![]() ![]() Each box contains 10 to 20 items available for purchase at a discount. The on-demand shipments are priced at $20 per delivery. ThredUP hopes to differentiate itself with lower cost secondhand clothes. If it sounds familiar, it’s because Stitch Fix, Le Tote, Trunk Club and others have similar offerings. Customers will be able to order on-demand shipments, with personalized items sent to their home. ![]() Here’s the post where I shared what we DID keep from our ThredUp rescue box.Consignment startup thredUP is launching Goody Boxes, for people who want to try on clothes at home before making purchases. (You’ll get $10 off your order if you are a ThredUp newbie!) I hope you enjoyed this tour of the ThredUp box rejects!Īnd if, even after seeing this post, you want to try a ThredUp rescue box, click here and look for the “Rescues” tab up at the top of the page. I also don’t know why it says, “This is the beginning of never ending fun.” What? I don’t know why this shirt is sheer on the bottom half. It didn’t fit any of us, but we wouldn’t have modeled it for you anyway. This shirt is not terrible, but it was a little too short and cut in a swingy style that seemed off with the shorter length. We all agreed that maybe someone very fashionable could come up with a outfit to pull this off, but it wasn’t working for any of us. It’s really too big for her, and it’s a weird bandage-like fabric. I couldn’t get this top on at all, so Sonia modeled it. This hot pink cardigan might not be flattering to anyone on the planet, but it is SO definitely too old for any of the four of us. Zoe said, “Mom, this shirt looks like something from Friends.” But it did happen to be Zoe’s size, so she kindly modeled it. This genuine leather vest fit none of our styles. This shirt looks like it could be normal. I call it the, “I’m about to have surgery” look. This tank looks pretty normal from the front.īut the back is scooped so low that anytime you move, the front falls down.ĭiane von Furstenburg designed this and I really do not know what she was thinking. But the sight of me in it cracked us up no end. And a crew neck, which is not bad, but I really do not prefer myself in crew necks. This is not terrible, but it has those really high side slits. I have bad feelings about this print, and the sweater was super itchy too. I do not love the symmetrical placement of these flowers. This jacket is pretty normal-looking, and I’ve considered keeping it. Also, a short-sleeve cut from a fall-looking print seems odd to me. So odd.Īnd you can clearly see where the lining around the collar begins and ends.īut the sleeves are a little unusual. This is made of a dressy-ish woven fabric, but has a graphic-tee look to it. I think I look terrible in it!īut the body of the shirt is attached at the elbows! I’m not against long cardigans, but this pattern is not at all my thing.Īnd neither is this LuLaRoe cardigan. ![]() It was too small for me, and my girls definitely did not want it. This jacket is Lululemon, but it has a weird shape…like the bottom is sort of petal-cut. They are so annoying when you want to wash your hands! This sweater would not be my favorite with any type of sleeve, but I have to say, I really hate these types of sleeves. I think I just don’t understand short-sleeved sweaters at all. Here we have a sweater with a lot of holes, plus 3/4 sleeves.įor those times when you want to wear a sweater but you’d also like to be cold.Ĭontinuing with the big-holes-in-sweater theme, except this time they are more random: This sweater wasn’t terrible but it does kind of make me look…one-sided. I dubbed this one, “the steel wool sweater” because that’s exactly what it felt like. In what climate would you need a hood but no sleeves? The NopesĪ short sleeved sweater with a hood. Hopefully you can still assess the fashion (or lack thereof) properly. So, forgive the dark cell phone mirror shots. Get comfy because there are a whole lotta these.Ī lot of these are mirror selfies because this was just too many clothes to ask my kids to photograph me in. I already shared photos of the items we kept, so today, it’s time to see the rejects! The box promised to contain 50 tops that ThredUp had rejected (either because they didn’t meet ThredUp’s standards or because they’d been listed too long). I recently took a bit of a risk and ordered a $100 rescue box from ThredUp*. If you enjoy me modeling bad fashion, then you’ll enjoy this trip through my rejects! So, I thought it would be appropriate timing to repost this one. When I wrote the post about LuLaRich this week, I remembered the my ThredUp rescue box had included a LuLaRoe piece (scroll down to see). ![]()
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