By Amy | Leave A Comment

I love to look at pictures of celebrity babies and see what stylish ensembles they are wearing. It provides inspiration to a small-town girl who wants her kid to look cute. I wish I had the money they had to spend on those cute clothes, but I am a woman working on a Goodwill budget so those items have to come second-hand or have to be invented by me.
Here are a few ideas for dressing your kids like stylish
stars.. or at least getting them to the fashionable point where they don’t stand out.
I love iron-on transfers. I scored a great deal at Michael’s where I got some really cute iron-on transfers for my son to be placed on t-shirts. The black t-shirt was $2.50 at the craft store and the iron-on was $1.00. Super cool, “Rock Star” t-shirt cost me $3.50. If you have a knack for design, you could actually design the transfer yourself and then get the transfer paper from the craft store. Same idea, except an “original” that no celebrity baby will ever have.
The t-shirt pictured here was a hit with my son and his mom & dad. He
said he can’t be a rock star until he is ten or a hundred though. At
least he can look like one in the meantime.
Check your thrift stores and try and buy when they run sales on specific items. I keep a closet of clothes that actually don’t fit our son…just yet. Look for
basic items that will never go out of style and start stocking up for the years ahead. Make sure to thoroughly check the items before purchasing them though. Items that are donated could be donated for a reason. Check under the arms of shirts, the seams on the item, the
knees of the pants, the bottoms of the pants, make sure the zippers zip, and buttons and clasps are intact. Nothing is more disappointing than bringing home a “deal” and then finding out is, in fact, a dud.
Make old items new again by embellishing them. Boys jeans can be
quickly converted into a little girl pair with a cute heart applique or a little beading or pink buttons sewn on the pockets. A little boys shirt can be made into a girls shirt with a sweet pink shirt underneath it. Try to think outside of the box.
Work out a deal with friends. I have a great friend who shares her bounty of clothes with me before taking them to resale. I am able to get quality name-brand clothing without having to hunt for it. She sells it to me dirt-cheap and she avoids the consignment shops while I avoid the hassle of running from store to store. Don’t hesitate to ask if one of your
girlfriends has children that are bigger than yours what they do with their clothing. You might be surprised that they just donate the items and would be willing to pass them off to you or could sell them to you.
Outlet shop, but make sure it really is an outlet. Have you ever been to an outlet store that had the same or higher prices than the regular store? I have and what a disappointment that is. Know what regular pricing is versus the factory store before doing your shopping.
Shop the end of seasons, but hold out until the bitter end for the really good deals. At the end of the season, I purchase winter coats for the following year. I never fail to have an amazing jacket for our son, but rarely do I pay more than twenty dollars for it. Check stores that you don’t normally shop and hit the clearance section to get a quality jacket for a fraction of the price.
Garage sales are great for scoring cute clothes for your children. We hit the garage sales all summer and stock up on clothing for our kids. No one knows that the Baby Gap shirt my daughter wore once was purchased in a garage.
How do you make your kid look like a star? Any tips to share with our readers?
ABOUT Amy
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I rarely pay full retail for clothes for my girls and they wear GAP, Gymboree, Children’s Place, etc.
There are a ton of consignment sales here in Nashville and I love to hit the last day half-off sale. I always walk out with name brand “play clothes” but no one will ever know I only paid $1 or $2 for the cute GAP t-shirt, as opposed to $10 or more.
Our Goodwill also has a lot of special sale days where kids’ clothing is marked down further. They post the info on their website.
My husband has taught me the absolute GENIUS of clearance racks. We troll the likes of Target and Nordstrom Rack. For our “rock star” baby, we’ve had amazing luck at Children’s Place outlets. At the end of the season, you can get really great stuff for just a few bucks! I think our biggest splurge was a brown velour jacket for her, that still fits a year later! It was $12.
However, for true RockStar good looks…a pillow case would look great, with the right hairdo!
hey, cool blog. You can get cool name brand clothes from ebay; I get most stuff for around $5 and that’s including shipping; watch out it becomes addictive.
Check out http://www.jbfsale.com. for a massive consignment event in your area. They have higher percentage rates for sales, and many items are half price on the last day. I just sold my breast pump there.
Our church has several lending circles for childrens clothes. These have been a real blessing. We had our “bonus baby” after almost all the big brother clothes had been passed on.(He was 10!) Our middle child was a girl, BB was a boy. Our pastor’s wife had children in the opposite order – so we have been swapping. Girl items to them, boy items to me.
Her next one is also a girl, so I was charged with passing on the boys clothing. 6 boxes went to families with different ages last Sunday. My instruction, “Use what you want. Pass on the rest.” I don’t know the needs of many younger couples, so I asked if one or two of them could pass on the infant winter clothes to the next lucky family. (It is a little early to know whether boys or girls are coming at this early date.)
It is fun to see old favorite outfits wandering the halls at church. An aunt of mine said her church even had “swap meets” with adult clothes periodically.