Friday, January 3, 2020

SALES RESISTANCE


I’m really at the place where I have enough of everything I want, so I try not to buy what I don’t want. This may sound silly, but when you like fabric, yarn, and patterns, the lure to buy is a constant.

My email has been full of deals from many sellers, most of which are small businesses dealing in the aforesaid fabric, yarn, and patterns. I am somewhat sympathetic to them because they feed my hobby interests. My creative endeavor is in pulling together the elements of a cute doll outfit, not in designing and drafting.  

Throughout the “buying season,” i.e. December, I was surprised by what retailers (large and small) offered me as “good deals.” “Free shipping,” says one, and then you find that you must spend $35, $65, even $100 in order to take advantage of that deal. “Save 10% today,” offers a seller. Ridiculous! – unless, of course, you’re buying something very expensive, like a house or a car. For most items, a good sale doesn’t begin until the discount is at least 25%.

“Save $1.00 on this pattern (regularly $5.00) if you buy today.” I’m not enticed by that. The difference between $4.00 and $5.00 is mostly nil unless I’m at the grocery store. Then I’m appalled to see how prices consistently go up and sale prices are higher than they used to be.)

And don’t let them fool you. “Last chance,” they say; “this sale ends tonight, so buy now.” When one sale ends, another begins. That’s just the way it is. Well, most of the time.

And then there are the contests. The offer always makes it sound like I’m THE winner. “Sign up and win this sewing machine,” reads the offer. I resent the implication that my winning is a sure thing or that they’re doing something wonderful for me because they’re giving away one of their products. The reality is that this is a game of chance and it’s very likely I won’t be the winner. And not only that, but when I occasionally consider entering, I discover that they want way too much of my personal info.

In the genre I follow (sewing for dolls), some contests are set forth as “challenges,” wherein contestants make doll outfits using specific patterns and then post pictures on social media. The lucky winner, however she’s chosen, might receive a new doll or a bundle of fabric. After trying one or two of these challenges, I found that I don’t like the sense of competition encroaching upon what I love to do in the privacy of my sewing studio. I prefer to sew what I want to sew rather than what someone tells me to sew. Perhaps I'm not the only one who feels that way, but sometimes it feels like I'm all alone out here. 

Now that I've vented, it's back to work.




3 comments:

Chris said...

I'm so impressed that you've written a post each day!!

I'm with you on all the "great offers" that appear each day in our inboxes. I've learned to just laugh and say, I think I'll wait and see what tomorrow brings. I agree, ten per cent is nothing. I wait for at least forty percent and free shipping. And even then I ponder my needs and usually decide I don't really need whatever it is. I'm enjoying my lean closet and bare space on shelves.

Kathy said...

I have lots of good ideas on my shelves upon which I need to act. I do like something new, though, and I like mail, so feeling "stuffed" is not inspirational.

But I can tell we have basically the same philosophy of shopping. I frequently abandon a cart when I realize I can do without the item(s).

Kathy said...

Oh Chris -- I meant to acknowledge that the muse has been with me, but most posts haven't been very long, and that's fine.