tiktok is kind of bad for fashion

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Patreon: ✦ Donate: ✦ Instagram: ✦ TikTok: … 29 thoughts on “tiktok is kind of bad for fashion” Here in argentina You have to be rich to Buy in those sites because of the change of money, the shipping and mostly taxes (? Our coin doesnt worth anyrhing compare to dollars.But in capitol You can…

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29 thoughts on “tiktok is kind of bad for fashion”

Here in argentina You have to be rich to Buy in those sites because of the change of money, the shipping and mostly taxes (? Our coin doesnt worth anyrhing compare to dollars.But in capitol You can find a Lot of ferias where these type of cloths are beign selling from second hand

I work at a small consignment shop and I only shop local used clothes now! people will bring in clothes that are very expensive new, and you can get them for around the same price as the fast fashion clothes.Definitely recommend checking out your local consignment shops!!

Thank you for that video ❤ you impressed me to try sew some clothes from old ❤️❤️

In my wardrobe, I have seven hoodies, fifteen t-shirts, four summer dresses, five pairs of jeans, plus socks and underwears… and that’s pretty much all.I am not a minimalist, I just prefer to have a small number of good quality clothes.Fast fashion is a scourge for me because it makes it difficult to find that quality.Nowadays even expensive store will sell you crap, expecting you to throw it away after two months.

Overpriced can also mean priced about what your target audience can afford.By that standard, many things that may be fairly priced, are still grossly over priced.

I can’t help but think that what people need to do is stop logging on tiktok, throw away their smartphones and come back to a flip phone for calls and messages.This is what happens when you listen to random’s people stupidity! And while I say this, I also say yours is a great video.

This is what needs attention, not stupid tiktok trends

This video helped me a bit because i have like a few items on fast fashion brands and as i was watching this video i was like “you know what? fuck h&m and shein”.I’m not gonna get rid of my fast-fashion clothes but actually start buying second-hands thanks for this video! i’ve been convincing myself to stop buying new trendy outfits LOL.ilysm mina le

I haven’t been able to buy new clothes in two years.I just wanted to say, that it’s not inly possible but sometimes necessary.So my kids can have clothes.

Okay, as a “”poor person”” can you please please say anything else.I unsubscribed a year ago and just came back to see if you were any less stuck up.

But no.Here you are just fucking saying “poor people consolation prize”

I’m more impressed by someone who can mix and match the same pieces, creating different and new looks vs.

someone who just buys new stuff all the time.The former takes actual creativity and thought while the latter is just a celebration of gross, unnecessary overconsumption.

If we can’t get people to give af about the workers or the earth, maybe we can get them to care about themselves.polyester breaks down into micro plastics.micro plastics have polluted 90% of fresh and salt water.

Extremely small particles are in the air we breathe, precipitation, and found throughout the ocean.

Micro plastics have already been found in our blood, lungs, stomachs, and even fetuses.It’s terrifying and no one is sure of the negative long term impact of regular plastic consumption.The problem continues to worsen daily and little is being done to stop it.The fashion industry is responsible for 30% of the pollution world wide.

i love how this video didn’t even mention the LITERAL SLAVE LABOUR that is the sole reason brands like shein can stay on trend no matter the time span…

Still can’t believe in 2023 that Kardashian or Jenner has any pull in fashion.

Blows my mind.

The title of the book behind you “Japanese Costume” made me think of the late Academy Award winning, Japanese costume designer Eiko Ishioka.Her designs in the movie “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” were intended to visually draw more attention than the sets, which essentially made the costumes the “set.”

I came here from Tumblr!

second hand is wonderful.Unfortunately the rich tiktok girlies discovered that too and buy giant “hauls” to resell for 10 morbillion dollars on depop.whats worse is theyre so open about it and see nothing wrong with upselling.

they think theyre girlbossing and “running a business”

i’m so glad i never cared for fashion trends.Sounds really exhausting.My personal style is not what u find in most shops anyways, so i recently started sewing my own clothes (mostly tops, pants i’ll just get second hand), it’s really fun, i get exactly what i want, it fit’s perfectly and i can pick a nice quality fabric that feels good in the first place.It also makes u appreciate ur own clothes so much more bc of all the work u’ve put in and u 100% know ur gonna wear it a lot and not just one time and then it get’s lost in ur closet

In Malaysia buying clothes at H&M or Uniqlo, padini is like a yearly thing well at least for me and my family..during raya we buy like two or one piece to wear as celebration but in Malaysia usually after buying clothes we will use it again and again.No one is going to judge you if you wear the same clothes again here so I’m quite glad that most Malaysians are like this..I still feel guilty though since yk how much impact it has..

In here we don’t have many thrift stores and it’s not a widely known concept… Although now people are starting to buy from there more..usually just the gen z.H&M is actually very expensive to me in Malaysia it’s literally so EXPENSIVE even Uniqlo is expensive so not many people have the privilege to buy it hence the yearly or sometimes me and my family just don’t buy any at all and just buy from padini..nowadays my family is having financial crisis so we don’t buy from there anymore bcs the price literally make me tear up fr

I used to work at goodwill and MAN.Thrifting for clothes is amazing and I do it all the time but WOW, they really do overprice the clothes.Especially since it’s a nonprofit.If something was Lula Roe, they marked it up to the boutique section (and don’t even get me started on how lame the boutique section is)

Where I need to send my soul to look this freaking good while being ill? 😮

My sister and I did a “haul” when we were kids, except our audience was only my grandpa.

My grandma would take us to buy a year’s supply of school clothes every August, then we did a fashion show for him.

That feeling when summer is here and you can finally were you’re favourite shirt again… A feeling not everyone can relate to.

i don’t understand people who are anti outfit repeating.like if it’s a cute look i’m gonna wear it 20million times you know? like the entirety of my wardrobe is like 6 skirts that i love, a really old pair of jeans, and like 10 tops that i mix and match with the skirts

When the skinny jeans suddenly were dubbed only for “geriatric dusty millennials” I was walking through my mall wearing straight legged jeans.They fit like skinny’s on me because I’m curvy and athletic.

I didn’t have the money yet to replace my jeans and most stores wouldn’t open their dressing rooms due to C o v i d.So I walked past a group of girls honestly not too much younger than me, but the dirty looks I got.You know how people look at you, down at your pants then back up at you like you’re disgusting.I hate that bullying is okay now.I felt like millennials tried so hard to stop the bullying but here it is again.

I think we should stop generalizing the topic of Fast Fashion to “brands” and focusing the term to its actual concept, that being said we should separate the unethical mass produced brands from the term as well.

Fast Fashion is about how fast a brand can adapt itself to what is new and trendy.

And as much as people love to say otherwise NO ONE is safe from falling into the fast fashion cycle, yes nor those aesthetic girlies, nor the designer community, nor the DIY community and not the second hand.

Fast Fashion is a concept, not a brand, meaning that regardless where you buy the clothes if you have not personal style, and just trend hop, you are part of Fast Fashion.

The aesthetic communities are not far from supporting the concept either, maybe in the long run, but as how often people is finding themselves and since the clothing is required to fit into an specific aesthetic can still be used for Fast Fashion as trendy aesthetics pass.

As well viewing Fast Fashion from the stand alone point of view of a fast passed and 1st world country, and speak that as a only truth creates the stigma around people, as the way we 3rd world countries experience fashion and other kind of trends are extremely different.

If I found things second hand that fit me, I would only buy thrift.

But Fashion Nova fits me…and I literally have this dilemma each time I need a new thing because I try for thrift first…but it rarely works out for a person my size sadly.

Wow, I actually sat through this.Not a dig at you.I just don’t watch many YouTube video essays, but this was really good and engaging ans informative.

I can’t understand why people throw out clothes.Unless it’s some old manky sock, I donate everything.There was never a throw out pile when I was sorting through my clothes.

I won a oversized shirt in 2017.

It’s currently sitting in my bag (I have divorced parents) and I plan to where it tomorrow.And I got a very cute dress in Fiji, but it shrunk, so now it’s a shirt.

it’s also a difficult position when people w less money r working to make a following online and those r popular things to do.a content creator has to start somewhere and building a base off that can sometimes be what someone needs to become financially stable

i think the hockney dress is still rly cute!

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