Secondhand Challenge: No Buying New Stuff for an Entire Year

A family from Alberta, Canada, has nearly completed a year-long experiment in which everything they buy—with a few exceptions for things like food and hygiene—must be previously owned.

Jessica Gabriel, the family matriarch who blogs about their challenge at Nothing New, Nothing Wasted, recently talked to the Globe and Mail about some of the resources her family found most helpful in getting by without buying new:

There’s Kijiji, there’s Freecycle, your friends are wanting to get rid of stuff, and people are constantly upgrading their own stuff, and it’s amazing the quality of goods you can get second-hand and not feel like you’re living a second-hand life.

The Gabriel family also utilized a procedure it calls “up-cycling,” which is basically using some creativity to fix up something that you own or that you got secondhand, thereby creating something new with old materials:

I had some comforters that weren’t all that visually appealing to me, so I recovered them with fabric that I had kicking around. Another thing that my husband did was he got an old dilapidated barbecue from the dump and he cut the legs off of it and made an ice-fishing fireplace out of it.

READ MORE:
Q&A: How to Get Through December without Spending Money

Related Topics: freebies, Freecycle, secondhand, Saving & Spending
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  • http://debra251.wordpress.com debra251

    My husband & I have been doing this for over 25 years.
    It has been quite a fun game and at this point in time we have a home that has been 90% furnished with free & refurbished items, the total cost of our present home furniture: $285. This does not count electronics although all 3 computers that we own are updated or rebuilt as needed. Example: My husband & son recently built a kitchen island from an old discarded wood desk top and 2 bookcases found at a flea market for $5 each, complete with 2 barstools that someone was getting rid of, again, total cost $10, Yes, we get a lot of complements on it and just laugh. How did this start? Being “middle class” yet admiring fine craftsmanship we flat refused to spend money on items of poor quality so went to the extreme never expecting to someday actually being in vogue! One does have to laugh.
    Signed: Italian & Blue Collar

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