
No, you will not be condemned to hell for eternity after putting those tiny Kat von D Sinner + Saint perfume vials in trash. Tip # 4: Yes, you can just throw them out Makeup can be donated to playhouses and school drama clubs, teen and youth development centers makeup and perfume samples are also welcome at many Dress For Success chapters.įeel like combining altruism with socializing? Gather your friends or book group or running club, pool spare samples, let everyone have at it and send anything that’s unclaimed to national organizations like Project Beauty Share or Beauty Bus Foundation. Truesdale said toiletries like shampoo, body wash and lotion are generally welcomed at shelters (homeless and cold-weather shelters in particular), orphanages, Ronald McDonald House and children’s hospitals, where volunteer groups often put together comfort kits. also suggests thinking about how the new user will experience the product does someone in an emergency shelter especially need an Urban Decay lip gloss sampler? Probably not. Mindy Godding, a decluttering expert from Richmond, Va. The best way to determine this, duh, is to call or email organizations before making donations. Please stop doing that.)Įmergency shelters are more likely to want sample-size products, whereas long-term stay organizations will generally prefer full-sized product donations. (This is a polite way of saying that you shouldn’t dump all your unwanted junk on charitable organizations. But! Endeavor in all things to be responsible, especially when it comes to donations. Tip #2: Donate the samples you don’t want or need.īeauty samples are ripe for donation, which is great news for those of us staring down an angry mob of foundation samples in every shade but the one of our actual skin. One day, I’ll take that vacation and need 76 mini bottles of body wash.

We pin our hopes on them - it’s fun to imagine that maybe finally you’ve found The One, so you delay trying it to prolong the experience.” Wischhover blames our tendency toward fantasy and wishful thinking, “Samples represent possibility. Truesdale said, “the follow-through is usually where the problem lies.”īut why aren’t we using these precious items that we’re all so lovingly collecting? Ms. We grab travel-size toiletries from hotels because we can think of all the ways we’ll use them but, Ms. “Many people don’t like to buy higher-end products without knowledge of them or their worth, so they feel excited to be able to try something new and different from what they typically might buy.” (Hence the rise of subscription “boxes” stuffed with small sizes.)

SEPHORA SAMPLES PROFESSIONAL
Jennifer Truesdale, a professional organizer based in Charleston, S.C., thinks there’s a more practical reason. Cheryl Wischhover, a reporter who covers the beauty and retail industries for The Goods by Vox, explained the allure of samples, “They are tiny and tiny things are cute! Everyone knows cute things are irresistible, whether they are puppies or teeny tubes of Good Genes.”

Tempting though it may be to blame Sephora, Birchbox, and the hotel groups Hilton and Marriott for saddling us with darling samples we didn’t ask for and certainly don’t need and also are constitutionally unable to part with, the reality is that we are the problem. Tip # 1: Understand how you got here and admit you have a problem I’m scared, and I’m cold, and I’m absolutely never going to use that bottle of Ferragamo body wash I snatched from a hotel sometime back in 2014.īut in 2019, I’m determined to change. We don’t even wear mascara.Īnd we haven’t even gotten to the part where we confront the stockpile of hotel shampoos and body washes and disposable shower caps cluttering bathrooms the world ’round. The “travel-size” mascaras for trips we’ll never take. The tiny bottle of Eucerin grabbed from a dermatologist’s office. The scams are rife: ordering big-ticket items and returning them just to keep the samples befriending department-store employees to get extra bottles of goop walking into Aesop to look at products and ask for samples, carefully scanned one by one. Birchbox, Kiehl’s, those tiny little soaps that are pressed into your hand if you so much as breathe in the direction of a Sabon storefront, Ipsy, and in the case of one work friend who promised to maim me if I revealed his identity, enough Sisley fragrance samples to fill a pool.

Of course, it’s not just Sephora samples under which you will find our listless but beautifully made-up corpses. “ I legit want to get more, but I know I can’t go through them without a system or something so I’m all ears!”- Louise Rothschild, 39.
