Welcome to the New Day Cafe! This is an open thread.
Vox writer Izzie Ramirez recently took a look at contemporary manufacturing approaches and how the quality of new items continues to decline. She starts off by comparing a bra she bought 10 years ago to its newer replacement, which, despite being the same model, fell apart in a few washes.
From the piece,
“I felt unmoored for months. Why would the same item be worse years later? Shouldn’t it be better? But here’s the thing: My lackluster bra is far from the only consumer good that’s faced a dip in comparative quality. All manner of things we wear, plus kitchen appliances, personal tech devices, and construction tools, are among the objects that have been stunted by a concerted effort to simultaneously expedite the rate of production while making it more difficult to easily repair what we already own, experts say.
In the 10 years since I bought that old bra, new design norms, shifting consumer expectations, and emboldened trend cycles have all coalesced into a monster of seemingly endless growth. We buy, buy, buy, and we’ve been tricked — for far longer than the last decade — into believing that buying more stuff, new stuff is the way. By swapping out slightly used items so frequently, we’re barely pausing to consider if the replacement items are an upgrade, or if we even have the option to repair what we already have. Worse yet, we’re playing into corporate narratives that undercut the labor that makes our items worth keeping.
‘If you change the style regularly, people get tired of the style,’ says Matthew Bird, a professor of industrial design at the Rhode Island School of Design. ‘They start to treat cars like sweaters — it’s become grossly accelerated. The pressure to make more stuff, of course, lowers the quality of what’s being made, because the development and testing is just accelerated even more.’”
I recommend reading the whole thing if you are interested in why things don’t last like they used to and why this has become accepted by the buying public.
Grab a cup of coffee
and share what’s on your mind this morning.
This is an open thread. Please join us.