Akili Li wrote:Yes, new things are very expensive. You can often get very good used things though for a fraction of the price. I particularly like going to a University town because they often have monthly (or even weekly) rummage sales on all sorts of odd items for very very little.
Electronics are harder, though, because they build in obsolescence and they become obsolete awfully quickly.
I don't like used things because when I get them, they are often broken. I do want to go to where you go for those sales to see if there's something I'd like. Mostly fountain pens, though. Those are awesome and I'm always down to purchase one... even if I require funds than I have. Also, fidget spinners are not controllers. They are just something you spin.
Moi wrote:
I'm a cheap person and I'm used to living within my very slim means.
I often wonder why things are so expensive.
Like why do these shoes cost $300? Are they eternal? Do they cure cancer? Do they allow you to fly?
I get told with a lot of things you're paying for the brand name.
I don't care about brand names - I want stuff that I like.
I'll find a nice pair of shoes for like $12 and wear them until they're full of holes and falling apart.
As I see it - why would I buy a pair of shoes for $300 when I can get many shoes or shoes and some other stuff for $300?
One reason why things are expensive is labour, and some materials are not easy to come by or are hard to make. Also, time. There are fountain pens that take months to create, and one tiny mistake causes the whole process to start all over again, and they are made by hand.
Akili Li wrote:Yes!
And it is surprisingly easy to make shoes. I mean, not the super supportive boots you go on tough adventures with, but the everyday shoes. And if you're starting from other used items instead of trying to buy new materials it is very cheap indeed. And then they are tailored to you. Cobbled to you, I guess... but they'll be exactly to your taste because you made them. And presumably you'll make them the way you like them, anyhow.
It is odd to me, how much people are willing to pay for seemingly very odd things.
($45 for "custom window decals"? That's just society-sanctioned graffiti!
A bundle of color-coordinated old books for $75? You can get a BOX of them from the library for $6, and they'll be ones you wouldn't mind actually reading, too.
Or how about a $2000 "art" mirror-mosaic? Just get some $5 mirrors from a garage sale and pull out your grouting tools. It'll for sure fit your space, then.)
They might lack the knowledge and calibur to make such items, so maybe that's why they buy expensive stuff.