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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to want to buy ' ONLY BRITISH' made products

37 replies

presceccoilove · 05/12/2012 22:38

absolutely fed up with chinese crap, just want to buy 'BRITISH' made products AIBU?

OP posts:
GhostShip · 05/12/2012 22:41

Awww but then you wouldn't be able to buy that Italian wine you love so much you make it your username.

Cailleach · 05/12/2012 22:42

No, I find myself thinking this more and more these days. I've bought so many things over the years that were made in China, and most of it was total rubbish that lasted barely ten minutes (vacuum cleaners being the worst. ) Some of this wasn't cheap either, I'm not talking about poundshop level tat.

Now I'd rather buy European made stuff and I look out for it wherever possible.

GrimAndHumourlessAndEven · 05/12/2012 22:42

don't understand your question

if you want to buy products made in GB, then do so

Not sure why you think you are being unreasonable to do this

Confused
presceccoilove · 05/12/2012 22:42

Grin Grin Grin

I was referring to 'KNICKERS' actually

OP posts:
AKissIsNotAContract · 05/12/2012 22:42

What kind of products?

GrimAndHumourlessAndEven · 05/12/2012 22:45

[baffled]

praps this is an ad-bot doing a bit of spamming for those £10 keks from Mary Portas or summat

NomadsLand · 05/12/2012 22:48

You can buy British activewear and swimwear here www.stateofmindactive.com

Or check out www.buybritish.com

presceccoilove · 05/12/2012 22:48

I'm thinking along the lines of english clothes, art, material, cars, in fact almost everything except wine, have the chinese ever made a decent prescecco Grin I think not

OP posts:
Fozzleyplum · 05/12/2012 22:49

YANBU. I love Brora knitwear, which is British made. The quality is amazing and it seems never to wear out.
I buy Hotter Valetta shoes for work, as I have very wide feet and now wear orthotics. I have discovered they are British made, and are really well made for the price (flattering, too, on my massive flippers).

presceccoilove · 05/12/2012 22:50

I adore mARY pORTAS SHE IS marvelous, we need more mary's in the UK to encourage less imports or am I missing somethingHmm

OP posts:
presceccoilove · 05/12/2012 22:52

I am proud to be british on a british website, what is so wrong, i want to buy british products not chinese

OP posts:
presceccoilove · 05/12/2012 22:54

Come on , lets support British products, name some

  1. Top of My List is Mary Portas
OP posts:
HELPMyPooIsStuck · 05/12/2012 22:55

Yanbu.......but chances are you won't be able to bleddy do it, I too am sick of mass produced shite, dd plays with some of my old toys......cant see many of hers lasting 30 plus years !

GrimAndHumourlessAndEven · 05/12/2012 22:57

no one is saying it's wrong; if you feel so strongly why are you not sourcing and purchasing already?

Confused
WorraLorraTurkey · 05/12/2012 22:58

Buy what you want with your money, I don't bloody care.

GrimAndHumourlessAndEven · 05/12/2012 23:02

are we supposed to be rubbishing stuff made by forriners etc etc, them pesky chinese yadda yadda but failing dismally to fall in line, OP?

Beaverfeaver · 05/12/2012 23:24

I buy British where possible.

I them also buy what I can from my local independent shops.

Not always possible, but if you try hard enough it's possible and feels good to support local stuff

Beaverfeaver · 05/12/2012 23:25

I havnt found a decent British made tv or camera yet though...

LRDtheFeministDude · 05/12/2012 23:32

I feel Mary Portas would be a great export. Mainly because she'd then feck off with her patronizing comments.

I used to like her shows, too. Not any more.

SomeTiggyPudding · 05/12/2012 23:33

And another one to finish you off Wine!

Cantbelieveitsnotbutter · 05/12/2012 23:37

I try to where possible, it's the 'proudly British' brands like joules and jack wills that make me chuckle, only recently have they started to get into British manufacturing.
I think it's massively important we try and keep the pound in Britain. How can we moan there's no jobs if we don't help it ourselves?

Mayisout · 06/12/2012 02:44

Well you could all start by avoiding Amazon or Starbucks whilst they pay their tax in Luxemburg or wherever it is, to avoid the British tax system.

While they are raking in the dosh other British based companies are going down the pan due to he unfairness which allows these big firms to evade tax.

I bet it would only take a couple of weeks of them being ignored to change their plans. They are already mumbling about 'taking their customers views into consideration' which to me means 'are running scared in case custom drops off'.

But we are too apathetic to do anything serious.

ripsishere · 06/12/2012 04:00

Good luck with that.
The reason, IMO, that things and stuff are so inexpensive is the very fact that they've been made overseas.
When we lived in England, I tried really hard to buy season, locally produced food. It's very difficult, not to mention expensive.

Decemberinthesun · 06/12/2012 04:31

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

mortimersraven · 06/12/2012 04:36

I used to work in British manufacturing and I think it's sad how little most people care about sourcing locally made products (although price is a massive factor - I couldn't afford the products we made - which were 10x the price of a Chinese made equivalent).

Now I work in China. Although I agree it's good to support local business and economy, I would like to wave a little flag on behalf of Chinese manufacturing which has a terrible reputation for being cheap and nasty but is actually very different now to what it used to be. I've seen absolute tat and I've seen super-top quality being produced here. It depends very much upon the company.

In addition, most British made products will use foreign components so be aware that for example, 'British' cashmere still somes from cashmere goats in China or Mongolia, it's just processed and knitted/woven in Britain.

Most 'Made in Italy' textile products, (clothes, bags etc) are actually made in China, then they do a final process in Italy - sew on a label, or hem a scarf - and then they can legally say 'Made in Italy'. It's not as easy to buy local as you'd think.