The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Charity shop farewell for all our little must-haves that turned into our little never-agains

Our style expert reveals her lockdown wardrobe clearout has inspired a new generation of dedicated followers of fashion

- By Alice Hinds ahinds@sundaypost.com

Inthe long, long hoursof lockdown, after the box sets, baking, board games, and even clearing out our wardrobes seemed to have a certain exotic allure.

The hours spent pulling long-forgotten jumpers from long-neglected drawers and filling bin bags with the little must-haves that turned into the little never-agains has led to a bonanza for our charity shops after 67 million items of unwanted clothing were uncovered.

When high street stores reopened for the first time since March, experts anticipate­d a surge in donations to local causes, with one survey suggesting 49% of people had unwanted clothes waiting to be gifted. And volunteers were not disappoint­ed as bags and boxes began to arrive in droves, with some of the busier stores receiving hundreds of bags a day.

Brenda Walton, area manager for Oxfam’s stores in Glasgow and the west of Scotland, said some shops had been overwhelme­d by the volume of clothing, furniture and other household items arriving on their doorstep – and some locations can’t keep up with the donations.

She explained: “The public’s response and support has been absolutely amazing. People have come out in their hundreds.

“Some of our shops have very small back areas, so if a donation of 35 bags comes in – which has been common over the last few days – it can quickly fill the entire space. Plus, we don’t have a lot of volunteers right now, especially as we often rely on students, so it’s created quite a backlog for us.”

She added: “Our Helensburg­h shop had separate donations booked last week with 35 bags one day, 23 the next, and 19 more the following day. But those bags have been all shapes and sizes – boxes, rubble sacks, carrier bags and bin bags, so there’s been a lot coming in.

“Some shops are seeing up to 150 bags a week, which is a lot more than usual times.”

According to GivingAssi­stant.org, a rewards platform, online searches for “charity shops near me open today” have increased by 450% in the past 30 days. But with charity shops currently having to quarantine new items for a minimum of 72 hours before they can be sold, Brenda admits it’s been a challenge to find space for extra stock.

“If someone brings along a donation, and we are already stockpiled from floor to ceiling, it’s very rare that we would say no – but it does add to the pressure on our processing services. In some of the smaller shops, the donations are stacked more than halfway up the walls.

“So, we’ve put in place a system called Ring Before You Bring, which encourages donors to phone ahead and book a slot, so we can safely accept the donation and avoid any disappoint­ment.

“Without people’s gifts we couldn’t make money, so we’re really grateful.”

‘ People have come out in their hundreds. The support has been amazing

Like thousands of others during lockdown, P.S. fashion expert Wendy Rigg decided on a muchneeded wardrobe clear out but she discovered that her fashion trash was her granddaugh­ters’ treasure.

Visiting my grandmothe­r as a child was always such fun, as she let us have full access to her wardrobe. There were fox fur stoles, floral print tea dresses, wedge heels, fancy canes and all sorts of fabulous things to get dressed up in, and we loved this.

My granny used to get most of her own clothes from thrift shops, and always looked lovely in neat Chanel style suits with her dyed red hair in a ’40s updo. I loved to watch her do her hair in the mirror. It involved a lot of hair grips, and a sponge hairpiece to give the roll at the front some height. She’d then apply lipstick in a peachy shade, and would always wear a single strand of pearls. She did this every day, no matter where she was, and was never knowingly understyle­d.

She was beautifull­y coordinate­d. Neat pencil skirts to just above the knee were matched with collarless jackets and blouses with a tie at the neck. It was all a bit Cate Blanchett in the current series Mrs America.

These are my first memories of developing an interest in fashion and

I’m sure those early dressing-up sessions set me on the career path that has taken me all over the world.

Now I’m the granny and when I decided to have a wardrobe clear-out during those long months of lockdown, my own grandaught­ers, Layla, 12, and Taiga, five, discovered the joy of dressing up in my cast-offs.

As you’d expect from someone who works in fashion, my wardrobe is stuffed with accessorie­s and clothes. But my love of clothes is now tempered with an awareness of how fast fashion impacts on our planet, a planet my grandchild­ren have inherited.

Designer Patrick Grant said on The Great British Sewing Bee: “We have enough clothing on the planet right now to clothe the next six generation­s of the human race: we have to find ways of using what we’ve got.”

I realised there are many items in my wardrobe that I have shockingly only worn once, and honestly will never wear again.

For me, getting rid of things I no longer loved or wore was cathartic. The guilt I was harbouring because of that dress which was bought for a wedding and never saw the light of day again, could at last be assuaged.

I’ll even confess that while working as a fashion editor on a busy celebrity weekly, I’d often get a last-minute invite to an evening event, and would think nothing of dashing out to buy something new which would end up squashed into my packed wardrobe never to leave its dark confines again. The shoes I bought

with heels that killed my feet after one night only, never again to be squeezed on to my Cinderella feet (home in a cab by midnight with blisters). I can put all that guilt in a neatly tied-up bag and take it to the charity shop or put it on eBay.

During lockdown I found clothes I’d forgotten I even owned. It was like finding treasures in a vintage shop. I unearthed the decades. It was like a fashion version of an archaeolog­ical excavation.

Packed away I found the Betsy Johnson dress with matching elbow-length gloves I bought in LA on a fashion trip, a Vivienne Westwood pirate shirt, and an early John Galliano skirt.

There were a lot of frivolous fashion items I couldn’t bring myself to get rid of. Sequins, giant rose hair accessorie­s, tiaras, satin, lace Venetian masks, Japanese parasols, Spanish fans bought on holiday, floppy-wide brimmed hats, silk and lace, fluffy pinkness, tulle petticoats, glittering heels too high to walk in.

These frou-frou fancies drew Layla and Taiga like moths to a flame.

Whenever they come over to visit, my bedroom ends up looking like a backstage dressing room for the entire cast of a theatrical performanc­e. I love watching them clopping around in my heels and adopting personalit­ies and making up scenarios to go with the clothes.

It makes me smile to see the sparkly mini-skirt I wore in Ibiza, ending up looking fabulous on Layla or sometimes it’s worn as a cape by Taiga.

Hopefully I’m inspiring them the way my granny inspired me, and will remember this with affection when they grow up.

l loved to dress up at gran’s. Styles might change but some things stay the same – Wendy Rigg

 ?? Picture ?? Wendy and granddaugh­ters Layla, 12, and Taiga, five, dress up with Layla wearing boa worn by Wendy, inset
Gemma Day
Picture Wendy and granddaugh­ters Layla, 12, and Taiga, five, dress up with Layla wearing boa worn by Wendy, inset Gemma Day
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 ??  ?? Wendy with grandaughe­r Taiga, five
Wendy with grandaughe­r Taiga, five
 ??  ?? Wendy wrapped up in boa
Wendy wrapped up in boa

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