this post was submitted on 16 Oct 2023
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Hello! I have an issue:

TLDR: I live in E Europe and would just like a site or app where I can shop for good quality, consistent, reliable, brandless, fashionless, timeless, standard, printless, good material, fairly priced clothes.


I usually like to buy bulk (2 long house jogger pants, 5 t-shirts of the same brand and form, just different basic colours, 2 black jeans, 7 pairs of socks of the same kind, 7 pairs of undies for example) and get it over with.

The closest i have found are C&A and H&M so far. I'd like even more simplicity and a bit better build quality.

"Fashion" conglomerate apps both second hand and new, contain the opposite of what i want in clothes: overpriced, varying quality, brand heavy, print/logo heavy, exotic cuts, weird colors, dated, impractical clothes.

I dont like needing to visit many generic online shops and flip the coin on build quality, and i dont like going to many online stores and finding the simple, honest clothing i like scattered one-three items on each brand.

I specifically want to avoid popular labels because that costs extra and the price is high for the label, not for the actual item of clothing.

Is there one app to unify this for me, or is there a company that just has fair prices and no fuss? And by no fuss, I also mean, i don't want some brand that sells me a white plain t-shirt for 100$ and makes this precious pageantry out of minimalism.

Sorry if i come off as bitter, but it's really difficult for me to just find simple stuff, and i am already fed up with it being such a chore after half a life. Simply because i have such simple requirements, its very difficult to find what i want.

Thank you in advance.

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I like Decathlon. I get everything there except jeans. Plain black or white t-shirts are a bit over 3 euro a piece. Socks are good, shoes are good, training pants and hoodies too and all of them have plain colors without much branding. For undies I get under armor and the elastic is branded unfortunately, but the comfort was more important. Good luck. Also since you said Eastern Europe check if you have a Waikiki store available, it's dirt cheap. Also Pepco is even cheaper. I've found plain clothes in both.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

i like decathlon too tbh. my only gripe is sometimes its a bit too primary colors for my taste. i like muted colors.

btw h&m has very good unbranded undies that last the most if you take care of them well (out of what i had so far)

on waikiki and pepco, i have encountered quite a few quality issues a few years back and stopped trying. might give them another shot - but see, we're already discussing 6 stores, each with SOME simple stuff, and i dont like to keep seeking out those few items that are simple and good.

(also Lidl but you gotta always keep an eye out there)

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

(also Lidl but you gotta always keep an eye out there)

Surprisingly true - my last Lidl visits had me looking into their clothing-isle longer than expected.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

YES! exactly. But that's also half my point: Lidl, C&A, H&M, Decathlon, waikiki, underarmour, sinsay, salomon... thats already a lot of places we need to either digitally or physically go to browse through.

If you think about it, most minimalists either

  1. hate shopping and would love a one stop shop for their needs. currently you end up visiting more places because you know exactly what simple things you want, than some shopaholic who will just buy whatever is at hand wherever they randomly find themselves shopping and wear it for a while. (here the minimalist hates the way he has to spend his time)

  2. are addicted to shopping and is their main struggle trying to become minimalistic - and browsing 10 shops instead of 3 like they used to - which will only make it harder for them to step away. (here the striving minimalist will hate the way they feel because they're basically investing even more time in shopping than they used to)

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

i found black shirts are actually harder to maintain than white ones. a good spot remover can easily save a white one, whereas a black one needs careful washing on 30 degrees, no heat drying to not lose color, no sun drying to not bleach etc. Besides if you pair black pants with black shirts, one will be darker than the other, and look washed out and old in comparison. whereas, if you have a white shirt and black jeans that might or might not be a bit discolored, the contrast will make them look a lot darker and therefore newer.