
This store offers gently used donated clothing.
Jun 6, 2025
(View Apart / Shutterstock.com)
For many years, people wanted clothing that was inexpensive and super easy to purchase online. But the convenience of fast fashion came at an environmental cost. Now a brand in the Netherlands is turning it all around by providing Free Fashion.
The clothing is provided by donations and is available at pop-up stores around the country, according to Fashion United. While this approach is unconventional, it is filling a badly needed niche.
The stores resemble typical high-end fashion shops, but the clothing is available at absolutely no charge and there is a limit on how many pieces people can take per day. There are no hidden charges and instead of using cash or charge cards, people pay with attention, according to BrightVibes, through interaction with staff and labels.
Each label tells the real cost of the item. A T-shirt costs 2,700 liters of water plus carbon emissions and a pair of jeans uses a whopping 7,000 liters of water.
Giving Clothing a New Life
Many people have unused clothing at home, things that were loved and forgotten or no longer fit. Instead of throwing these items away and having them end up in a landfill, Free Fashion is giving clothing another life.
The system is circular and based on sharing according to Lot van Os, artist, designer, and co-founder of Free Fashion. He told BrightVibes, “People can drop off clothing at the store, giving it a second chance. Volunteers sort the donated clothes, check the quality, and attach special labels.”
Every person who comes to one of the pop-up stores receives three tickets, which allows them to pick out three items of clothing per day.
“We want people to be mindful when choosing clothes,” van Os said. “It’s not just about giving things away for free — it’s about raising awareness of the value of clothing that others no longer wear.”
Starting Small and Growing
The idea started small with a single rack in front of a house in Tilburg. “We just put together a clothing rack and placed it outside so that people in the street, in the neighborhood, could share clothes. And, well, things kind of got out of hand,” explained Dieuwertje Vorstenbosch, co-founder of the store.
There have been more than 20,000 customers in Tilburg and Amstelveen and at Utrecht Central Station, which opened in the fall of 2024, there are sometimes more than 1,000 clothing items that find new homes in just one day. van Os sees this as a model of the future.
“This concept could work for almost anything,” he said. “There is already an abundance of everything—tools, electronics, smartphones, sports equipment — so many things that people own but don’t fully use.”
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Bonnie has dedicated her life to promoting social justice. She loves to write about empowering women, helping children, educational innovations, and advocating for the environment & sustainability.
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