Wear It’s At boasts name-brand fashions

Resale shop has everything from school clothes to formal attire

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Karen Hansen, one of the owners of Wear It’s At, stands in the mens section of the store. Wear It’s At specializes in selling lightly used name brand clothing. (Michael Krabbenhoeft/mkrabbenhoe@saukvalley.com)
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The store offers good quality – oftentimes new with tags – name-brand clothing at deep discounts. It carries brands such as Abercrombie & Fitch, American Eagle, Coach, Gap, Hollister Co., Lucky and Silver.

Hansen once offered a buy-one-get-one-half-off deal to help clear out some of the stock she inherited from the previous stores, but she continues to offer the bargain to attract customers and keep them coming back. She also has a “clearance” rack filled with items for $3 or $5.

“It’s one of the best places on the market,” Huls said. “Karen doesn’t look at [her merchandise] as hand-me-downs; she looks at them like the clothes at any other store.”

Wear It’s At does not sell items on consignment because the store does not have room.

Customers who wish to “sell” new or gently used name-brand items will receive $1 in cash or $2 in store credit in exchange for each one, depending on the item; customers who bring in formalwear or designer handbags, for example, will receive more.

Hansen and her daughter, Danielle Hansen, shop for merchandise about once a week, usually on Sundays, at resale stores, consignment shops, thrift stores, discount department stores and malls in Aurora or Chicago. They also keep their eyes out for special requests, such as a specific size and brand of jeans, from customers.

Wear It’s At is sort of hidden. Hansen has several handwritten signs on neon poster paper outside the store, but she laments their inability to distinguish the upscale resale shop from the antique store in the same building or a rummage sale in the neighborhood.

No one really knows we’re here,” she said. “We’re not on the main drag. We’re along a street that’s mostly residences and churches. We don’t have a storefront or a sign.”

Hansen hopes to get a more permanent sign soon. She also hopes, eventually, to pass on most of the duties of running the shop to her daughter, who is working on a college degree. But, more than anything, she wants to help people look and feel great for less money.

“I think there’s a place for this kind of store here,” she said. “I don’t think people should have to drive all the way to Rockford and have to pay a lot of money to get these kinds of clothes. I hope the word of mouth spreads here, because we have a lot of really nice stuff at really low prices.”

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