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Legal, pensions and money

Socks and other rip-offs

(43 Posts)
JessM Sat 22-Mar-14 12:17:58

I needed to replace my walking socks. Everyday wear in the winter. Outdoor shops seem to be running some kind of price fixing cartel on the ones containing lots of wool. £15- £17 a pair seems a lot of money for something that is produced so quickly by machine. And they do wear out and shrink a bit I think. Got three pairs of synthetic ones in a shop called Trespass for a fiver a pair yesterday. (half price) Very happy feet.
It's a crazy markup they must be charging on these things isn't it.
Those Buff scarf-like things are also outrageous (about £30 for a small stretchy tube of fabric) - but at least you can admire the entrepreneurial flair of the company that have made them a classic item.
And don't get me started on Crocs - £30 or more for a pair of plastic sandals - again very cheap to produce.
What else do you think is wildly overpriced?

CariGransnet (GNHQ) Tue 25-Mar-14 16:26:49

Gally I thought exactly the same about Havaianas. But having (over the years) spent a small fortune on cheap flip flops that were so painful that it ended up being one wear then back of the cupboard forever more, I have to say I have been converted. Most comfortable things EVER. Wore mine every single day last summer and intend to again when it's warm enough to avoid the risk of frostbite. A friend said it's like the difference between fillet steak and a value burger - and much as I laughed I now have to admit she was right.

thatbags Mon 24-Mar-14 20:11:16

I think these, which are my favourites are machine made but the toe seam is properly grafted. They are not quite thick enough for hiking boots, at least not for me, but they are great for everyday wear. When they get thin at the heel, I darn them or wear a thin cotton sock underneath. After a couple of darnings I make them into temari. The wearing out is the only disadvantage. They are the most comfortable socks EVER. I used to get them eslewhere slightly cheaper but I'm not sure I can now.

JessM Mon 24-Mar-14 19:27:34

I have had numerous pairs from walking shops. Priced as above - around £15 a pair. Do you buy hand knitted ones or something?

thatbags Mon 24-Mar-14 17:55:44

gaga, oof!!

thatbags Mon 24-Mar-14 17:54:53

You obviously haven't bought top quality ones. There's a lot of difference between cheap socks and good, not cheap ones, at least in my experience. How toe seams are made, or even if there are any, for a start.

JessM Mon 24-Mar-14 17:20:10

I think the point about socks bags is that they contain little material, not much design, are produced entirely by machine. So even the top quality ones would cots little to produce hmm

Gagagran Mon 24-Mar-14 16:31:10

Well apparently because the car stands outside the walls of the tyres can crack with the sun and weather and these did. DH has been and got the car back (£714) and George the mechanic showed him and explained it so we just have to grin and bear it. It does include £26 for new wiper blades (!!) and an MOT certificate. Wow! It's expensive running a car.

thatbags Mon 24-Mar-14 16:05:49

It depends on the kind of car, whether it is front wheel drive or rear, whether it is four wheel drive, how 'heavy' the driver is on the accelerator and brake, whether driver has to do a lot of tight turns (we do cos of where we live); it depends on outside temperature because the higher the temp, the softer the rubber and how easily the tyres will wear, etc, etc, etc.

Do they look worn to you?

Anne58 Mon 24-Mar-14 13:47:45

Get a second opinion Gaga, rather than just take their word for it.

Gagagran Mon 24-Mar-14 11:27:59

My 5 year old car is in for a service and MOT today. It's only done 15,000 miles but the garage have just rung and said it needs 4 new tyres as the rubber has degraded. The total bill is going to be £750. I find it really hard to believe that tyres need replacing after 5 years and low mileage but what can you do? Is this a rip-off?

rosesarered Mon 24-Mar-14 11:10:51

or ingenius?

rosesarered Mon 24-Mar-14 11:10:05

Ingenious!

granjura Mon 24-Mar-14 11:07:14

Talking about socks- I'll never buy any of those super soft socks- as it seems the soft material is somehow blown in and not woven- and within a few days the soft stuff will have disappeared around the toes- which will then go through in no time (:

I've cut the foot off and use them as long cuffs to bridge the gap between gloves and anorak- works a treat!

rosesarered Mon 24-Mar-14 11:01:20

What about the steep prices for ladies razors? Venus especially [although the blades are good, they don't last long.]

glammanana Mon 24-Mar-14 09:51:22

Holly Just like here on new brighton Front we have had a new development built all nice restayrants I must add but when a Ice Cream Parlour opened you could not move and the prices where OTT everyone went mad on the opening day !!
mr.g's family started their business just after the war with everyday vanilla sold from hand wheeled carts and went to be quite a big business his uncle sold out to a bigger company in the early 60's I'm thinking we must have been the poor relations hmm

HollyDaze Mon 24-Mar-14 09:04:04

It may well be where he got the taste for slabs of bread glammanana - I tend to buy Blackpool Milk Roll (small thin slices) and my granddaughters look at it as though it's not worth eating lol.

Ice cream parlours - we had a new one open up in Peel and you'd have thought they'd unearthed a new Hanging Garden of Babylon with all the feelings of ecstacy that seemed to go around!

Gally Mon 24-Mar-14 08:53:04

Havianas Thongs (flip flops). A couple of pieces of rubber with a thingamyjig on the top for your toes, from £28 +. The cheaper versions are uncomfortable so I suppose you pays your money...........

Birthday cards seem to be gradually creeping up in price, although I did find some cheapys in Tesco recently for 50p

glammanana Mon 24-Mar-14 08:30:51

What a shame Holly I wonder if that is where mr.glamma gets his liking for doorstop slices as he spent a huge time on the Island when he was young,his family ran Ice Cream Parlours and where from Onchan.

HollyDaze Mon 24-Mar-14 08:20:08

It doesn't glammanana, it tastes just the same (but thicker sliced - the Manx seem to like doorstep slices) - you'd pay extra if it tasted like home-made wouldn't you smile. I was nearly forced to have to make my own blush

glammanana Mon 24-Mar-14 08:11:12

Holly I bet the local bread tastes far better than the supermarkets though smile

HollyDaze Mon 24-Mar-14 08:02:54

Bread - our local bread, made from wheat grown on the Island, processed on the Island, baked on the Island costs around £1.75 for a standard loaf. Thank goodness the Co-op and Tesco moved here smile

thatbags Mon 24-Mar-14 07:16:51

I agree about posh salt. that's just laughable.

thatbags Mon 24-Mar-14 07:16:16

So we can't buy cheap because that's not fair to factory workers and we can't buy not cheap because that's a rip off. Never happy, us.

thatbags Mon 24-Mar-14 07:12:21

I'm not sure Crocs are overpriced. They last a very long time. I'm still hard wearing some I bought six years ago. Plus they are extremely comfortable. I don't mind paying for comfort which can be very hard to find in shoes, and always has been for me. I have healthy feet; that's why I'm fussy; I want to keep them that way.

Buffs are also dead useful. I use them all the time. They did not cost £30. Prob half that. Again, they'll last for yonks.

Most All good quality items of clothing cost a lot, but you still have them ten and twenty years on so in the end...

Re wool rich socks, Bridgewater are good and last well. You want at least two thirds (preferably three-quarters) wool content if you are to get the real benefit of wool's insulating properties. Less than that is not worth bothering with; you might as well just go synthetic.

JessM Sun 23-Mar-14 21:59:27

Designer sea salt. Or salt from the Himalayas. Another rip off. Its all sodium chloride.