- Joined
- Feb 20, 2021
It seems like there are more thrift store options in men's big and tall sizes. Men's clothing tends to be made better in general, which could explain why more of it lasts long enough to make it to a thrift store donation box, but it's also not on-trend or cute, so the gorls wouldn't be caught dead in it. The thrift stores in my area, where the obesity rate is extremely high, are packed full of ridiculously sized men's workwear jeans. It's not uncommon to find at least a couple pairs with a 52 inch (132 centimeter) waist or even larger every time I go in. They're the thick, nearly indestructible denim popular with farmers, agricultural workers, and other laborers, the kind of thing you can find at Tractor Supply Company, Fleet Farm, Runnings, and other ag supply stores. I honestly can't imagine a dude with a 52 inch waist doing farm labor but I guess it happens. There is a decent selection of other giant men's clothing, particularly t-shirts in sizes 3X-5X, most of them printed with novelty slogans.The deathfat size clothing that managed to survive this long is either like sensible business casual stuff from Lane Bryant, or low quality ugly shit thrift stores would just throw out even if it was in any shape to sell, which it probably isn't.
It's not the kind of clothing any of the fat women populating the Beauty Parlor would be caught dead wearing. It would also take a remarkably creative (and skilled) skinny bitch seamstress to make anything fashionable from it, anyway. This seems to be hyper-regional, though. Whenever it comes up for discussion, people are pretty much equally divided over whether their local thrift stores have only sizes 0-8 or only massive, hideous hambeast garments.
These cows seem not to understand that it's possible to produce clothes that are a combination of any two of the following characteristics: fashionable, readily available in
It's also interesting to me that you rarely, if ever, see very petite women complaining about clothing options, even as size inflation makes it harder and harder to find truly small sizes. I really think that a woman who complained online about being too small for mainstream clothing retailers would probably be pilloried by a frothing obese mob.