Washing brand new clothes before wearing?

Not only have I worked in clothing retail, I worked at JC-fucking-Penney. :eek:

And I kind of like the new stuff smell, shower curtains included.

Maybe it’s just me, but if I see stains or anything on new clothes on the rack, I just don’t buy them.

You know, I had actually not heard of these cases or myths, but that’s pretty much what my mother-in-law’s rash looked like.

You’d be amazed at what people will buy. The real winners will insist on a discount, which is reasonable…but then, they’ll bring the item back, and want the full price refunded. :rolleyes:

The last time I was in a JC-fucking-Penney, the saleslady kept harping on how much I’d save by applying for a JC-fucking-Penney charge card. I wanted to pay with cash. I told her over and over that I just wanted to pay with cash, but she kept harping.

Finally, I paid (cash) and left the store.

When I got home (a sixty minute drive) I found out she had left one of the theft thingies attached to one of the pairs of pants that I bought. I had to drive back and have it removed.

It was the last time I’ll ever set foot in a JC-fucking-Penney. Fuckers.:mad:

JC-fucking-Penny is filled with shrieking harpies, my once-manager being one of them. After five days of her petty tyranny, I threw in the towel at that place.

Nope, never, except the time I bought a Hawaian shirt at Goodwill.

Interestingly as of my vote the response is perfectly split, 114-114 (with 3 ‘other’ votes).

I’m a woman, and I always wash new things. Years ago, I used to work in a garment factory when I lived in a small town were there weren’t many employment opportunities. We had some seriously gross employees there, including the lady who was sent home repeatedly for lice infestation before she was fired for not doing anything about it. :eek:

The company ultimately ended up pulling up stakes and outsourcing production overseas, but the time I spent there taught me that garments can be exposed to a lot of yuck before they even leave the factory.

I also have a good nose for chemical smells. I am a fiber artist and I can even recognize some of the smells. Most of them are from dyes. A washing will take out the smell from dyes and dye fixatives. Smelling dye on my clothes would bug me all day, unless, of course I am working with dyes–but I don’t wear my new clothes for that. :smiley:

What and what them?

Yeah, this. Not “department store lint.” Clothes aren’t born at JC-Fucking-Penny, they come from a sweat shop in a place with questionable or non-existant sanitation. They are touched all over by other people while they’re being made - even if they were made by my well-manicured cousin Maude in her suburban home, they’d still be touched all over by other people. Then if they are washed before they are shipped, who know what they’re washed in. Then people touch them to get them to the sales floor, then people touch them to look at them and/or try them on.

It’s pretty much the same as wanting to wash your produce before you eat it. You just don’t know where it’s been. But there’s a pretty good chance you won’t like where it’s been.