Shopping
There’s a free clothes swap-shop in the Baltic Triangle this weekend
1 year ago
The Baltic Swap-Shop is in the sheds at Baltic Creative, by 92 Degrees Coffee on Jamaica Street, on Saturday from 10am to 4pm.
A free clothes swap-shop is happening in the Baltic Triangle over the bank holiday weekend, giving people the chance to have a wardrobe clear-out and exchange their unwanted clothes.
Thereâs no cash involved, swappers just turn up with their items, theyâre given a token in return for each one and then they can âspendâ that on something different from the donated stock.
The event has been organised by Baltic resident Alex Keyter who says swap-shops are becoming an increasingly popular way to stop clothes either being left on the shelf or ending up in landfill.
âI read recently that we have enough clothes on the planet now to give everyone clothing for the next six generations but at the same time a lot of it is either just sitting unworn in peopleâs cupboards or going in bins,â he says. âWe have the surplus but thereâs no infrastructure for redistributing it even though more and more people are interested in the sustainability of swapping instead of buying.
âSwap-shops are an easy way of doing that and even any remaining clothes that are left at the end will be sent to Roberts recycling for textile processing so nothing will be wasted.â
Alex decided to run the Baltic Swap-Shop after seeing the success of similar events in the city and other parts of the country.
He explains: âI moved to live in the Baltic Triangle a year and a half ago, Iâm from Southampton originally, and I needed to make friends and connections so I just went and spoke to anyone I could. I started going to Baltic CIC networking events and I thought it would be great if there were more resident-led community projects going on.
âIâd seen a couple of clothes swap-shops in Cardiff when I was studying there and Iâve seen other groups in the city organise events like this. Liverpool Guild of Students did one for their students at the start of the year so that was the original inspiration.
âI thought it would be a cool way to bring people together and reduce and reuse so I applied for grant funding and now weâre here, about to have our first one.â
The Baltic Swap-Shop is in the sheds at Baltic Creative, by 92 Degrees Coffee on Jamaica Street, on Saturday from 10am to 4pm.
And Alex says although itâs a community idea, everyone is welcome to go and exchange their unwanted clothes whether or not they live in the area.
âPeople can come along with clothing thatâs still in good condition but theyâre not really using anymore and maybe itâs just sitting in their wardrobe. Rather than putting it in the bin or dropping it off at a charity shop, which obviously could be done, they bring them to the swap-shop and in return for each item of clothing theyâll get a token. Other items that people have already donated will be out on rails and they can exchange their tokens for something else theyâd like.
âNo money changes hands, itâs all completely free and done on a token system, but in order to be able to get items out you do have to bring items in, you canât just come and pay an admission fee.
âWeâre accepting T-shirts, shirts, dresses, skirts, jumpers, jackets and coats, but we canât process things like underwear, shoes, socks. They mustnât be stained or torn, or damaged beyond swap, but if theyâre wearable then theyâre welcome.
âWhen youâre donating an item itâs because you want it to have a new home and then you could find a new home for something else. Youâre going along because youâve got clothes spare but youâre staying because youâve got the chance of finding other items that you like that you wouldnât normally have found for yourself.â