Stash Your Cash: How to Have Cool Crap for Less Money

by Myscha Theriault on 20 November 2007 14 comments

This is for those of you who still want better crap, but love having a bank account balance too. It’s also a companion post to Philip’s piece called When Poor Folks Have Better Crap Than You. (Was that intro hilarious, or what?) After getting a sneak preview of his article, I thought it was too cool to wait. So here are five simple strategies you can put to use immediately in order to have better crap. Happy shopping!

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  1. Fix up and find free crap. Many a curbside, salvage yard, or dump item has found new life in our home, and I dare say the homes of many other cheapskate decorators. A quick example? Turn a lower height rectangular bureau into a room divider and sofa table. Here’s how: add some bun feet, spray paint it, and add some funky new handles. Then, top it with a runner, some potted plants and framed photos, and perhaps a candle or two. With the drawers facing out, you also have hidden and easily accessed board games for family activity night.
     
  2. Modify or spruce up your old crap. Got an old, beat up set of tall generic bookshelves? Add some bun feet (one of my favorites along with industrial shelving) and crown molding at the top and bottom. Then, add some half round trim the shelf fronts and paint the whole thing black. As I covered in my blue jeans article, this strategy works for clothing too. Rip off any ugly detailing and slap on some new buttons. You might be surprised at the result. Tempted to trade in your old car? Think about a new paint job, tweaking the hub caps and cleaning up your white walls.
     
  3. Shop for second hand crap. Auctions, moving sales, estate sales, and classified sales ads from people who buy all the newest stuff but can’t afford it. I covered this a while back in the power shopping article. You can get some seriously high end crap with this strategy. A fairly well-to-do friend of mine is currently downsizing in order to sell her place, buy something smaller, and have a little more free time to travel and smell the roses. Some of the stuff she’s getting rid of at fifty percent off or more from her original purchase price? An ATV without a scratch, a new model Hummer with low mileage, multiple flat screen TV’s, some seriously slamming jewelry . . . the list goes on. Now that this girl has decided to downsize and simplify, she’s not screwing around. The executive ocean view / lake front home on the coast is going too. She’d rather have a small cottage or cabin. Shopping second hand, as I’ve covered previously, is not just about second hand pots and pans.
     
  4. Figure out new uses for your crap. I’ve spent a fair amount of time researching this, as we want to save as many things as possible when we raze the cottage we’re currently living in. As this was and is a family property, this is largely for sentimental purposes. But it’s certainly for financial reasons as well. The more creative we get with the building process, the more square footage we can have. Just replaced your front door? Repaint the old one, add some legs and a glass top, and you’ve got a one-of-a-kind loft style dining room table. Got some tall old shutters? Hinge them together for a combination room divider and holiday greeting card display rack. All sorts of ideas are out there for re-using old windows, ladders, bureaus and more.
     
  5. Try on expensive crap in stores to get the style and size right. Then go shop for it on Ebay for a chance to buy a new version from a seller who’s letting it go cheap. A friend of mine turned me on to this. It’s how she gets her designer jeans and other name brand crap for 70 percent off or more.

These are my top five strategies for saving money on cool crap. Got any you’d like to share?

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Guest's picture

These are GREAT suggestions. One way of finding free crap, getting things you want to add to your crap or figuring out what to do with old crap is to freecycle (www.freecycle.org). It's free, a bit like a bulletin board on Craigslist but most of the time it's quite a bit bigger.

You can post a note asking for things that you want or asking people to take your stuff. You might be surprised at what people are willing to give you. I've gotten a really nice phone that and an exercise ball and I've gotten rid of a BUNCH of old crap.

rstlne's picture

I find that thrift stores are good sources of inexpensive cr*p, but I do have to shop a lot of thrift stores to find what I want.

Guest's picture
20 Nov. 2007 | 10:06 AM Badgerette

All hail reworking old crap! My house is full of it. Our "new" TV stand was once a hideous 1970's coffee table. Doors removed, & a coat of waxy black paint, it rivals any new one for style. My husband's desk was once a broken Sauder type desk & an unwanted slab of granite. An old sewing cabinet is my printer stand, vintage faucet knobs are drawer pulls on a dresser. River rocks are bookends. As if shopping for most necessities second hand weren't enough, I delight in finding unintentional uses for things. Thanks for the awesome article!

Myscha Theriault's picture

Sorry, I just couldn't resist . . . thanks for all your comments and ideas, everybody! Love the granite topped desk and TV stand ideas!!!!!

Guest's picture

Shop where rich people unload their crap. I found the right second hand clothing stores and thrift stores that had a steady supply from the McCastle neighborhoods that were populated by compulsive shoppers. Nothing like a $6 Dana Buchman suit that looks like it was worn once.
I go to expensive stores to get ideas. Then try to find what I want at outlet places like Tuesday Morning or the big furniture stores clearance warehouses.
If you still keep the idea of buy less, buy what you really actually need and buy the best quality you can afford you can have some decent stuff.

Guest's picture

(1) If you have specific types of crap that you're looking for, set up Craigslist or eBay RSS feeds (and e-mail filters, if you get Freecycle listings) to make it easy to patiently wait for just the right crap at just the right price. This is especially important when just the right price = free, because you need to find out about and act quickly when good stuff gets offered up on CL or FreeCycle;

(2) Be eager to take crap from other people. In fact, become known as the person who will gladly take crap! The best person to take crap from is your boss's boss (it's a little weird taking too much crap from your boss, and your boss's crap may not be that much better than your crap). We got a very nice, not too old stainless steel Meile dishwasher from the owner of the company my husband works for. Insert yourself insidiously in conversations when you hear the word "remodeling" or "redecorating."

(3) If you have a taste for big crap, you gotta have the wheels to haul it. We have easily a $1,000 worth of free landscaping materials sitting in our driveway right now, which we never would have been able to score if we were driving around a Prius, sorry to say. "Free delivery" is the privilege of those who can afford to pay retail for new crap.

Myscha Theriault's picture

Nice ideas. I remember having access to GREAT second hand stuff in Tucson by shopping where people who overshopped for good crap dropped off the good crap they overshopped for. It was indeed sweet.

Thanks again for the continued participation in the discussion everyone.

Guest's picture

Oh, I wish you could tell me where in Tucson to shop for second hand! I have the worst luck choosing stores (or maybe my tastes are different from everyone else's...or I go at the wrong times...)

Loved the post. Definitely believe in sprucing up old stuff we have. An old dresser turned into a "art storage" -- painted it however I wanted and then put the paints in it. Looks nice and fits the purpose! Save on money and the space of a new piece of furniture in one sweep. Plus we don't have to figure out how to get it down the stairs...

Myscha Theriault's picture

Well, out in Green Valley the White Elephant store was one of our haunts. They also have great estate sales / second hand vehicle sales there in the paper on a regular basis as it's a retirement community. In the city itself, Speedway Thrift always resulted in a find or two every time I went. Twice as Nice was OK, but a bit higher than I like to pay for second hand stuff. There's also a great 99 cent grocery store on the corner of Gulf Links and Craycroft. Keep going up Craycroft to 22nd street (I'm pretty sure it's that intersection and not Wilmot and 22nd) and check out the Rainbow Grocery outlet as well.  Walgreens stores abound with their free rebate programs, and the mall across from Pier One and Linens and Things has a Macy's with killer clearance sales when you can catch them. Does that help?

 

 

Guest's picture

There are so many ways to make a home feel more comfortable and look better without spending money, just by using what is already there. No new stuff required... just correct the 10 Most Common Decorating Mistakes.
Downsize what you have, before going out to get more, and your home can feel more open and tranquil.

Lauri Ward,
Downsizing Your Home With Style

Guest's picture

Thanks for the tips, I have an idea of where I'll be visiting in the near future!

Myscha Theriault's picture

My husband and I were just chatting and he reminded me the 99 cent grocery store was Kolb and Golf Links, not Craycroft. There is however a great Asian market with cheap curry pastes and other stuff on Craycroft between Gulf Links and 22nd ( I think it's right next to Sew What). Sorry if you went on a wild goose chase. It's been just long enough since I lived there, that I'm starting to get the street names wrong. Keep me posted if you have problems finding any of the places.

Guest's picture

Myscha, this one is great, we all have things that we no longer need and donating them or sharing them with others who can enjoy them is so much better than seeing them hit the landfill! Also a great way to save $ for the things we really want to accomplish in life!

Guest's picture

When you need something, mention it in casual conversation. Someone might sell theirs to you if they aren't using it. The best part is, you know it functions, and you have an idea of how much life is left in it, and can price accordingly.