Why People Regularly Wear Just 20% of Their Wardrobe

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A Closet Filled With Regrets

The Clothes Seemed Great in the Store; Why People Regularly Wear Just 20% of Their Wardrobe

By RAY A. SMITH wsj.com

You loved it in the store. Now it haunts you from the closet.
You still haven't worn that item of clothing that seemed perfect in the shop but at home seems so wrong. You can't bring yourself to get rid of it, though. It's in a corner of the closet that could be labeled "regret."

The retail industry counts on this and knows that people buy for many more reasons than actually needing something. Sometimes the skirt or shoes were bought on a whim. Other times, a blue mood demands ill-advised retail therapy. Maybe the sale was too good to pass up. Or maybe the outfit was perfect for the thinner, edgier, wealthier person you aspired to become.
"Generally you like it, but it's a little tight or a little baggy. And you think 'Oh well, it's a minor flaw. It won't bother me in the long run.' Then, that turns out to be the very thing that keeps you from wearing it," says consumer psychologist Miriam Tatzel in Nanuet, N.Y. Other times, "You think you might have a use for it in the future, but that day never comes."
Shoppers can be stuck with more second-thoughts-merchandise now as many retailers toughen their return policies. Many impose shorter deadlines for returns, among other conditions. Most retailers don't allow returns on items that have been marked down. Also, some shoppers don't return clothing due to the hassle of making another trip to the store or the hassle of packing and mailing items that were purchased online.
Only about 20% of clothes in the average person's closet are worn on a regular basis, says Ginny Snook Scott, chief design officer of California Closets, the designer of customized closets and storage spaces. That's especially the case for women since "men tend to wear more of their wardrobe, as they stereotypically have less," she says. "They tend to have less than 10 pairs of shoes that they rotate fairly well, whereas women have four to five times that amount, on average."

Tara Johnson, a 37-year-old attorney in Webster, N.Y., finds herself with a pair of waxed denim skinny Levi jeans she bought on sale online from Net-a-Porter in November and a pair of strappy gold and black Christian Louboutin heels she bought on sale at Barneys New York in January.
She loved how the jeans looked online and purchased them swiftly. But "by the time they got here and I tried them on with other things in my closet, I was like 'Ehhh, it's not working,' " she says. "Then I started finding reasons why I didn't like them. They're too long. I have to wear a certain kind of heel height or get them tailored."
The jeans still have the tag on. She hasn't worn the Louboutins. Neither the jeans nor the shoes can be returned.
Nikki Lafferty, a philanthropist in Los Angeles, regrets a silk wrap dress by Roberto Cavalli she splurged on two years ago hanging in her closet that she only wore twice. "I have a 4 in front of my age. I'm holding out hope that I will feel sexy one night and have an event to wear it to where I want to look sexy," she says. That's not likely to happen, she says, especially as most of her events take place in Washington, D.C., among politicians. "It's not the place to be sexy," she says.

Two years ago when she and her husband were remodeling their home, she retained Lisa Adams, chief executive of Los Angeles-based LA Closet Design to design her closet and help her better organize. She ended up giving away a few large shopping bags of clothes to charity, including some with the tags on. In March, she called on Ms. Adams again, believing her closet was "bursting," with items causing her second thoughts. After working with Ms. Adams, Ms. Lafferty finally gave away the Cavalli dress.
Shopper's remorse is different, of course, from compulsive shopping or hoarding. Buzz Bissinger, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of "Friday Night Lights," set off a stir online when he chronicled his shopping addiction in an essay in the April issue of GQ entitled "My Gucci Addiction." He spent $587,412.97, he wrote, on mostly flashy designer clothing between 2010 and 2012. Mr. Bissinger subsequently sought treatment for his compulsion. "I wrote it because it was the only way I knew of coming to terms and getting the help I am now getting," said Mr. Bissinger in a statement emailed by a GQ spokesman.
A few years ago, when the recession made her anxious, Colette Courtion, founder of a chain of upscale anti-aging skin clinics in the Northwest, went shopping. Some of the clothes still have the tags on. She keeps them as a reminder, she says, "to go to yoga instead of shopping."
Now she shops only when she truly needs something. "It's not for recreation anymore," she says.
A Post-Purchase Consumer Regret Scale, developed by Seung Hwan Lee and June Cotte at what is now called Western University's Ivey Business School in Ontario, tracks reasons for shopper's remorse. Among the causes: fear that choosing an alternative might have worked out better; a change in how important or useful an item seems; a feeling they didn't put enough thought into their purchase decision; and a suspicion they spent too much time or effort buying something that later doesn't seem worth the time or effort. The scale was published in a 2009 issue of the journal Advances in Consumer Research.
The conventional wisdom that shoppers regret splurges isn't true, research found. In fact, shoppers most regretted, over the long term, passing up an indulgence for something practical or less expensive, according to research in the Journal of Marketing Research in 2008 by Ran Kivetz, a professor of marketing at Columbia University Business School, and Anat Keinan, assistant professor of business administration at Harvard Business School.
Michael Fanelli, a 50-year-old construction project manager who lives in New York City, still holds on to a few pairs of patterned pants from high-end label Etro he purchased years ago. When he was shopping, "I was looking for something that makes a statement," he says. "I look at them now and it's 'what was I thinking?'"
Mr. Fanelli owns a lot of shirts with prints and patterns, which made it tough to match with the trousers. He occasionally wears the pants but feels self-conscious whenever he does. He keeps putting them back in his closet in part because they are "really nice quality."
Of all people, Tyler Tervooren, of Portland, Ore., should be able to avoid style risks. The 28-year-old is the founder of Advanced Riskology, an online guide to taking smarter risks in life from mountain climbing to starting a business. When launching his business in 2010, he bought expensive wool sweaters, hoping to impress business associates.
He wore one once. "It just wasn't me. I'm a jeans person," he says. He finally donated some and sold others at a consignment shop when he moved to a smaller place in 2011.
Now if he sees something in a store he might want, he will wait 10 days, to see if the feeling passes.




 
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it's like our clean your closet thread...
combined with our reformed shopaholic thread...

:lol:...

very 'on-topic'...
what's the source?
 
Ahh I like this article, it makes me feel better. I have so many things like this in my wardrobe :ninja:
 
I really liked this article ! I will definitely share it with my fiancé. He might now realize that it is a chance he has more clothes & shoes than I and takes more space in the closet :lol: Definitely makes me feel better to scale my closet even more and get closer to those 20 pieces excluding lingerie/shoes/accessories (I only own one bag & one clutch, 3 pairs of boots, 1 pair of sandals and 1 pair of converse anyway)
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I can totally identify with this, but perhaps I am slightly better off with always able to find a way to wear these difficult pieces. Perhaps the most difficult piece and perhaps most painful (very expensive!) was a shearling coat with fur inside I got from Margiela that I never wore, and doubt I ever will.
But I always justify by telling myself these are art pieces, especially the artisanal pieces, they are really an art by itself.
 
I can totally identify with this, but perhaps I am slightly better off with always able to find a way to wear these difficult pieces. Perhaps the most difficult piece and perhaps most painful (very expensive!) was a shearling coat with fur inside I got from Margiela that I never wore, and doubt I ever will.
But I always justify by telling myself these are art pieces, especially the artisanal pieces, they are really an art by itself.

I make an exception for such pieces, too. I've bought designer items that aren't even my size and that I never intended to wear but I just had to have them because they were so beautiful! Like a pair of Alexander McQueen sandals with a sculpted heel that are literally the first thing you see when you enter my apartment because they're on display on a shelf there :lol: Never worn them, won't ever wear them, but I never regretted getting them (didn't pay full price for them anyway), they're for decoration and they're awesome.

I'd be happy if I could claim that I wore 20% of my wardrobe. I just got rid of 5 bags full of stuff last week, but before that it was probably 5% max of my wardrobe that I would wear regularly :rolleyes: But for some reason I barely ever have regrets about things I've bought. I regret not having bought certain items! I don't even think that the problem is that I have too much stuff, it's just that I'm boring and always wear the same things and don't clean out my closet regularly enough. There are so many nice things in my wardrobe that I should wear more often. But yeah, sometimes expensive and beautiful garments just are complicated and difficult to incorporate into every day outfits and then there's the lack of special occasions to wear them, too.
 
I make an exception for such pieces, too. I've bought designer items that aren't even my size and that I never intended to wear but I just had to have them because they were so beautiful! Like a pair of Alexander McQueen sandals with a sculpted heel that are literally the first thing you see when you enter my apartment because they're on display on a shelf there :lol: Never worn them, won't ever wear them, but I never regretted getting them (didn't pay full price for them anyway), they're for decoration and they're awesome.

I'd be happy if I could claim that I wore 20% of my wardrobe. I just got rid of 5 bags full of stuff last week, but before that it was probably 5% max of my wardrobe that I would wear regularly :rolleyes: But for some reason I barely ever have regrets about things I've bought. I regret not having bought certain items! I don't even think that the problem is that I have too much stuff, it's just that I'm boring and always wear the same things and don't clean out my closet regularly enough. There are so many nice things in my wardrobe that I should wear more often. But yeah, sometimes expensive and beautiful garments just are complicated and difficult to incorporate into every day outfits and then there's the lack of special occasions to wear them, too.



I can totally see eye to eye with you!
Me too hardly regret whatever I bought, be it that Prada leather sandals or that super oversized Margiela Shirt with an yellowed out effect on the collar, or that houndstooth Etro coat with a fur collar. I am also too lazy to sometimes think of mixing and matching mostly also due to time constraints and constantly on the move...the irony is that the items bought at full retail prices are sometimes the items I hardly wear :sick:
 
I'm an aspirational ironer.
I need to stop buying clothes that need ironing.. :innocent:
 
I need to stop buying clothes that need ironing.. :innocent:

I know right. :lol: I am rarely wearing shirts because of that reason, it's just easier to put on a T-shirt or a top, especially when you are in a hurry. Not that these do not need to be ironed, but it's just easier to take care of them, compared to silk shirts (which get wrinkled easily too). Then I think, before picking up the clothes in my closet, how long will I be ironing this shirt and just pick something simpler to wear. With this in mind I don't buy shirts often.
On the other hand I can't go wrong with minimalistic monochromatic pieces I am wearing the most, and always try to choose something that is of the highest quality for my budget. If I can't afford it, I don't buy it, ever. Same goes for cheap clothing that I know from experience will be suitable for the trash in no time.
And as a quite a long termed member of The 4-5 piece French wardrobe gang :p I think my shopping habits are pretty good. ^_^
 
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This is why I want to clean out my closet but the thing is that although I do not wear them every week or every month I love all of the things in there and will wear them from time to time. It would just be so much easier to get dressed if I only had the things that I will put on any day. Still have not found the solution.
 
Good topic. Im definitely guilty of wearing 20% of my wardrobe, but I have nothing to add to that, haven´t found the solution to it yet, although the tip one of the people from the article had, about waiting for a bit and then buying it if the feling desnt go away, helps sometimes. Unless its a sale :) I usualy wait for a day or two, not 10 days though, 10 seems a bit too extreme.
 
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I am definitely guilty of wearing very little of my wardrobe, but probably slightly more than 20%... For me, the major issue is that I have literally collected and "archived" pieces from my favourite designers. As such, I often don't feel I can wear those pieces or I have few occasions to wear them. I am a lawyer, so that means I have a professional wardrobe from Monday to Friday - often little hence between to wear pieces I have. Luckily I don't find myself drawn to sales shopping, with purchases that I later regret.

I have started the process of selling clothes that I know I will just never get around to wearing. I just find myself struggling to let go of some pieces that I really should.
 
I definetly wear 20% of my closet.I confess.and even I am a fashion blogger I always go for basics and easy to wear things in the mornings.Its because I have a hectic work.at vacations and at weekends I try to wear the dresses, the shoes I dont wear everyday.I put more effort on my style when I am off work.Its weird or maybe because I have more time to pick what to wear and not in a hurry.I also love using basics (clothing) with fancy shoes.I collect very precious to me pieces from many different fashion capitals and vintage treasures that are very precious to me and I dont wear them everyday but I love them.I feel like they are safe in my closet :))
 
Wearing only 20% of your wardrobe regularly would be fine if there were 5 seasons in a year:innocent:
 
I wear much more than 20% on a regular basis ... probably more 75-80%. Certain heels I find myself not wearing because they require a great deal of effort to walk in due to the weight of the shoe. I also have started working at home more, and dressing up less for work ... but I still dress up for dinner on a regular basis (out, not at home ;)).
 
but it doesnt say how much of the remaining 80% still has the tag on? or am I the only one guilty of having around 30% of there wardrobe never seeing light of day, unworn and feeling lonely with the tags still on?
 
I enjoyed reading this, and I can definitely admit I am one of the shopper's victims. My closet is filled, but I only do wear 20% of it.
 
This is why I want to clean out my closet but the thing is that although I do not wear them every week or every month I love all of the things in there and will wear them from time to time. It would just be so much easier to get dressed if I only had the things that I will put on any day. Still have not found the solution.

I actually did clean out my closet furtherly. I think I am at a point now where I have been wearing 50% of my clothes on a regular basis (worn at least once over a period of three months). It could still be better I think, but some things like party dresses, stilettos and sandals are just not worn that often
 

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