Purchasers and consignors of secondhand clothing in consignment stores

The research investigated acquisition and disposition behavior of purchasers, purchasers/consignors, and consignors of secondhand clothing in consignment stores. A questionnaire was administered to 168 women and two men in three Roanoke, Virginia stores. It was hypothesized that (1) long-time purcha...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Morrow, Phoebe Mack
Other Authors: Clothing and Textiles
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/101456
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-1014562021-01-15T05:35:03Z Purchasers and consignors of secondhand clothing in consignment stores Morrow, Phoebe Mack Clothing and Textiles LD5655.V855 1985.M675 Consignment sale shops -- Virginia -- Roanoke Market surveys -- Virginia -- Roanoke Used clothing industry -- Virginia -- Roanoke The research investigated acquisition and disposition behavior of purchasers, purchasers/consignors, and consignors of secondhand clothing in consignment stores. A questionnaire was administered to 168 women and two men in three Roanoke, Virginia stores. It was hypothesized that (1) long-time purchasers (three to five years) patronized other secondhand sellers more than short-time purchasers (two years or less); and that purchasers (2) acquired (a) primarily to save money and (b) secondarily to have well-made clothing, (3) bought two to four times a month, and (4) were satisfied with stores' merchandise and services. Hypotheses 2a and 4 were supported but 1, 2b, and 3 were not. A hypothesis that consignors consigned to obtain a return on clothing investments and get rid of unwanted items was supported. Friends were important information sources about stores. Chi-square analysis indicated that respondent groups were similar demographically, in the types of clothing they purchased and/or consigned, and in the uses of clothing purchased. Host respondents were Caucasian, 30-49 years old, and often had baccalaureates or other post-high school education. Twenty-seven percent of the respondents had total household incomes of $40,000 or more. The most frequently purchased and consigned garments were shirts or blouses. Purchasers and purchasers/consignors used purchased clothing primarily for social occasions. Purchasers and consignors differed on the number of years they had been patronizing stores and on their purchasing and consigning frequencies. Also, more purchasers than purchasers/consignors patronized flea markets and garage sales. M.S. 2020-12-15T19:11:40Z 2020-12-15T19:11:40Z 1985 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/101456 en OCLC# 13416441 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ vii, 153 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1985.M675
Consignment sale shops -- Virginia -- Roanoke
Market surveys -- Virginia -- Roanoke
Used clothing industry -- Virginia -- Roanoke
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1985.M675
Consignment sale shops -- Virginia -- Roanoke
Market surveys -- Virginia -- Roanoke
Used clothing industry -- Virginia -- Roanoke
Morrow, Phoebe Mack
Purchasers and consignors of secondhand clothing in consignment stores
description The research investigated acquisition and disposition behavior of purchasers, purchasers/consignors, and consignors of secondhand clothing in consignment stores. A questionnaire was administered to 168 women and two men in three Roanoke, Virginia stores. It was hypothesized that (1) long-time purchasers (three to five years) patronized other secondhand sellers more than short-time purchasers (two years or less); and that purchasers (2) acquired (a) primarily to save money and (b) secondarily to have well-made clothing, (3) bought two to four times a month, and (4) were satisfied with stores' merchandise and services. Hypotheses 2a and 4 were supported but 1, 2b, and 3 were not. A hypothesis that consignors consigned to obtain a return on clothing investments and get rid of unwanted items was supported. Friends were important information sources about stores. Chi-square analysis indicated that respondent groups were similar demographically, in the types of clothing they purchased and/or consigned, and in the uses of clothing purchased. Host respondents were Caucasian, 30-49 years old, and often had baccalaureates or other post-high school education. Twenty-seven percent of the respondents had total household incomes of $40,000 or more. The most frequently purchased and consigned garments were shirts or blouses. Purchasers and purchasers/consignors used purchased clothing primarily for social occasions. Purchasers and consignors differed on the number of years they had been patronizing stores and on their purchasing and consigning frequencies. Also, more purchasers than purchasers/consignors patronized flea markets and garage sales. === M.S.
author2 Clothing and Textiles
author_facet Clothing and Textiles
Morrow, Phoebe Mack
author Morrow, Phoebe Mack
author_sort Morrow, Phoebe Mack
title Purchasers and consignors of secondhand clothing in consignment stores
title_short Purchasers and consignors of secondhand clothing in consignment stores
title_full Purchasers and consignors of secondhand clothing in consignment stores
title_fullStr Purchasers and consignors of secondhand clothing in consignment stores
title_full_unstemmed Purchasers and consignors of secondhand clothing in consignment stores
title_sort purchasers and consignors of secondhand clothing in consignment stores
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/101456
work_keys_str_mv AT morrowphoebemack purchasersandconsignorsofsecondhandclothinginconsignmentstores
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