It's true: every main street in every little village is peppered with second-hand shops, each of which is tied to a specific charity with all or most of the shop proceeds going back into the charity.
Here I am in Lytham, Lancashire outside the Barnardos shop, where I picked up a cashmere-blend sweater for about three pounds (about five bucks).
Thrift shop culture (or charity shop as they say in Jolly Old) is so ingrained in English culture that it has, from my outsider's viewpoint, become almost mass market.
Translation: the shops are hyper clean (completely bereft of that sickly sweet thrift shop smell I know so well in Canada); they're also quite corporate looking (as you can see from the outside of the British Heart Foundation shop) - but there's a but.
The downside is there's not a lot, hardly any, good vintage duds. Most of the apparel is contemporary mass market labels like Marks & Spencer and main street - or as they say High Street - brands. Jewellery is new.
Hate to be negative. As I am having a perfectly glorious time here. Went to a vintage market today and have much to tell, soon, dear readers, when I"m back on my home turf in a day or so. Ciao for now!
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