← Back to context

Comment by tgsovlerkhgsel

5 days ago

I'm surprised the Chinese sellers are able to compete for fast fashion. Clothes are the one thing I don't really buy online because getting sizing right is already hard even when you're not dealing with Temu-style "well actually we said there's a +- 25 tolerance in the fine print and this is within tolerance" bullshit.

AliExpress is indispensable for small technical items. If they're available locally at all, shipping included they'd often cost 10-20x as much.

No idea about Shein, but I was shocked how easy/good Temu return policy was. My wife bought some rugs and some prints and they were not as described/pictured.

Took a minute in the app to generate a qr code, then I had it to the post shop the same day and they refunded within 3 days.

I wouldn't (personally) buy clothes to wear normally from them, but something like beach shoes or a poncho for a festival I'd maybe get there.

  • TIL Temu has a return policy. I thought the return policy was "throw it in the trash and be out the money (albeit 1/10th of what you would have paid in a regular store)".

It's not fast-fashion they are competing with — they invented ultra-fast-fashion. Their platforms (Shein and Temu) are fully geared towards allowing manufacturers to jump on board the latest hypes and trends and have a saleable product on there within a week or so, to sell for a few weeks until it is no longer trending.

You want a 'My tariffs did that' T-shirt? Temu.

https://www.temu.com/search_result.html?search_key=tariffs%2...

Local store chains can't match that velocity.

People are happy to just try stuff on at home then deal with returns or accept the loss if it doesn't fit or look good.