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| - As a few other people have said before me, things here were a bit overpriced for having been someone else's used & discarded items. Well, considering that the Salvation Army is right across the street and prices are a lot lower there. That being said, it is one of the cleanest thrift stores I've ever been it. It could be that not one thing I saw in here was stained, dirty, or broken. The store also had a pleasant smell to it, which in my opinion does a lot of help when walking around secondhand stores.
I also noticed the really awesome rust colored couch with the curves. I looked for a price on it and finally realized its not a for sale item. Darn.
I did, however, find a coffee cup holder and a DVD on the American Drug War which didn't seem to have ever been open. Both were $2.00 each. When I was checking out, the older woman at the register--while not very helpful, yet not quite rude--was on the phone with someone who wanted to make a donation. This seemed annoying to her since they closed at 5pm and it was 4-something. The person had a bunch of furniture to drop off to their store and I'm not sure if they ever did.
It wouldn't have been a problem if I hadn't been left waiting during this entire phone call after I'd already waited for her to carry on a conversation with the man ahead of me (whom she seemed to know personally). Eventually, I was done paying and I left.
I probably wouldn't go out of my way to stop in here, but if I'm in the area (I live in Goodyear) and have nothing else to do, I'd pop in for a bit. Also, just a note, it said on a sign that white tags and green tags were 50% off. I didn't see any green tags (at least not on anything I looked at, but I wasn't there for long) and the only white tags I saw were on furniture, which it said was excluded from the sale. It was a little confusing.
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