http://lifeandhealth.guardian.co.uk/fashion/ethical/story/0,,2266559,00.html
If it smells, it's not vintage it's garbage.
I have never bought anything from a "vintage" store, as they mothball the shit out of their wares. Probably because most of the owners are lazy people who are running the store because otherwise they'd have to hold down a real job.
I only buy second hand clothes in charity shops, and smell or condition has never been a problem.
Very difficult to get good quality thrift clothes in Australia. Australia is a very modernised country, so old quality tweeds and heavy wools etc are thrown out by kids when their daddies die. No-one wants the old stuff, everyone wants the made-in-italy/japan stuff because the stuff has more modern light fabrics. Quality is not even an issue with most aussies.
For about 4-5 years I bought mostly vintage, a lot of it high dollar 50s gear that was rare. LA is a great place for 30s-70s vintage, the selection used to be really good and the prices surprisingly low for the pedigree of gear you could get. There was a time when vintage stores from San Francisco would come to LA, buy stuff, then mark it up and sell it up there. And obviously there's always been a huge influx of Japanese buyers over the years. But the vintage selection nowadays is slim pickings and what you do find is so expensive it's hard to justify.
"New" is the new vintage
'new is the new vintage' jason, a great remark!
as for - hm - real vintage, i regularly check out local charity shops etc, a habit that is stuck by the (not-so-nowadays) constant search for records. nowadays i tend to look more for clothes as the good record sources have somewhat dried up here. if a vintage piece is in a good condition and fits the look i'm after i buy it. recently i have been much more into new stuff though.
Maybe Im a horrible snob but I like new clothes. Especially after reading that report on germs and viruses found on neckties...blah.