While looking online at the various options of stores which are desperately seeking my money, I got to thinking...if a store can cut prices by up to 90% and still make a margin, doesn't that mean their stuff is priced too high?
I digress.
The thing that interested me was that for what appeared to be a mere pittance of the former inflated value, I could possibly walk away with some pretty dang good bargains if I can just get the right fit and the right look.
I am not flamboyant by nature in my clothing. My favorite color is blue and up until a couple of years ago, various shades of blue were the regular mainstays of my wardrobe.
The only thing exotic about me is the collection of tacky and tasteless slogan t-shirts I own.
But I started thinking, wouldn't it be nice to have a couple of things that would make me look reasonably turned out for a reasonable price.
Welcome to the world of thrift store shopping and clearance rack bargain hunting. By the way, 90% off isn't a bargain if it's something you really won't wear or use. That's just finding a cheaper way to waste the moolah.
I got a lovely gray striped women's two-piece suit for which I have some nice blouses and for which I plan to get a small array of solid color shell type tops. And no, they will not all be blue.
Tempting...but no.
I also need to find some black shoes that are actually comfortable to walk in that will look dressy enough for church or going out but not kill my feet during the attempt.
Sadly, this is one area where thrift stores need not apply.
I may borrow the bowling alley clown shoes and watch them spray them to a faretheewell with the fungicidal spray, but I seriously doubt the thrift shop is doing the same. You just don't know where they have been! And they most certainly aren't hosed off with anti-whatever sprays and detergents.
So, I hunt the shoe stores once in a while for a sale that can fit within the budget and on the oddly sized feet I happen to possess. The shoes might fit one foot but drown the other... so I feel an almost sporting obligation to buy them regardless of color or style should they happen to come reasonably near fitting BOTH feet.
Which would explain the reason that I owned half a dozen pair of tennis shoes at one time. I have pared it down to a couple of pairs at the current time.
Athough people who are not fans of Madonna generally don't put their lingerie on display, that is also a money spending opportunity. Women want to make sure that what they have in the line of more 'personal attire' is decent looking and in good repair. While we don't wear it as dinner wear nor show up at the PTA with our bustiere outside our clothing, shopping for something tasteful that does the intended job is also required.
In my case, I do all of my shopping with a jaundiced eye squared situtated over the balance line in the checkbook. I can't afford to bankrupt the family just to be well-turned. Plus, for those who truly know me, it would be ridiculous to suddenly expect me to become a clotheshorse prancing around in designer gear when I am vastly more comfortable in jeans and a t-shirt.
Daddy used to say most people spend like they have a champagne budget.
Count me in with the balogna crowd.
While I may have champagne type ideas, they are most assuredly tempered by the saltine and balogna reality that we face daily.
And I truly enjoy saving money.
The question comes down to 'just how much do you have to have?'. And the older I get the more that answer is becoming 'less'.
So maybe a low budget is a blessing that should be considered a precious commodity.
Meanwhile, my catalog looking and web surfing doesn't require any monotary contributions. And, as Martha Stewart says, "that's a good thing".
1 comment:
"90% off isn't a bargain if it's something you really won't wear or use."
That also goes for clipping and using coupons at the grocery store...
If it isn't something you or the family will eat, don't buy it in the first place.
And in the second place, when the store brand item is cheaper than the national name brand item even with the double coupon discount, if the two are roughly the same quality, why go with the national name brand?
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