Making costumes from secondhand stuff is a part of the Halloween scene in 2014, according to Goodwill. We call it boocycling.
When we posted a story about boocycling recently, we asked theLURVers — Listeners, Users, Readers, Viewers — of NPR to send us photos. They were inspired. A trio of those photos accompanies this story.
Like recycling, upcycling, downcycling and nicecycling, boocycling inspires people to do more with less.
Threshing through thrift stores, combing through consignment shops, resourceful revelers are concocting creative costumes all across the country. It must be that good old American Can-Boo Spirit.
"Retail sales in October make up 9 percent of our total revenues, making October the busiest sales month at Goodwill," says Goodwill spokesperson Charlene Sarmiento. "This is different from other retailers that count the December holiday season as their biggest sales month. We attribute much of the higher sales in October to people shopping at Goodwill for Halloween."
And after partygoers depart and pumpkins are pitched, what happens to the Fright Night frills and frippery? Some of the costumes will be discarded; some will be saved for another year, and some, appropriately, will be donated back to thrift stores.
Goodwill also receives post-Halloween donations of store-bought costumes. "We encourage people to donate their costumes after Halloween and would welcome more Halloween costume donations," Sarmiento says. "As people are cleaning out their closets before winter, some people will go ahead and donate their used costumes."
Some Goodwill stores will even be stocking up on new Halloween accessories — such as face paint — to sell next year along with secondhand clothes, she says, "so our customers can make Goodwill their one-stop shop for Halloween."
Making them boo-gooders.
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The Protojournalist:An experimental storytelling project for the LURVers — Listeners, Users, Readers, Viewers — of NPR.@NPRtpj
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