Tag Archives: Shopping

My Challenge: The Good, The Bad and The Sparkly…

17 Sep

I’m now one month into my living-without-new-things challenge and it’s been surprisingly easy so far. This may just be because I own so much crap in the first place, but anyway, I thought I’d give you a lowdown on the highs and lows so far…..

THE GOOD:

My black jacket was found scrumpled up in the bottom of my ex-boyfriend’s wardrobe. Many hours in charity shops hence saved.

I am currently living in the London neighbourhood with the highest saturation of charity shops, ever. Extra time spent hunting through the rails is more than compensated by time saved not having to tube it to Oxford Street.

I have browsed through Topshop a few times and appear to be developing a willpower of the gods when it comes to pretty things. If only I could apply it to chocolate too…

THE BAD (and the sparkly):

That willpower of the gods is facing a huge test. I really want a pair of these.

My challenge: First problem encountered

25 Aug

Ok, so I’ve encountered a big problem with my challenge already. I have lost my black jacket.

This isn’t like losing a pair of socks, or even a cardigan – you always have loads more of them hiding away in your wardrobe.

My black jacket is pretty much an essential fixture. As a fan of colour and big bold prints, I have swathes of clothes which I cannot wear with anything else unless I fancy looking like a radioactive clown. This missing item renders huge chunks of my wardrobe unwearable. Oh shit.

So what do I do? Now I have set upon my challenge I can’t fall at the first little hurdle. A denim jacket goes with most colourful things, but it’s not much good if I need to look smart. Or I could spend many hours trawling the charity shops of Kilburn High Road, praying something resembling my precious jacket is hanging on one of their rails.

Looks like Oxfam beckons…

My guide to surviving the summer sales

6 Jul

This morning I dragged my broke ass down to Topshop for that twice-yearly ritual of rifling through the rails of size-20 hotpants and last year’s mustard cardies, elbowing other shoppers out of the way and collapsing under the weight of my pile of garments en route to the fitting room.

Sales can be pretty painful. The hours of wading through the crap no one wants, only to find that, once you do discover something amazing, they either don’t have your size or someone else is snatching it off the rails as you gaze on, helpless. But when you do find that perfect item – that knockout dress or those sky-high heels – the thrill as you spot it’s in your size and you whisk it away to the changing room is quite possibly non-rivalled in the shopping world. Yep, sales shopping is high octane stuff – fashion’s equivalent of the Thorpe Park log fume, perhaps.

But although the thrills and spills can be pretty emotional, is it actually any good for your wardrobe? Some would argue no. It’s all last season’s stuff which you’ll probably wear a maximum of two times before realising you hate it. The low prices just suck you in, giving you a hefty dose of ‘sales fever’ (symptom: stack of clothes on your bedroom floor with the labels still on, which are heading for the charity shop.)

I however, disagree. I am a total disciple of the high street sale. A hefty percentage of my wardrobe is purchased there in the weeks after Christmas and the end of June. I don’t think I’ve even brought anything full-price in Topshop for about three years.

And my sales rules are these – don’t try and follow trends when sales shopping, don’t rush your decisions and go for things you truly love rather thant what’s hot right now.

You need to set aside plenty of time – enough to comb through all the rails and really way up decisions before you buy, so this isn’t a task for lunch break. This is the only way to avoid a hefty dose of ‘sales fever; and a pile of unwanted clothes. Just because it’s cheap doesn’t mean you shouldn’t take as much time as you would picking out a pricey designer dress – it’s still your hard-earned cash you’re spending.

Taking your time is essential to ensure that you actually really like the clothes and are not suffering from ‘sales fever’. Make sure you try them on, don’t just sprint to the tills high on those low prices – as I’m sorry to admit I have done in the past!  And, as it’s end of season and the trend-led pieces are on their way out, you should avoid them at all costs. However, I don’t see the harm of buying, for instance, a winter jumper in the summer sales. If it’s a gorgeous jumper you really love and will get plenty of wear out of once winter hits, then what’s the problem?

And if you really can’t find anything you love in the sales, then walk away. Don’t feel you have to buy somehting for the sake of it just because it’s bargain time. There’ll be more clothes on the rails in coming months you’re sure to fall in love with – save your cash for them instead.

ShopStyle: Google of the fashion world?

18 Nov

Jemima Kiss blogged yesterday at The Guardian on ShopStyle and its plans to become a one-stop online shopping mecca.

It will enable users to browse all clothes and accessories avalable online, read reviews and even save items in a StyleBook scrapbook to plan and put outfits together. Anyone who used to watch Cher in Clueless computer co-ordinating her clothes in open-mouthed awe will surely find the last idea pretty exciting!

I remain sceptical about ShopStyle, though, for the simple fact that the company is paid commission by retailers. Google retains its popularity because it puts the user first and is transparent about the way it operates and makes money. Will ShopStyle do the same?

I would like to know a little more about how ethically it treats its users. For example, will it offer a true ‘whole of market’ search? Or only the parts of the market that have agreed to pay them commission? As yet I can’t find any statement on the site to explain this, and until they do I wouldn’t recommend it as your only port of call.

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