The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Be very wary if you’re buying a dress online

-

THE lure of having a dress made to specifical­ly fit you is desirable for every woman. But it is usually expensive.

One of the most common complaints is that a size 14 in one shop seems to be a 12 in another shop, and a 16 somewhere else.

You’ll obviously look better in a dress that is specially measured to fit your height and vital statistics.

But there are pitfalls if you are attempting to buy a made-to-fit dress online.

Audrey Clarke, of Newburgh in Aberdeensh­ire, had a stroke at the end of September. Although now recovered, Audrey reckoned that instead of a stressful trail around the shops she might buy a dress from an online dressmaker.

She had a search around the www and thought that the bright, cheerful, welcoming website www.shillas.co.uk seemed exactly what she was looking for.

It promised profession­al production and quality assurance at the best possible prices.

Audrey ordered a lovely silver dress in her usual size in February. The price was initially listed in dollars, but she paid £105 sterling.

The dress arrived but it was the wrong size. Not just a little bit wrong either – it wasn’t anywhere close to the size Audrey had ordered.

This was perplexing, but not worrying. After all, the “returns policy” questionan­d-answer section of the Shillas website was quite clear. It reads: “If I do not like the dress I received, can I return it to get a refund? No matter you don’t like the dress colour or the style, we can return it for you with the refund or remake a new one for you.”

That’s fine, thought Audrey. She enquired about how to return the dress. And that’s when the problems started. Audrey contacted Shillas to find out where to send the dress. But there didn’t appear to be anywhere to send purchases back to.

She was, instead, offered a refund of 8% of the cost price. What on earth good was a few pounds refund when the dress she has is entirely useless?

The next offer was 14% but Audrey, unsurprisi­ngly, rejected that too. She wanted a full refund, as per the returns policy stated on the Shillas website.

But she got absolutely nowhere. Shillas asked for photos of the dress, which Audrey sent, but there was still no change in the offer of a 14% refund and that she could keep the dress.

Audrey contacted Raw Deal, as much to warn readers as in hope of getting a refund.

We had a look at the Shillas website, and also reviews on sites like Trustpilot and Ratingplea­se. They are damning. Scores of dissatisfi­ed and angry people have left scathing comments. It seems very few get a refund.

We contacted the Shillas’ customer relations, but, perhaps predictabl­y, got no response at all. It seems Shillas don’t want to explain their customer service policies with a national newspaper.

 ??  ?? Audrey’s Shillas dress wasn’t even close to the size that she’d ordered.
Audrey’s Shillas dress wasn’t even close to the size that she’d ordered.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom