putthison:

The Man Who Thrifted A Ferrari
Who’d have thought you could thrift a Ferrari?
Matthew R. is an inveterate thrifter. He says he works seventy hours a week, and he’s been buying and selling second-hand clothes since 1998. Not long ago, he started a consignment service, Luxeswap, and not only do their auctions often crop up in our eBay picks, but I’ve personally trusted him to consign a number of clothes in the past. He’s one of the best menswear sellers on eBay. But truly: I had no idea.
This week, Matthew bought a Ferrari. With thrift store money.
Here’s how it happened…
Matthew started thrifting in the late nineties, and quickly learned that when he found something good that didn’t fit him, he could sell it on eBay and make a little dough. The first item was an Emporio Armani sportcoat. It sold for fifty bucks. Like most of us, Matthew took the extra money and spent it on clothes and small indulgences.
In 2007, he read a book called One Red Paperclip. It was written by a man, Kyle MacDonald, who traded a paperclip for a pen for a doorknob for a camping stove and on and on for a year until he had traded for a new house. Matthew thought: how could I turn my own little hobby into something special?
So he started a savings account.
His business money went into a business account. His personal money - the money from his own personal purchases - went into the savings account. And year after year, that money grew.
Then, last week, he took the money and bought a Ferrari.
Matthew says: “This car was born of things that nobody else wanted. Things that people discarded. I wanted to be able to say I thrifted a Ferrari. And I did.”
A genuinely remarkable achievement.

putthison:

The Man Who Thrifted A Ferrari

Who’d have thought you could thrift a Ferrari?

Matthew R. is an inveterate thrifter. He says he works seventy hours a week, and he’s been buying and selling second-hand clothes since 1998. Not long ago, he started a consignment service, Luxeswap, and not only do their auctions often crop up in our eBay picks, but I’ve personally trusted him to consign a number of clothes in the past. He’s one of the best menswear sellers on eBay. But truly: I had no idea.

This week, Matthew bought a Ferrari. With thrift store money.

Here’s how it happened…

Matthew started thrifting in the late nineties, and quickly learned that when he found something good that didn’t fit him, he could sell it on eBay and make a little dough. The first item was an Emporio Armani sportcoat. It sold for fifty bucks. Like most of us, Matthew took the extra money and spent it on clothes and small indulgences.

In 2007, he read a book called One Red Paperclip. It was written by a man, Kyle MacDonald, who traded a paperclip for a pen for a doorknob for a camping stove and on and on for a year until he had traded for a new house. Matthew thought: how could I turn my own little hobby into something special?

So he started a savings account.

His business money went into a business account. His personal money - the money from his own personal purchases - went into the savings account. And year after year, that money grew.

Then, last week, he took the money and bought a Ferrari.

Matthew says: “This car was born of things that nobody else wanted. Things that people discarded. I wanted to be able to say I thrifted a Ferrari. And I did.”

A genuinely remarkable achievement.

Shanghai Glamour: New Women 1910s-40s – Museum of Chinese in America

Paul French, chinarhyming.com

A little exhibition that may appeal to any China Rhyming regulars passing through New York…Shanghai Glamour: New Women 1910s-40sApril 26, 2013 to September 29, 2013Museum of Chinese in AmericaShanghai Glamour explores how Shanghai women and…

Gorgeous Black-and-White Photos of Vintage NASA Facilities
Maria Popova, brainpickings.org
From the wind tunnels the made commercial aviation possible to the analog machines that preceded the computer, a visual history of the spirit of innovation presently unworthy of the government’s dollar.Among the great joys of spending…

Gorgeous Black-and-White Photos of Vintage NASA Facilities
Maria Popova, brainpickings.org

From the wind tunnels the made commercial aviation possible to the analog machines that preceded the computer, a visual history of the spirit of innovation presently unworthy of the government’s dollar.Among the great joys of spending…

Miss Eleanor Mac Donald, the well...

digitalnz.org

Miss Eleanor Mac Donald, the well-known English dancer, has an unusual hobby. She dresses dolls as fencers and then gives them to charity. i (Eveni…

View at:

From:

Nation­al Library of New Zealand

Date:

We Tried It: The Corset Craze

zruderman, peoplestylewatch.com

What it is: A crazy-tight (is there any other kind?) rubber corset, used to slim one’s midsection
Who tried it:
Zoë Ruderman, PEOPLE.com Senior Style Editor
Why she did it:
Because Jessica Alba recently revealed that…

Aux armes, citoyens!economist.com
The rise of UKIP means British politics is becoming more EuropeanTHERE’S a joke that Nigel Farage, leader of the UK Inde­pen­dence Party (UKIP), likes to use as an ice-breaker. “Unlike that lot in Wes …

Aux armes, citoyens!
economist.com

The rise of UKIP means British politics is becoming more European

THERE’S a joke that Nigel Farage, leader of the UK Inde­pen­dence Party (UKIP), likes to use as an ice-breaker. “Unlike that lot in Wes …

7 Dodgy Food Practices Banned in Europe But Just Fine Here

motherjones:

nbd, just arsenic in turkey feed, nothing to see here.

'Shocked': Patricia Volk's Memoir About Beauty And Its Beholders

Fresh Air from WHYY, npr.org

‘Shocked’: Patricia Volk’s Memoir About Beauty And Its Beholders Fresh Air from WHYY

Patri­cia Volk’s moth­er was beau­ti­ful in a way that stopped peo­ple on the street. Strangers com­pared her to Lana Turn­er and Grace Kelly. She was styl­ish …

How Elsa Schiaparelli changed women’s underwear “Women’s underwear before World War II was kind of elaborate. It was usually made of silk and it had pleats and it had to be ironed. This was in France. There was no such thing as ‘drip dry’ and when the war started, most of the men went to the front and the women had to take jobs. There was gas rationing and so everybody had bicycles and you had to be licensed to ride a bike in Paris, and in one year bike licenses tripled; it went up to 11 million. The way women dressed with these long skirts and this very elaborate underwear didn’t lend itself to riding a bike so Schiap changed panties completely. First of all, there was famine, so she got rid of the buttons and put elastic in the waist so that as you were losing weight, your panties would stay on. Then, she made them out of drip-dry material, so you didn’t need a maid to iron them … and she added a double-slung crotch and suddenly women could ride their bikes with a lot more freedom.”

Compulsively sharing
what
I don't want to share.
Some 18thC, some fashion, some pedagogically inclined notions.