I also buy most of my clothes at Goodwill and other thrift shops. While my weight was dropping, I went every time my jeans started to get loose...and would just downgrade (or upgrade) to a smaller size....and also donate back the ones that had become too big.
It's great thrift shopping because:
1. It's extremely cheap to go and replace a previous wardrobe...and easily affordable to do it often while you lose. And I learned that putting on a smaller size made people suddenly notice the loss and motivated me even more, as I went along.
2. You already know how they'll launder.
3. I often don't like the current style of certain things...and when a style is in fashion, that's pretty much all they sell in the stores. But at thrift shops you can get a whole variety of past styles that you might prefer (and look better on you) over the current styles.
4. You may fit in different sizes depending on the brand. At thrift shops, you have a huge array to try on and choose from and may end up with several different brands in different sizes. For instance, I worked my way down in Levi jeans to 29 waist, but last time I went, I decided what the heck, and tried on some "skinny jeans" from Apple Bottoms brand...and they looked great so I got them. In regular stores, it would be unlikely that I'd go and shop in the teens section...but in Goodwill, they're all in one place, on one set of racks. There are literally hundreds of jeans in almost hundreds of sizes to try on....the dressing rooms are not locked...you just go in and use them and don't have to get a number or anything like that. You are free to just try on armloads of brands and sizes at whim.
I would never pay the exorbitant prices (compared to thrift shops) they charge in the regular stores. And once you wear something new, it's worn. It's only new once...so why pay those prices just to enjoy it NEW one time? And heck, you can change your wardrobe every time you lose 5 lbs...because it's so inexpensive.
Also....people who can afford expensive clothing tend to donate more because the expensive clothing holds up longer and they don't tend to share or pass-down clothing as we regular folks need to do. I have myself a whole wardrobe of really nice, expensive...short/petite jackets (to wear with pants or a skirt) that would cost a small fortune in regular stores...but I got them for 5 bucks each. And if you really want to get some expensive clothing for cheap prices, go to the thrift shops run by the ladies auxiliaries for different hospitals...like the Palm Tree thrift shop at Paoli Hospital in PA. Most hospitals have them....they provide additional funding (which is the main purpose of these auxiliaries). And holy cow, if you go to some of these in fancy areas, you can literally get designer brands, for dirt cheap...many with the tags still on them and never worn.
My father got multiple Armani suits, never worn and with the tags still on them years ago at the Palm Tree at Paoli Hospital. Most of the auxiliary women there are doctor's wives donating their time...and often buy expensive suits that their husbands turn out not wearing for one reason or another so they just donate them to the thrift shop, brand new...tags still on them.
Anyone who has never tried thrift shopping should try it. You don't know what you're missing....seriously.
deena
