• Home
  • About
  • Resources
    • Resources
    • Certifications
    • Go Local
  • Events
  • Contact
Fair for All Guide

pursuing a connected & responsible life

secondhand september

What’s It Like to Run a Secondhand Shop?

October 2, 2015 by Julia 3 Comments

When I really like something, I enjoy hearing the story behind it so I can appreciate the people and processes that bring me so much joy. This Secondhand September (I’m a couple days late, shhh!), I wondered what it takes to actually run a vintage shop and how someone gets involved in that business. Thankfully, Sara Baldwin Schatz, founder of Fountain Square alt-boutique Lux & Ivy, was more than happy to illuminate the topic.

Lux & Ivy retail floor with racks of clothing

I asked Schatz what personally draws her to secondhand shopping. “I have always loved vintage and secondhand clothing,” she says. However, her parents didn’t get her into the habit. “Before I could drive, my mom could never understand why my friends and I wanted to be dropped off at Goodwill and Value Village. We would spend hours just sifting through racks of clothing. Each piece seemed to tell its own story. It was as if you could picture the previous owner; and yet the moment you put that perfect dress or sweater on, it instantly became a part of your own story.”

Schatz’s love of vintage clothing grew through her studies in journalism and photography and work experience in the fashion industry. But she says, “Now, as an adult, my interest in secondhand goes way beyond feeling and aesthetic. I truly believe that it is the most responsible way to shop. Why waste precious resources creating new clothing that is not made to last? Especially when so much beautiful, well-made clothing is already in existence—discarded and waiting to be reused. Fashion is so much bigger than the latest trends—it should be something that we think about as a society, the same way we are collectively starting to consider wastefulness and production when it comes to our consumption of food.”

Fashion should be something we think about as a society.

When asked about the biggest challenge of being in the vintage clothing business, Schatz says, “Truthfully, the toughest thing is fulfilling the needs of my customer—a big reason why I started carrying new clothing as well, still trying to keep sustainability in mind when doing so. Because I can only carry what people bring me and what I find, I am somewhat limited as far as the shop’s aesthetic. I get so many requests for vintage items and I do my best to hunt them down for people, but it isn’t as easy as placing an order from a distributor like you would with new items.”

Schatz and her son at the Lux & Ivy store

Schatz and her son at the Lux & Ivy store

Schatz cites merchandising as the second-most challenging aspect of her business. I actually had to look up what merchandising is; according to Wikipedia, “At a retail in-store level, merchandising refers to the variety of products available for sale and the display of those products in such a way that it stimulates interest and entices customers to make a purchase.” I’ve always thought this would be the most fun part of running a store, but Schatz points out that with a limited selection, you also have limited options for conveying the shop’s aesthetic.

Thanks to Sara Baldwin Schatz for sharing a small glimpse behind the scenes of a secondhand store! Do you have experience working in the secondhand biz? What was it like? Satiate my curiosity in the comments!

Posted in: Ethical Consumerism, Interviews, Style, Sustainable Living, Thrift, Vintage Tagged: secondhand september

The Best Secondhand Stores in Indianapolis

September 22, 2015 by Julia 5 Comments

Thanks to everyone who came out to FairSwap15 last week! Check out the gallery of awesome photos by Abigail K Photography, and keep an eye on our new Events page to find out when the next swap will be.

Best Secondhand Stores in Indianapolis

Photo by Abigail K Photography

For the last seven years or so—ever since I learned that sweatshops and poor labor conditions in factories were not in fact eliminated in the 1990s and remain widespread today—I’ve done the majority of my shopping secondhand, which I consider to be an ethical choice for a variety of reasons. Thankfully, I live in Indianapolis, a city rich with excellent thrift, vintage and consignment shops. This Secondhand September, I wanted to share my picks for the best secondhand stores in Indianapolis.

Goodwill

I go to Goodwill like other people go to Target. It’s my first stop for almost any purchase. They have almost everything, I live right by the excellent N. Keystone location, and it’s reliably well-organized and clean.

  • 25+ locations in the Indy area
  • Price point: Most items under $10
  • Good for: Clothing and home items particularly, but they have virtually everything
  • Need to know: Hit a savings bonus by shopping their “color of the week” (not the actual color of the item—each item has a different colored plastic tag) for 50% off.

Vintage Vogue

Despite its unique name, Vintage Vogue is actually a Goodwill store with a twist. It stocks items from the Goodwill donation stream but is arranged and styled like a boutique to provide a more conventional shopping experience. The selection is curated to include higher quality, trendier items, which is great if you don’t have a lot of time to invest in sifting through the racks.

Sales floor of Vintage Vogue store

The boutique-y layout of Vintage Vogue

  • 2361 E 62nd Street
  • Price point: Slightly more expensive than a regular Goodwill store. I paid $10 for jeans and $8 for a shirt there once.
  • Good for: Women’s clothing
  • Need to know: Vintage Vogue is located close to the N. Keystone Goodwill location as well as The Toggery, making Glendale an efficient neighborhood for a big shopping trip.

Value World

I go to Value World when I’m shopping for costumes. The selection tends to be a little older and quirkier (though I’ve gotten some very wearable shirts there), but the super-low prices are perfect for buying something you plan to modify or wear infrequently. I also like to shop for shoes at Value World because they keep most of the shoes in one area instead of spreading them out a la Goodwill.

  • 4 locations around Indy
  • Price point: Generally very low. Some items are priced at $1-2.
  • Good for: Tops, shoes
  • Need to know: There are no fitting rooms at Value World, so don’t plan to buy anything there where the fit is really important.

Broad Ripple Vintage

Do you like The Doors? Good, because that’s pretty much all they play as the soundtrack at Broad Ripple Vintage, and it represents very well what you’ll find there.

  • 824 E 64th Street
  • Price point: Moderate
  • Good for: Men’s & women’s clothing
  • Need to know: The style at BRV skews toward the 60’s and 70’s hippie look, though there are outliers. They also have a great selection of 80’s prom dresses and women’s slips, crinolines and other retro undergarments.

The Toggery

I’m currently wearing my absolute favorite pair of black pants, which I bought at The Toggery. It’s a consignment store, meaning they only accept what they think will sell, which leads to higher prices than a thrift store but a much higher quality selection.

Rack of clothes at The Toggery

  • 1810 Broad Ripple Ave.
  • Price point: Moderate. I recall these black pants being $12, but they also sell designer items at a higher price point.
  • Good for: Stylish, work-appropriate clothing
  • Need to know: Make money on your own unwanted clothes, shoes and accessories by consigning them here.

Lux & Ivy

Lux & Ivy caters to the rock n’ rollers of Fountain Square, according to owner Sara Baldwin Schatz. The vintage selections at her shop inside the Murphy Building have a distinctly edgy flair.

  • 1043 Virgina Ave, Suite 209
  • Price point: From $5 – $100 depending on the era and condition of the item
  • Good for: Edgy vintage clothing
  • Need to know: The shop contains a mix of vintage and new items, so choose carefully if you’re aiming for a 100% secondhand haul.

Thrifty Threads

Thrifty Threads is a shop with a big heart. Clients from the Julian Center shop at Thrifty Threads for free to help get back on their feet. Proceeds from items sold to the public help underwrite Julian Center programs and services.

  • 1501 W 86th Street
  • Good for: Clothing, furniture
  • Need to know: The National Council of Jewish Women also operates a boutique within the thrift store selling second-hand designer clothing.

Do you have a favorite secondhand shop not listed here? Share it in the comments!

Posted in: Ethical Consumerism, Style, Sustainable Living, Sweatshop-Free, Thrift, Vintage Tagged: secondhand september

A Secondhand September

September 14, 2015 by Julia 1 Comment

This September is shaping up to be a secondhand-centric month. Not only is my very first clothing swap event tomorrow (!), but the Ethical Writers Coalition is leading a Secondhand Challenge. The EWC challenges you to rethink your attitudes toward secondhand shopping and begin to think secondhand first.

Ethical Writers Coalition Secondhand Challenge

Using secondhand items is ethical for a variety of reasons:

  1. It saves usable items from the landfill
  2. It doesn’t use the energy and materials required to produce new items
  3. It opposes cultural pressure to buy everything new
  4. It honors the people who make items by not treating their work as disposable

Secondhand items can be found at thrift shops and consignment stores or alternative channels like clothing swaps, Craigslist, Freecycle, neighborhood message boards, Yerdle, and more.

The flip side of the coin of secondhand shopping is putting our own unwanted items out into the secondhand market. This can be an ethical challenge in itself. According to the documentary The True Cost, only 10% of the clothes people donate to charity or thrift stores gets sold. The rest ends up in landfills or is shipped to developing countries where the flood of secondhand clothing can undermine local industry. That’s why the EWC challenge also includes an emphasis on finding the right channels for discarding your unwanted things (such as the alternative channels listed above).

Here are a few of my favorite posts collected by the EWC’s Secondhand Challenge so far:

  • 10 Ways to Thrift Shop Like a Pro via Style Wise
  • How I’ve Mastered the Art of Secondhand Shopping via Sotela
  • How To Buy Vintage via The Note Passer
  • Connecting Stuff You Don’t Want with People Who Want It via yours truly
  • Cleaning House: Nextdoor.com via Walking with Cake

Thrift shopping is how I get most things I need, but I’m excited to take another step in supporting secondhand culture with the clothing swap tomorrow. If you’re in the Indy area and haven’t signed up yet, join us!

Posted in: Ethical Consumerism, Style, Sustainable Living, Thrift, Vintage Tagged: secondhand september

Blog Archives

Categories

Like Us

Like Us

Stay Connected

Enter your email address to receive notifications of new posts.

Make sustainability part of your event's success story

Copyright © 2025 Fair for All Guide.

Omega Child for Fair for All Guide WordPress Theme by Julia Spangler

 

Loading Comments...