February 22, 2012

Landing Your Fashions at Your Price

There are about as many ways to save a few dollars on current clothing fashions as there are fish in the sea. A little ingenuity can make those jeans from Forever 21 drop in price, if you’re willing to be patient or apply a little thinking to the situation. If, like most people, your budget is limited, especially during this period of economic uncertainty, saving money is the newest fashion anyway. If you must have the latest fashions or else fear that you’ll end up in the wallflower category at all the coming parties, it’s time to get clever. That way, you’ll end up wearing what you want to be seen in, but at a better price than you might otherwise pay.

 

The most direct way to get into the clothes of your choice at a better price is to figure out exactly what you want to buy. Note the price. Note the date as well. Then, approach the store manager.  Inquire directly about when he or she anticipates having a store-wide, or select merchandise clearance sale.

 

With fashion clothes being entirely seasonal – and there being four seasons each and every year – inventory must constantly be pushed along. It often takes a sale to get it moving as fast as the store wishes. Be patient, and know that if the store you’ve visited sells out of the item (in your size) that you’ve had your eye on, another location will likely have it. Just make sure to visit as close to the start of the sale as possible to ensure the broadest selection.

 

 

 

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A Clothing Fabric that is Making Headway

Full wool Merino sheep.

Image via Wikipedia

Merino wool is making headway as the go-to fabric for people who exercise. Unlike traditional wool, it is capable of being woven into a very thin layer, which makes it more ideal for thin summer tee shirts and the like. Where regular wool, with its itchy sensation and thick, sweater weave was very good for keeping warm in the coldest months, merino wool has proven itself to be excellent in all seasons. But there is more to this fabric than its ability to be woven very thinly. Other advantages make it likely that it will continue to be adopted at a rapid pace, displacing synthetics, which have had a long history in their own right.

 

Synthetics came about decades ago. Typically made from oil-based products and other non-sustainable substances, they were latched onto by athletes who loved their sweat wicking properties. In this performance function, sweat emitted by a hot body continues right through the synthetic, evaporating very quickly. Compared to cotton, synthetics seem to dry almost instantaneously, since cotton takes on a lot more water for the same amount of material. By absorbing less sweat, the synthetic kept an athlete from being forced to be wet for a very long time.

 

People came to enjoy the fast wicking property of synthetics, but wondered about the smell. When one sweats inside a polyester shirt, it stinks pretty badly within several minutes. And here, merino wool wins hands down in comparison. It is anti-microbial, which means that germs can’t proliferate. Merino wool is popular partly because it dries very quickly, but also because it doesn’t smell bad following exercise.

 

 

 

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