Average American throws away 80 lbs. of clothing each year

A charitable group here collects books all year then sells them one weekend in February. At the end of the cycle, except for a handful of really valuable books, the leftovers are given to old folks homes or the like and the cycle begins anew.

I have noticed there’s always a glut of last year’s political books. Left or right there are a half-dozen on the table top and underneath, boxes full of them to replenish the table stock.

Other than a pair of socks (a gift) and one tee shirt, I haven’t acquired any clothing since before the pandemic. In that time, I’ve donated several garbage bags full of professional garments, as well as giving several old towels and blankets to the animal shelter. I have, perhaps, thrown out a few socks totaling a couple of hundred grams, if that, and certainly not 250# of clothing in the last 3 years.

I definitely remember this story from England. SFW.

For a while, we got “The Da Vinci Code” by the boxload (or so it seemed) and Sarah Palin’s “Going Rogue”, but we don’t see so many of either of those now.

Same here. All I need are jeans, underwear a tee-shirt and socks. Throw on a fleece and I’m good to go anywhere. That is my dress code.

We are in the middle of donating all of my mothers clothing though. She died last Friday 10/21/22. My Wife took it in for donation yesterday. I’d say there was about 150 pounds.

Throw away 80 lbs a year? That sounds rediculous.

@enipla , so sorry to hear about your mother passing. I’ve been following along with your posts about all you did to care for her. I send good thoughts to you and your family.

If I exclude shoes and coats/jackets, I’m not sure I own 80 lbs of daily wear clothing. Most of my wardrobe is teeshirts, shorts and a few pair of jeans/pants with all the extra pockets in them.

I know I don’t, because if I want to get rid of clothing that still has some life in it, there’s a perfectly good thrift shop a few miles from my house.

Now I’m wondering if I even own 81 pounds of clothing. I probably do, but my guess is that I’d have to throw away most of my wardrobe to throw away that much.

“Shades of Grey, wherever I go…” - Billy Joel and Oxfam

The suit of armor is for special occasions?

Of course. Have you ever shined a suit of armor? Way too much work for casual wear. Plus, it’s really hard to find maidens locked in towers anymore.

And climbing stairs in armor is a bitch.

Oh no, sorry to hear it enipla and condolences to you and your family.

One third of people allegedly went up two pants sizes during Covid. If that is true, that might mean a lot more closet cleaning.

I don’t weigh clothes. A full washer might be fifteen or twenty pounds worth? I do not throw away many clothes but easily donate more than this weight each year to worthy charities. I hope most of these are put to good use.

Seems high, but like you, I’ve never thought much about it. What we need is a volunteer with a lot of laundry and a good bathroom scale. Who’s bored, er, curious enough to take the hit?

Forgot to mention that “Hillbilly Elegy” has taken over that spot.

I donated the vast majority of my parents’ clothes 2 summers ago. I don’t know how much 15 13-gallon bags weigh, but it took 6 weeks to wash, dry, and bag, and drop it all off.

They never threw away anything not outright destroyed, best I could tell.

Seems high to me too. When I carry a mesh hamper downstairs containing a full washerload of (dry) laundry, it’s probably something like 8-12 pounds? When I take the wet laundry out of the washer and put it back in the hamper to schlep upstairs to my drying rack, that’s when we’re looking at twenty pounds or more.

For reference, my washer is rated for 9 kg (just under 20 lbs). I know it’s smaller than my mother’s washer. I’m in Switzerland, and she’s in the U.S.

I’ve often seen washers advertised in the U.S. according to the number of towels, or something similar. So it seems to be more about the volume than the weight.

It seems that the headline should be that the American fashion industry throws away 80 lbs of clothing for each American. I think most people can’t afford to throw out so much money.

I’ve often pondered that. “Holy smokes! There’s a gallon of water still in this load.”

My wife is really tiny. We once made the mistake of buying a top load washer and a front load dryer. The wet clothes were so heavy, she had to stand on a footstool to lift the clothes from the washer, set them on top of the dryer, then get off the footstool to load them in the dryer. Can’t understand why she tired of it so soon. :slightly_smiling_face:

The day I become the Average American is when I hang it up for good.