your sink, your sink gets amazingly clean at the same time. I bought an $825 Moschino sweater for $25, new, because it had a stain on it. I had no problem restoring the sweater to its original creamy white. When to pass: Oxyclean is amazing, but its not infallible. Check the label to see if it works with your specific fabric/type of stain.

In summary, slightly imperfect = slightly more money in your pocket.

love,

thriftstore brandwhore