Rag recycling?
Jan. 1st, 2009 11:01 pmI have a lot of old clothes that I want to get rid of. However, these are clothes that... have seen a lot of use... They've got holes, and stains, and some of them are aged under-shirts...
The point is that I can't really give them to anywhere that would be trying to sell them or give them to people to wear. However, I don't want to throw them out. I'm sure that there are places I can give these that either turn them into rags, or paper, or whatever... Anyone have any leads?
Thanks.
The point is that I can't really give them to anywhere that would be trying to sell them or give them to people to wear. However, I don't want to throw them out. I'm sure that there are places I can give these that either turn them into rags, or paper, or whatever... Anyone have any leads?
Thanks.
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Date: 2009-01-02 04:44 am (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2009-01-02 01:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-01-02 01:57 pm (UTC)Freecycle Cambridge
Freecycle Arlington -- for some reason, Freecycle.org doesn't know about this one
Freecycle Medford
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Date: 2009-01-02 02:03 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2009-01-02 03:35 pm (UTC)all thrift stores (goodwill, garment district, savers, etc) deal in rags as a side business to some degree. when clothes don't sell in the store or are deemed too beat up to be sold, they get sold as rags. bigger operations will have a baler on site that cubes them into giant bales and loads them onto trucks for sale to a rag merchant (who may sell them to an agency that sends them to a third world country, to a pulping outfit, or anything else that miscellaneous cloth products are used for) while smaller outfits will bring them to a central point or sell them to a larger operation. places to small to do this will just throw the clothes away.
when you donate unsellable clothes to a non-profit organization like goodwill, they will either gain money from selling in a store or will gain profit selling as rags. either way gets them something but rag bales go for a fraction of what they can make from selling the items on a rack.
savers, for example, is a for profit store but it has a non-profit partner (in some states its the epilepsy foundation) that is the supplier of the thrift merchandise (picking up at people's homes and trucking it to a store). if you donate stuff at a savers store (a for-profit), they keep track of how much stuff, and they pay their NP partner for that donation even though it was donated at the store.
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Date: 2009-01-02 07:13 pm (UTC)http://www.cambridgema.gov/theworks/departments/recycle/Dropoff.html implies that Cambridge wants usable clothing that they'll give to nonprofits. I don't know what they do with unusable stuff.
Cambridge recycling center - rags/clothing
Date: 2009-01-04 02:19 am (UTC)