logo
How you can save money by recycling your old clothes and empty bottles

How you can save money by recycling your old clothes and empty bottles

STV News2 days ago

As households face tighter budgets, high street retailers are increasingly getting into secondhand and recycling initiatives.
Previously the preserve of online marketplaces and secondhand shopping apps, retailers are now offering financial incentives in exchange for items such as used clothing and empty containers.
Consumer expert Helen Dewdney, The Complaining Cow, outlines how consumers can benefit by exchanging unwanted goods for rewards.
These programmes usually involve payments or vouchers for packaging materials that can be reused, including items destined for recycling bins, such as empty bottles and containers.
Under the Shwopping scheme customers can donate old clothes to Oxfam and receive a £5 voucher to spend on purchases of more than £35 at M&S.
Boots runs the Scan2Recycle programme, which accepts products difficult to recycle at home, including composite materials (metal and plastics) and non-recyclable items like toothpaste tubes and lotion pumps. Small cosmetics such as travel-sized products and samples are also accepted.
Customers must download the app, wash and scan items to have them validated before dropping them off at participating stores. Recycling five or more eligible items earns £5 in Advantage Card points, redeemable on purchases over £10 within three days.
View the full list of all the items that can be brought to their stores.
Customers can bring any empty perfume bottle, regardless of where it was bought, to receive 15% off a same-day purchase at The Perfume Shop. The retailer also commits to planting a tree for each bottle donated.
Through its Take Back scheme, customers may drop off at least three clothing items in a box at at more than 200 stores nationwide or arrange a courier collection, which River Island will pay for. Participants receive a £5 voucher valid on purchases over £40 for one month. Donations do not need to be River Island products.
John Lewis offers two programs: BeautyCycle and FashionCycle. BeautyCycle provides a £5 voucher for spending over £50 when customers return five or more clean, empty beauty product containers from specified B Corp certified brands such as Clarins, Elemis, Aveda and L'Occitane.
FashionCycle offers a £5 discount on clothing rentals over £50 in exchange for five clothing items, subject to certain restrictions.
Customers can return qualifying Lush packaging to receive 50p per item or 5p per 10ml sample pot. Alternatively, five returned items can be exchanged for a face mask.
H&M accepts a carrier bag of unwanted clothing or textiles of any brand or condition in-store and offers a £5 voucher for purchases over £25.
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Oxfam HQ could be turned into lab space and office
Oxfam HQ could be turned into lab space and office

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

Oxfam HQ could be turned into lab space and office

Plans have been submitted to turn Oxfam's headquarters into an office and lab Investments Limited have applied to Oxford City Council for planning permission to turn the building on John Smith Drive, Oxford Business Park, Cowley into a life science or office facility and "create a significant number of job opportunities".The charity said it had signed the lease for a new workplace within the ground floor of a smaller building on the same site, to help reduce Saj Malik, who represents Temple Cowley on the city council, has raised concerns about the knock-on effect of creating new science and tech jobs on the city's housing shortage. Oxfam's HQ moved to Oxford Business Park from Summertown in July 2005, and the building was sold to Sutton Council in was put on the market for £60m in 2023 and sold to a private investor for £37.1m in April lease on the building ran out in for the move include adding an extra floor to the building, as well as a gym and café area on the ground floor and a row of columns outside the comes after the charity announced it was trying to save £10.2m in wages, and that 265 jobs were at risk of to the planning statement the proposal will "create a significant number of new job opportunities" and the plans would "positively contribute to Oxford's role as a leading hub for research and development and life sciences within the UK".It adds the building could be used by multiple tenants and connectivity to the business park would be improved by upcoming plans for the Cowley Branch Mr Malik said many Cowley residents felt "it's too much, too quickly and gentrification is being imposed on communities without thought of the impact"."While I fully encourage investment into Cowley, this kind of development often doesn't benefit the people who live here in terms of job opportunities," he said."Already we have a shortage of housing in Oxford meaning teachers and nurses have to live elsewhere causing recruitment and retention difficulties."A spokesperson for Oxfam said they hope to move in July. "The new office space is smaller and will support us to reduce our costs," they added. You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

Jess Cartner-Morley's June style essentials: from treat-yourself dresses to high-street bling
Jess Cartner-Morley's June style essentials: from treat-yourself dresses to high-street bling

The Guardian

timea day ago

  • The Guardian

Jess Cartner-Morley's June style essentials: from treat-yourself dresses to high-street bling

I try to be realistic about what people will spend when I do these edits. When we're shopping and see something we like, the first thing almost all of us do is look at the price. What with money not growing on trees and all that. If I see something nice in a shop, then check the tag and find it to be out of my budget (or just overpriced), I move swiftly on. By the same logic, if I spot a contender for this monthly roundup but then discover it's prohibitively expensive – which happens a lot these days, 'sticker shock' being a familiar syndrome in an era of fashion hyperinflation – I am not inclined to include it. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more. But we can't be sensible all the time. I don't need to remind you that it's better to buy fewer good, long-lasting things than loads of cheap tat. Then there's the fact that, sometimes, an object is worth spending money on not because it's objectively worth a lot of money, but just because it's worth a lot to you. Plus, June is my birthday month, so you have to indulge me, OK? So, there's a couple of splurges in here, should you be in the market for a dreamy dress or two. But also: the £46.75 swimsuit that's in every chic holiday luggage, and some utterly brilliant earrings for less than £20. Because, that's real life. Cut-out strap sandals £28 at River Island I'm a huge fan of this particular shape of flat sandal, which I find to be sufficiently aesthetic to wear with a dress for a nice holiday dinner, eliminating the need to pack any heels. The key is that the upper of the shoe doesn't cover your toes, and doesn't extend too close to where your foot bends at the ankle. Straps across the front of the ankle rarely look good without a heel. Dismiss anything with a kitten heel (impractical), anything with a dividing post between the toes (blisters) and anything with metal touching your skin (hot). These are pretty perfect, in tan suede or chocolate leather. Crystal maxi skirt £155 at Odd Muse This is a two-in-one to introduce you to a useful concept (the party skirt) and a useful brand (Odd Muse). A really fancy long skirt – think pearls or fringing or feathers – looks chic for a daytime summer do (white shirt, flat sandals, sunglasses) and will be perfect with a neat sweater and kitten heels for winter parties. This maxi skirt comes in white, mint and black (now almost sold out in the latter). Odd Muse is one to keep an eye on. I hummed and hawed and missed out on the Odd Muse piece I coveted this season – the pearl-dotted Ultimate Muse Embellished Midi Dress, £165, now sold out in most sizes – but the skirt is equally fabulous. Domino earrings £15.99 at Zara These earrings hit that perfect sweet spot of being novelty enough to be interesting and a bit of a conversation-starter without ever suggesting that you're anything less than sophisticated. J'adore. Elizabeth dress £595 at Reiss£595 at Next There are two ways of looking at the £595 price tag on this Reiss dress. The first, obviously, is that almost £600 is a lot of money for a dress from a high-street store. But the second is that this dress genuinely passes for top-dollar designer fashion, and a dress with this level of detailing – the pearl and amber teardrop beads at the shoulder cut-out are divine in closeup – would cost five times that from a fancy label. A fellow fashion editor wore this dress at an extremely snazzy fashion dinner in Italy, and it not only passed as designer but was much complimented. Printed silk-trimmed mini dress £345 at the Outnet When I was in my 20s, I had a Pucci dress. God, I loved that dress. When I read that Marilyn Monroe was buried in her favourite Pucci dress, that made perfect sense to me. Anyway, that didn't happen, because I wore that dress on so many nights out – including one where I fell in a swimming pool – that eventually the jersey lost its spring and the colours faded. I still miss it and I still obsess over Pucci, so I hereby point you to the Outnet, where you can often find some summer treasures, like this mini dress with distinctive swirly epaulettes, which is snazzy-beach-lunch perfection and reduced from £690 to £345. Rhodes cup-size bikini top £52 at BodenMatching classic bikini bottoms £36 at Boden Speaking of Pucci. I'm generally a black-or-navy swimwear gal, but I've fallen hard for this structured Boden bikini top and matching classic bikini bottoms in the joyful, Amalfi-coast-lunch blues, yellows and reds of the Wildflower colourway. Also available in navy and white stripes if you're feeling sensible. Sign up to The Filter Get the best shopping advice from the Filter team straight to your inbox. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. after newsletter promotion Lab-grown diamond solitaire studs From £180 at Fenton We're hardwired to love diamonds. Lab-grown diamonds – which are very much real diamonds – are disrupting the industry. Fenton is a small, female-founded British jewellery brand using pioneering solar diamonds, grown using renewable energy instead of fossil fuels. A pair of diamond studs, with solid 14-carat gold, starts at £180. Never going to go out of style. Iphi top £39 at Blacktogrey No self-respecting Jane-Birkin-in-Provence is complete without a barely-there superfine T-shirt. Blacktogrey is a sustainable label making simple pieces designed with end-of-life recycling in mind. (Send your worn-out piece back, and Blacktogrey will do the recycling for you.) The boat neck detail elevates this top. Las Flores swimsuit £46.75 at John Lewis John Lewis tells us that this one-shouldered swimsuit has been a huge hit: customers love it because the shoulder detailing and sturdy, non-transparent fabric make it perfect for wearing as a top, so it does double duty on holiday. A smart buy. Carpenter straight-leg trousers £32.50 at M&S Poor old M&S has had a time of it, hasn't it? At the time of writing, online orders are still paused. A silver lining for me has been that when I've nipped into M&S to buy things I couldn't order online, I've spotted a few nice bits that I'd missed on the website. These Carpenter straight-leg trousers have little touches of utility styling that make them feel weekendy – deep pockets at the hip, a hammer loop, robust fabric that turns up easily when needed – but a sleek outline, and belt loops if you want to smarten them up. Jacquard weave dress £37.99 at H&M Let's end on a steal. I love this H&M jacquard weave dress for two reasons. First, the fabric, which is nubbly and tactile and looks way more expensive than it is. Second, the fit, with soft gathers at the waist and a slight scrunch to the side, well-thought-out details that blur the details of your outline in a graceful way. The pale pink is sold out in most sizes, but the ivory is cute too.

Boots shopper reveals how she got Pampers nappies for free instead of £5
Boots shopper reveals how she got Pampers nappies for free instead of £5

Scottish Sun

time2 days ago

  • Scottish Sun

Boots shopper reveals how she got Pampers nappies for free instead of £5

Read below for more freebies you can get for your little one OH BABY Boots shopper reveals how she got Pampers nappies for free instead of £5 Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A BOOTS shopper has revealed how they got a packet of Pampers worth £5 for free. The savvy shopper could not believe their luck after picking up the baby essential for nothing. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 1 The shopper got her hands on the baby product for free Credit: Extreme Couponing and Bargains UK Writing on the Extreme Couponing and Bargains Facebook group, they said: "Check your Boots Advantage card if you're in the parent and toddler group. "You can get a pack of size 2 or 3 pampers nappies." But many fellow shoppers were confused about how to find the offer or why it was not available to them. Boots has a free parent club for Boots Advantage Card holders who are expecting a baby or have children under 5. The scheme offers benefits like extra points on baby products and free gifts. You also get eight Advantage Card points for every £1 spent on baby products. But customers can also get personalised offers such as freebies and discounts on products they buy frequently. To find the exclusive offers that are available, you need to log into the Boots Advantage Card app. You should be able to see personalised offers in the "My offers" section of the app. These deals can then be redeemed in a Boots store. Beauty fans say Boots' new dupe is 'much better' than £21 lip mask Kate Moss & Kendall Jenner love & it's £16.50 cheaper And it is not just nappies that shoppers can get discounts or freebies on. One shopper picked up free breast pads, a dummy and a milk bottle by using the scheme. In the past customers have also managed to pick up a 250ml bottle of Aveeno baby hair and body wash. The programme also gives free gifts at key stages of your baby's development and parenting advice. OTHER FREEBIES FOR PARENTS The Pampers Rewards app lets parents earn points for every nappy product they purchase. Every packet of nappies or wipes comes with a QR code which parents can scan to earn points. These points can then be converted into money-off vouchers that you can use in major supermarkets such as Tesco or Sainsbury's. For every five stamps you collect, you get a £2 off voucher to spend on a Pampers Jumbo+ Pack. Parents also earn more points as their child goes up in size, with larger nappies earning more points. Ella's Kitchen gives parents vouchers for its food pouches when they sign up for its "Ella's Friends" loyalty scheme. The package also comes with a free baby weaning chart to map your child's progress. You can find out more by visiting Meanwhile, M&S customers who join its parenthood group can get access to two initial offers. One of them is a year-long 10% discount on baby grows - for example, a five-pack of pure cotton sleepsuits, usually costing £15.50, will be £13.95. They can also enjoy a free slice of cake, pastry or a fruit pot, every week when you buy a hot drink at a M&S cafe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store