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Woman Transforms Thrift-Store Clothes For $1 Into Elegant Outfits (30 New Pics)
Interview With ArtistNowadays, more and more people are becoming aware of the bad side of the fast fashion industry and searching for more sustainable options for their clothing—be it high-quality clothes with timeless design, thrift stores for secondhand and vintage that give unwanted clothes another try, or repairing, redesigning, and upcycling to give your old clothes a new twist. 38-year-old Jillian Owens transforms thrift-store clothing into brand-new looks to avoid buying from fast fashion retailers and save a lot of money. Scroll down with Bored Panda's interview with Owens!
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Much more flattering as a top, also the color change brings out the beauty of the lace shoulders.
Jillian Owens from South Carolina began refashioning cheap thrift store clothes into her own unique custom looks around ten years ago. At that time, she didn’t have enough money to buy higher-end fashion clothes. “I was working for a nonprofit and didn't make a lot of money, so I couldn't afford the higher-end fashion looks I saw and loved in stores. While I lacked cash, I had an abundance of creativity. I decided to take on the ugliest, saddest, and cheapest (just about everything I refashion costs $1) thrift store clothes I could find and turn them into my own unique designs,” says Owens to Bored Panda.
The original reminds me of those robes that rich people wore in the old movies 😂
When asked how she started to refashion thrift store clothes, she said: “I started out with a very basic sewing machine that I stored on top of my fridge in my tiny apartment. I'm basically self-taught. When I was learning how to sew, I checked out a few books from my local library and just started doing it. Now I have a much better setup and a dedicated sewing room.”
The look on your face in the before, just kills me. lol The print is too busy for such a big item but perfect as a little jacket. Love it!+
If there had been enough fabric I would have kept the lowers and turned them into pedal pushers to go with the top.
The before looks like my grandmas rug... She spruced it up well!
Because they're her photos and her post.. so stop drop and reverse it. Why are you posting stupid comments?
Load More Replies...After some time, refashioning herself was no longer enough and Owens started her blog “Refashionista” to inspire and share her work with others. “I wanted to share my work with the rest of the world, as I thought it could do a lot of good for a lot of people, whether they were broke, looking for a low-cost creative hobby, or just liked checking out what I was making. I want people to look at my blog and be inspired to start thinking more creatively about how they can solve problems they might have (just like I did with my wardrobe). We're all creative. We're all makers. And we can all take things that aren't working in our lives (for instance, a lackluster wardrobe) and find creative and innovative ways to make them better.”
Owens says that the creative process really depends on the piece, so each time, it’s different. “It really varies depending on the piece. When I'm thrifting, I look for items that are weird, dated, or unique in some way, as those are the ones with the most potential. From there, I wash the garment, then evaluate what it will need to be refashioned. Sometimes this means completely taking something apart and re-imagining it entirely. Sometimes it's as simple as removing a ruffle or raising a hem. It all depends on each unique piece.”
“I believe creativity is like a muscle. Lots of people think they aren't creative, and I don't believe them. There's something about the 'adulting' process that seems to leave creativity and the bravery that comes from it behind. Creative problem solving is a vitally important skill in our society. I feel like every time I refashion a dress, I'm solving a problem, and that's an incredibly rewarding and empowering feeling. Solving small problems (like refashions) helps to train our brains to look creatively at larger problems and solve those as well. The thing I like most about creativity is its power to solve huge problems and affect positive societal change. It all starts with small baby steps.”
Owens believes that you don’t have to buy a lot of expensive clothes to look good. All we have to do is to be creative and think sustainably. “We all know that how you dress is important. It affects what others think of you and how you're treated. I don't like it, but it's sadly true. Fashion can be democratized when we take a DIY approach to how we clothe ourselves. We can look great on the cheap and without supporting unethical fast fashion processes. We can all look fabulous while still being sustainable. That's what Refashionista is all about.”
If you are interested, you can find her previous post here on Bored Panda!
Cute dress, but I'm not a fan of the sleeves hanging from the belt...
Waste is a big issue in the clothing sector, so this is a great way to reduce it. Even though not all were my taste, great up cycling!
Agreed. i have friends who produce campaign t-shirts for charities. The big draw to their designs is that they are screened on reclaimed thrift shop t-shirts. Some thrift shops set aside t-shirts so they can pick up in bundles according to size.
Load More Replies...Clearly talented , although I wasn't crazy about all of them . Definitely loose the WTF face in the before pictures. It is distracting and you are much prettier in the after shots.
*lose But I agree, the dumb faces kind of ruined the whole presentation
Load More Replies...She clearly has an eye for fashion and knows what looks suits her and the majority of them do look better on her. However, a few of the pictures show that some really nice original patterns and designs have been ruined from what they once originally were (especially the red dress with the white polka dots).
I think she should just maybe start buying thrifted items that fit rather than picking up things 3 sizes too big. I get that it's a hobby but . . . not sure if some of the afters work.
Actually it annoys the hell out of me - it is so hard to find plus size stuff in charity shops. As a slim woman she has far more choice over clothes that plus size women do and she is reducing that choice further.
Load More Replies...Very nice. But I wish she'd stop pulling that silly face in the before pictures. Oh look, some people are so huge they have to wear big clothes. Yawn. It's very disrespectful to the people who originally owned them.
I think she buys them big so she has enough fabric to work with. I do agree she is making a stupid face, but also in the after pic something is wonky about her neck.. Too many hours sewing? I'd see a doc about that
Load More Replies...I will admit that some of the pieces do look better with the new alterations but this series reminds me of the Instagram vs real life comparisons. The before pics have her usually in an area with bad lighting, hair in a certain style and the article of clothing pulled away from the body whereas the after pics usually show her smiling, in an area with better lighting, etc. If you are going to do a real comparison, the conditions need to be the same.
Completely agree and I thought the same thing after the first couple of photos. Everyone looks better when they’re smiling and looking like they’re having a good time compared to hunched over pulling a ‘WTF’ face.
Load More Replies...I thought all the Afters showed skill and creativity. I wish I had her talent!
Excellent stuff and kudos to her! Back, when I was a kid, it was called "Make do and mend" and was the basic way of life.
Yes. My grandmother sewed all our clothes. We were the best dressed kids in town and it was all handmade.
Load More Replies...This is a long-time solution to "being broke, but can sew". This is how I got my first interview outfit, to get a job, when I was 14. Bought a suit that was waaaaaaaay oversized, for $5. Spent $7 on good quality buttons (because the original ones were plastic and horrid-looking). Pulled the suit apart, and re-sewed it together, to fit me. This can be a MUCH CHEAPER was to find good fabric to sew with, than buying fabric off a roll. <3
Love how everyone's gotta post nasty comments. No one cares whether you like the designs, or whether you think she looks good. The point here is there are amazing people in this world making an effort to repurpose resources already created into new useful things, (instead of them ending up as landfill) and choosing not to buy 'fast fashion'. Kudos to this woman and anyone like her!!
She has mad skills. But in most "Before" clothes she is just wearing the wrong size and/or is missing the belt or strap that should go there. I must confess that I prefer most of the "Before" rather than the "After". But it is just because I do wear vintage clothes without modifications and without mixing eras.
She is one busy grrl :-) Love her WTF look on the before captures.Wonder if she has a Instagram page?
this method is good when you have to buy clothes at reducd prices, large in size etc. and redo it, saving money
Ok I can't be the only one slightly terrified at her face when she does the exaggerated smile and her head is pointed down...
I agree - she can be goofy, but not look weird...I agree that she should probably work a bit on that. She has a terrific natural smile, though
Load More Replies...Ik heb haar blog lang gevolgd, helaas is ze inmiddels overleden, ik mis haar hoewel ik haar niet persoonlijk kende. Ze vermaakte kleding die gebreken hadden, ook al zag soms de voor foto er beter uit, vaak was er een vlek of verwassing of een gat. Ze was een wereldverbeteraar en een erg lief persoon. Haar gezicht was een grapje van haar blog, maar als je dat niet hebt gevolgd zul je het niet begrijpen.
Most of these were just too big in the first shots, but she definitely made it work by customizing them!
I binged on Jillian's blog when I I first found out about it. She takes some of the ugliest clothes (remember, they are in a thrift store! Somebody doesn't love them anymore!) and you can see her progression as her skills sharpen. The blog has more diasters than this post and she seems really fun. (Refashionista).
She is extremely talented!!! A whiz on a sewing machine!!! Great work.
Me: *glances at her face* Also Me: *stops and thinks* “OMG HOW ARE HER EYEBROWS SO HIGH” 🤣🤣🤣
Is she also the model? Not body shaming anyone, but just about anything is cute on a size zero or two body.
pic in first photo is rather creepy... i wouldn't want to meet her in a dark alley.
She's very talented in the design department, but the faces she makes are disturbing as hell.
More than anything, I'm astonished by the wide range of age she achieves in the looks. Sometimes she looks 25, other times 45.
Pretty much can honestly say I really don't care for hardly any of these before and after....
I think one or two of the updated outfits were OK. The rest were really homely looking. She should start with better looking trash from the thrift store.
And this is how you save up for a house likes hers. I must say, being so fashion inclined, she really should work in that industry. Her talent is too great to be wasted.
I just don't understand the poses at all. She always looks like she is ready to fall face first.
I find it refreshing. She looks goofy and excited. More like pipi longstocking than pouty Miss Instaglam
Load More Replies...It's a post on clothes and you focus on her face, are you that bored or just being a jerk?
Load More Replies...Waste is a big issue in the clothing sector, so this is a great way to reduce it. Even though not all were my taste, great up cycling!
Agreed. i have friends who produce campaign t-shirts for charities. The big draw to their designs is that they are screened on reclaimed thrift shop t-shirts. Some thrift shops set aside t-shirts so they can pick up in bundles according to size.
Load More Replies...Clearly talented , although I wasn't crazy about all of them . Definitely loose the WTF face in the before pictures. It is distracting and you are much prettier in the after shots.
*lose But I agree, the dumb faces kind of ruined the whole presentation
Load More Replies...She clearly has an eye for fashion and knows what looks suits her and the majority of them do look better on her. However, a few of the pictures show that some really nice original patterns and designs have been ruined from what they once originally were (especially the red dress with the white polka dots).
I think she should just maybe start buying thrifted items that fit rather than picking up things 3 sizes too big. I get that it's a hobby but . . . not sure if some of the afters work.
Actually it annoys the hell out of me - it is so hard to find plus size stuff in charity shops. As a slim woman she has far more choice over clothes that plus size women do and she is reducing that choice further.
Load More Replies...Very nice. But I wish she'd stop pulling that silly face in the before pictures. Oh look, some people are so huge they have to wear big clothes. Yawn. It's very disrespectful to the people who originally owned them.
I think she buys them big so she has enough fabric to work with. I do agree she is making a stupid face, but also in the after pic something is wonky about her neck.. Too many hours sewing? I'd see a doc about that
Load More Replies...I will admit that some of the pieces do look better with the new alterations but this series reminds me of the Instagram vs real life comparisons. The before pics have her usually in an area with bad lighting, hair in a certain style and the article of clothing pulled away from the body whereas the after pics usually show her smiling, in an area with better lighting, etc. If you are going to do a real comparison, the conditions need to be the same.
Completely agree and I thought the same thing after the first couple of photos. Everyone looks better when they’re smiling and looking like they’re having a good time compared to hunched over pulling a ‘WTF’ face.
Load More Replies...I thought all the Afters showed skill and creativity. I wish I had her talent!
Excellent stuff and kudos to her! Back, when I was a kid, it was called "Make do and mend" and was the basic way of life.
Yes. My grandmother sewed all our clothes. We were the best dressed kids in town and it was all handmade.
Load More Replies...This is a long-time solution to "being broke, but can sew". This is how I got my first interview outfit, to get a job, when I was 14. Bought a suit that was waaaaaaaay oversized, for $5. Spent $7 on good quality buttons (because the original ones were plastic and horrid-looking). Pulled the suit apart, and re-sewed it together, to fit me. This can be a MUCH CHEAPER was to find good fabric to sew with, than buying fabric off a roll. <3
Love how everyone's gotta post nasty comments. No one cares whether you like the designs, or whether you think she looks good. The point here is there are amazing people in this world making an effort to repurpose resources already created into new useful things, (instead of them ending up as landfill) and choosing not to buy 'fast fashion'. Kudos to this woman and anyone like her!!
She has mad skills. But in most "Before" clothes she is just wearing the wrong size and/or is missing the belt or strap that should go there. I must confess that I prefer most of the "Before" rather than the "After". But it is just because I do wear vintage clothes without modifications and without mixing eras.
She is one busy grrl :-) Love her WTF look on the before captures.Wonder if she has a Instagram page?
this method is good when you have to buy clothes at reducd prices, large in size etc. and redo it, saving money
Ok I can't be the only one slightly terrified at her face when she does the exaggerated smile and her head is pointed down...
I agree - she can be goofy, but not look weird...I agree that she should probably work a bit on that. She has a terrific natural smile, though
Load More Replies...Ik heb haar blog lang gevolgd, helaas is ze inmiddels overleden, ik mis haar hoewel ik haar niet persoonlijk kende. Ze vermaakte kleding die gebreken hadden, ook al zag soms de voor foto er beter uit, vaak was er een vlek of verwassing of een gat. Ze was een wereldverbeteraar en een erg lief persoon. Haar gezicht was een grapje van haar blog, maar als je dat niet hebt gevolgd zul je het niet begrijpen.
Most of these were just too big in the first shots, but she definitely made it work by customizing them!
I binged on Jillian's blog when I I first found out about it. She takes some of the ugliest clothes (remember, they are in a thrift store! Somebody doesn't love them anymore!) and you can see her progression as her skills sharpen. The blog has more diasters than this post and she seems really fun. (Refashionista).
She is extremely talented!!! A whiz on a sewing machine!!! Great work.
Me: *glances at her face* Also Me: *stops and thinks* “OMG HOW ARE HER EYEBROWS SO HIGH” 🤣🤣🤣
Is she also the model? Not body shaming anyone, but just about anything is cute on a size zero or two body.
pic in first photo is rather creepy... i wouldn't want to meet her in a dark alley.
She's very talented in the design department, but the faces she makes are disturbing as hell.
More than anything, I'm astonished by the wide range of age she achieves in the looks. Sometimes she looks 25, other times 45.
Pretty much can honestly say I really don't care for hardly any of these before and after....
I think one or two of the updated outfits were OK. The rest were really homely looking. She should start with better looking trash from the thrift store.
And this is how you save up for a house likes hers. I must say, being so fashion inclined, she really should work in that industry. Her talent is too great to be wasted.
I just don't understand the poses at all. She always looks like she is ready to fall face first.
I find it refreshing. She looks goofy and excited. More like pipi longstocking than pouty Miss Instaglam
Load More Replies...It's a post on clothes and you focus on her face, are you that bored or just being a jerk?
Load More Replies...