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Buying retail -- cautiously

Posted Apr 07 2008, 12:43 PM by Donna Freedman
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Some people seem to think that I never buy anything new. That's not the case. A few weeks ago I bought a dining table and chairs.

Although it's like placing a "Kick Me" sign on my own back, I'm going to admit that I bought these things from Kmart.

Discount department stores have a down-at-the-heels reputation: their merchandise is low-end and their employees -- when you can find them -- are surly and unhelpful.

That wasn't my experience. When I couldn't find the advertised dining set, a manager brought one out from the stockroom. Then he loaded it into my car, chatting pleasantly.

The sale price of $99 was a good deal for a table and four chairs. If you follow this link, you'll see that it's perfectly respectable-looking furniture. Naturally, some assembly was required.

Would I have preferred to buy an oak dining set handcrafted by a local artisan? You bet. But that's not in my budget. I'm certainly not the only one who can't afford custom furniture, imported linens or high-end cookware -- and this is how discount department stores stay in business.

It works for me
For the past three years I'd been using a wooden table borrowed from my daughter and a couple of chairs found by the Dumpster on trash day.

The table was and is nice. The chairs were wobbly. I'd gotten used to them, though, and for this reason the new chairs felt odd. As a sailor needs to get used to unmoving ground, I had to reaccustom myself to solid seating.

I might have used those old chairs indefinitely if my daughter hadn't shown me the Kmart ad. It's not that she needed her old table back; in fact, it took some rearranging to fit it into her apartment. She just wanted to remind me that it really is OK to spend something on myself -- on, say, chairs that don’t shimmy.

It would have been possible for me to "shop" via craigslist, rummage sales, thrift shops or Freecycle. This is the way I usually get things, or get rid of them. This time, however, I behaved like a consumer: I looked at the ad and had the urge for something that was new, not just new to me.

There's nothing wrong with wanting new things. It not only keeps a lot of people employed, it saves us from having to do everything ourselves. We could bake our own bread, sew our own clothes, and hew our own furniture from trees we felled ourselves. Some people do. But most of us prefer to hire it out.

The snob factor
Why, then, have I felt reluctant to tell people about my new dining set? One word: elitism. As noted above, some folks sneer at those who shop at places like Kmart or Wal-Mart. They throw around words like "food stamps," "low-income" and "redneck." Maybe it makes them feel superior to disparage people who don't have much money. Maybe they've been lucky enough never to have been broke.

Others raise ethical concerns about discount merchandise, saying it's made overseas under sweatshop conditions. No kidding. But where do most retailers, even high-end ones, get their products? Almost certainly not from American factories whose unions ensure fair wages and safe workplaces. I just checked the tag on a Liz Claiborne silk blouse and it read "made in China." (I bought the garment in a thrift shop, incidentally.)

A lot of people go to Kmart or Wal-Mart because they can't afford to shop anywhere else. Others are pulled in by the occasional loss-leader price that matches their budgets.

That's me. And after three years of taking meals and doing homework from a wobbly chair, I have to say it feels good to be on solid ground.

Comments

 

I gotta say, my mother in law bough a kitchen set 7 years ago at K-mart, we inherited it about a year later and have used it daily.  This kitchen set has moved across country three times since then and it has withstood alot and is still in great condition.

I also bought an expensive coffee table set from one of those "high end" furniture places and, after about 2 years it started falling apart and, it cost me close to 3 times then what the kitchen set cost! Just goes to show you.....

Gross.... I'm all about saving money but the smelly folk that frequent our Wal-Mart keep me away most times.

I usually end up scouring the web for a similiar bargain and shopping from home.  Hey, Wal-Mart does ship.

I'm not a snob.  I want to shop at Wal-Mart for the low prices and ease but most all the people who shop there in my area smell like they live on a park bench.

I bought a solid wood table with 4 chairs for $199.00 from KMart 6 years ago when I first moved into my house.  They still look beautiful and i didn't have to charge an expensive dining set from Eathen Allen that I would still be paying off.  I love a good bargain and would rather brag about how little I paid for something i.e. I just bought a sterling silver necklace from a major department store that had a $60.00 price.  My cost $6.90.

There is nothing wrong with shopping at discount stores.  I recently moved into a bigger house and had several rooms to decorate.  We decorated some with more high end furniture and some with Discount store furniture.  Honestly the discount store furniture is not bad at all.  I had to put some of it together but it is functional.  I got a coffee table and an end table at Christmas tree Shop for $50.  How can you go wrong?    Unless you have lots of money to blow, utilize the discount stores.  Most smart people do.

Who cares where you purchase the products?  As long as you are happy with what you have and can afford it, then it shouldn't matter if it came from Wal-Mart or the high end furniture store up the block.  No one will know, and if someone is so ignorant to make rude remarks about where you buy your things, then oh well.  Being a snob doesn't keep you warm at night, but knowing that you got a decent product and a good price would give me warm fuzzies cause in the end, I didn't break the bank.  :)

I think you did just right.  My husband & I always shopped at discount store or thrift shops, first because we had 3 kids to support & put through college on one paycheck.  Then because we got used to it & saw no reason to change to high priced stores simply because we had more disposable income when the kids grew up & moved out.  Turns out that it's a good thing we didn't develop a taste for high living.  My husband just became disabled, which cut our income in half.  We've always lived by the slogan "Live simply so others may simly live"

Another good place to look for sturdy & stylish furniture is unfinished furniture stores, that is if you don't mind painting or staining things yourself.  I've always enjoyed that kind of thing.

>> They throw around words like "food stamps," "low-income" and "redneck." <<

I grew up going every week to a (frankly kind of scary) grocery store that DID cater to the rough crowd-- my family was one of very few not paying with food stamps. And these weren't people who were using assistance to get back on their feet or to supplement a single-parent income; these were folks who just didn't want to work or put forth any effort in any area of their lives. People who snub their noses at Kmart and Wal-Mart because of the clientele really have no idea just how civilized most of the shoppers there are-- probably because they don't bother to go assess the situation for themselves. :)

Dumpster divers unite.

So what if it came from K-Mart?  Lots of folks with the "fancy" furniture are still paying for it.  Better to buy yourself something and not owe anyone.  Enjoy it!  I just bought a fantastic loveseat (a Lane) from the Salvation Army for less than $100 and it looks (and sits) brand new.  

In 1995 while living in a very small house in Corvallis, OR I bought a dinette table and four chairs at my local K-Mart.  The table was glass top and because of space limitations I only put two chairs together.  Four years later I sold the whole set for more than I paid for it at a Garage Sale.  It was in perfect shape and looked brand new.  I have since bought other small household items at K-Mart and have been just as pleased.  Bad part is that I live almost two hours now from the closest K-Mart so shopping there is really an all-day trip and a great treat!

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