|
Buyers for Vintage Clothing Stores in the past
are different from the buyers of today. When vintage
shops customers were narrowed between theater
students and collectors, buyers didn't have to
continuously re-fill their racks. As the market
grew so did most buyers strategies. It seams some
buyers are content with their techniques from
the past, while others are forced to obtain their
merchandise in other ways. Differences between
the time and resources that the actual vintage
buyers have, will predicate how and what type
of merchandise each shop will carry. Some buyers
choose to get their pieces by continuously spending
there weekends hitting up vintage swap meets,
garage sales, or estate sales. Everyone at one
time or so, vintage collector or not, has spent
a Saturday or Sunday morning driving from garage
sale to garage sale. Some times it pays off and
the buyer can find great eclectic pieces through
shopping this way, but more times than none they'll
spend hours upon hours sifting through piles of
clothes, or whatever the hunt is for, in peoples
front yards to come up with a couple of pieces
or none. A vintage collectors time is valuable,
seeing how most buyers are in fact shop owners,
and would rather spend time at there shop where
they are needed most, instead of peoples yards.
Vintage Clothing Swap Meets are a good alternative,
if a city near the buyer even hosts one. Unfortunately
most venders at these swap meets are in fact shop
owners themselves, trying to sling there second
hand dead stock* for cheap, while they sell there
good vintage merchandise at a retail price. Sometimes
good deals can be found, but again, the time and
effort to sift through these swap meets can be
demanding, leaving buyers to many times empty
handed. Most Vintage buyers that need to purchase
in bulk, skip over garage sales and vintage clothing
swap meets completely, and go directly for the
source. They hit a rag house, the end of the rode
for most clothes. Rag houses are warehouses that
collect every charitable clothing item that anyone,
anywhere, has ever given away. They are kind of
like the manufacturer for the vintage clothing
industry, if you can accept that they are not
actually manufacture anything. They are instead
more like the ultimate supplier for the industry.
Although supplying for vintage buyers is not what
the company are set up to do. Some donated items
are picked out and sold in second hand thrift
stores. Nonetheless, it seems that more times
than none, the clothing ends up at a rag house
that will bail it, weigh it, and ship it to another
country. Vintage shop buyers have bean hitting
up rag houses for years now, asking them to sift
through there merchandise and pull out pieces
that would sell in a shop. Many rag houses have
found that it is indeed profitable to separate
vintage pieces from the rest of their rags, to
sell to vintage collectors. For a little more
per pound than the average bails, a vintage buyer
can purchase 1000-pound bales of merchandise that
they need for their shop. This is a better solution
than hunting down single pieces at garage sales
or swap meets, but it still leaves a lot to be
un-desired.
CONTINUE
|
|