Wed 7 Mar 2007
I was reading Wilco and fiance Christi’s wedding blog in which they talk about their last marriage prep session as required by the Catholic church. One of the questions asked the couples present was how much money they expect to spend on clothing/wardrobe a year. Christi’s account was that the men and women differ quite dramatically in their answers, with the women in the higher numbers ($2500) and men in the lower ($500). Before I read Wilco and Christi’s reponse to the question, I thought about how I would answer it. I figure I spend about $200 a year. I add to my wardrobe slowly, I don’t do closet overhauls with the fleetings of fashion, I don’t do designer bags or shoes. Pretty much the only time I buy something or even go clothes or shoe shopping is if something I own broke and I NEED it replaced, like a pair of brown closed-toed high heel shoes, which I still haven’t been able to find. I don’t shop for the sheer joy of shopping. I hate shopping.
That reminds me, last week I walked toward the entrance of the courthouse on my way to work, behind a woman wearing tight 7ForAllMankind jeans. My first thought was, “She’s probably on her way in for a fee waiver.” That’s how jaded I am. But given the demographic area this courthouse serves, given the sheer quantity of people who request and are granted fee waivers, given how I know women to be, I’d say I predicted her purpose in the Courts with 85% accuracy. Because if she were an attorney, she wouldn’t be in jeans. If she were here as moral support to a family member on trial, she wouldn’t be alone. If she were a attorney messenger service runner, she would be carrying more papers. If she were here to file a divorce or harrassment case, well, then she’d be requesting a fee waiver so she could get those things for free. Claiming that she doesn’t have the financial means to pay the filing fees, because she’d spent $200 on wrapping her ass in denim.
So anyway, Wilco’s estimate was more than 12 times my estimate, and more than double his fiance Christi’s estimate (altho to be fair, I believe they were estimating their expected expenditure on wardrobe as a couple, and I was just thinking of myself). That made me really examine my attire priorities. Maybe I need a pair of fresh eyes to help me throw out my clothes. My old rule of thumb was:
KEEPERS – if it fits, and if it’s not too badly damaged; sometimes if it fits BUT it’s damaged, I keep it for “possible beach wear” or “possible painting wear”
DONATE – if it’s too small, tight AND I don’t expect to lose enough weight to get back into it someday, or if it’s ripped beyond repair
Go ahead and laugh. I know these guidelines don’t take into consideration things like whether something’s still in style, whether something is ever worn, whether I can truly see myself wearing the item again. That’s why I have oversized fuschia sweaters from the 80s, a Debbie Gibson concert T-shirt, holey tops that I have to wear a tanktop under, embroidered rhinestone-embedded denim shirts, jeans with house paint splattered over the front, granny underwear, navy with pink pin-striped baggy trousers with suspenders, multi-colored slouch socks, my junior high Physical Education (PE) sweatshirt and shorts. Damn it that I grew up in the 80s, and everything then was oversized. Everything still fits! I’ve had things so long that fashion has come full circle and my clothes are actually back in style. 😛
I need help.
don’t be a packrat.
here is my rule: everytime i buy something new, i get rid of something (via donation, etc.) that way, i have a constant equilibrium in my closet.
I usually don’t like shoppint either. Therefore I end up replacing stuff in batches. So most of the time I won’t buy new stuff until I realize I need to, and then replace a bunch of stuff all at once.
Those 7 for all mankind jeans are expensive!! Yikes!?!?!?
Wow if you can limit your spending to $200.00 a year on new clothes thats impressive.
What about your hammer pants????? I’m not a big shopper either. I like to have a goal when I go shopping–i.e. black pants, tennis shoes, dress for an occasion, etc. But I’m not real big on paying full price for anything. It MUST be on sale!!
Wow, $200 is impressive if it were true. I bet he actually spends more than that but doesn’t know it.
OK Somebody needs to die for suggesting that I should explain what FL is in the middle of dinner! 😀
And yes, I DID explain. I think the guy that sat next to us overheard quite well too!
James. You discussed FL during dinner?? I wish I could have seen the poeple/guy next to you.
Cindiferous: I have clothes I haven’t been willing to part with either, and it’s making my closet too crowded. I definitely need to get rid of a lot of stuff. Here is also a good rule, if you haven’t worn it in a year, get rid of it. That would be 80% of my closet
You told what FL was over dinner? I wasn’t there!!!!! Now even more people know and I’m still in the dark!!!
Diana – that’s too scientific for me. Besides, I think I’m past the equilibrium point. I’m at oversaturation. I need to just get rid of stuff without substituting new stuff now.
Flat Coke – your shopping philosophy sounds like mine. I guess we’d never go on one of those girls’ all-day shopping sprees together.
TurboTiger – No, *I* spend about $200 annually on clothes. HE spends 12 times that, per his estimate.
James – you mean the dinner that the THREE of us planned and that you UNINVITED me to without even so much as a courtesy notification that instead of the PLAN that was in progress, you were making it just DINNER for YOU and VANESSA? You’re lucky I’m even speaking to you.
Jordan – The problem is, there are stuff I haven’t worn in years (but still can fit into!) cuz there hasn’t been the occasion for it. Like formal dresses. (And the Debbie Gibson concert T-shirt.) But that doesn’t mean I don’t have use for it again in the future. (Like at an 80’s themed party.)
Flat Coke – I’ll email you about it. But believe me, you’d be disappointed.
Cindy – Whoa misunderstanding on my part. Sending you an email.
Jordan: Yea we did! And the worst part was the tables are pretty close together, and I have a loud voice, and im certain the other patrons overheard.
I was thinking I need to go through my clothes, too. And I need new clothes, but hate shopping. It something about being in a mall, with tons of people, there out of control kids, the lighting, etc that gets me in a funky mood. When I normally go shopping I find that one store that compliments me and buy the whole store and don’t shop again for months…even years.
Yup, that’s how I am. With shoes, too. It’s just that I don’t have that “one store that complements me.” Virtually nothing fits me off the shelf cuz I’m oddly shaped. That’s a big contribution to my hatred for shopping.
I have a oddly shaped body and hate it that I can’t catalog shop. That would back life sooo much easier. Plus, give me another thing to do at work. 🙂
I have the same problem, which is also related to why I’m trying so hard to gain weight.
Most nicer clothes are just too big for me. The sports shirts etc fit just fine, but most dressy / work casual clothes dont. I guess most stores expect men that wear this stuff to be much heavier set???? I dunno.
So I do have a really tough time finding anything that fits right, and catalog shopping is pretty much impossible at that point for the same reason.
This also messes things sale-wise for me. Usually if its on sale it doesn’t fit. If it fits, its not on sale. So I end up paying full price for stuff.
Shopping sucks.
I think we should pool our $$ together and buy a tailor/seamstress. Not pay for custom-tailoring, but PURCHASE the PERSON who will custom-make our clothes to fit from scratch.
You come up with the greatest ideas!!! That would be awesome! Plus, we would have OG clothes that no one else has. I am in!
Now THAT is a great idea!!! I’m in!
I’m in too, because I am way too short for a lot of the things they have out. Now I can do capris with no problem!! Also…shoes. I can never find the right shoes without looking for weeks because my feet are so small (size 5)… I refuse to shop in the KIDS section
I actually like the kid section for clothes. A girls’ large t-shirt fits nice and snugly, and tapers in at the waist, and cuts off right above my hips. Re your shoes, Jordan — good thing you’re not a guy.
It’s not too often I find any clothes on sale that are my size. I wear the wildly popular large for shirts, and they’re the size that always sells out first. Though regular priced stuff is easy to find, since they make a ton of large sizes. So that usually means I pay alot, but look nice. 🙂
I know what you mean about shirts. For normal people they stop at the waist.. for us shorties, they go on past the hips, so I’m very particular over picking out clothes. I HAVE bought things from the kids’ section but I’m tired of it… I want to shop where I’m supposed to shop, but most places have crap for petites. Online shopping works best for me, the only problem is that not ALL size 4s are actually size 4s… one company’s definition of a size 4 might be size 8 in another company and 2 in another one. It’s a crapshoot!
I do like ralph lauren, they seem to know how to get it right.. and amy byer? I think it is… there are several out there, the problem is finding them in the right color and size.
oh, and the shoe thing.. true dat, so glad I’m not a guy.. wink wink