I used to work for a company called Primus international. I took my work jackets and used a sharpie to black out international then used a white paint pen to write sucks under Primus. Been asked many times where I got it.
Charities will take them then cut, bale and sell most second hand shirts as industrial rags ♻️
There's donation bins i've seen that take basically any clothes to give/sell to people in need. They would take anything and it beats throwing them away in my opinion.
I'm blown away by your statement that you don't need clothes to dirty up nor rags lol.
I thought I replied to this already, so, apologies if you get two replies - basically, I already have too many rags and I feel skeptical of the donation bins. The ones I've seen are always overflowing with stuff and if they're outdoors the clothes that overflow are at the mercy of the elements. And I'm not talking about a couple clothes, but enough bags of donations to fill the bin again.
unfortunate to hear about the overflowing clothes.
Old clothes are nearly lint free after several washes. Cut them into rags and keep them around for cleaning and DIY stuff. That is what I do with mine.
I wear them.
I can't relate to work clothes (yet), but whenever I've had to get rid of a school uniform, it just ends up lent.
I'm not necessarily familiar enough to explicitly recommend this, but I am vaguely aware of the "take back bag" as a means to donate clothes and build up some kind of rewards points. I'm not really sure their goals or how it works, but may be worth investigating for you https://fordays.com/products/take-back-bag
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