Running a preloved maternity clothing business, what do you think I spend the most amount of time on? Sourcing beautiful pieces? Styling mamas? Photographing new arrivals? Trying on clothes myself in the name of research? (A genuine occupational hazard.) They’re all part of the job, of course. But the thing I probably spend more time doing than anything else is assessing clothes before they ever make it into Mother Dragon. And most of that happens long before a parcel arrives at my door.
Because Mother Dragon is an online store, every piece starts with conversations, descriptions, and photographs. Before I accept anything, I’m zooming in on images, checking fabric condition, looking at seams, asking questions about wear, and trying to determine whether a piece will meet the standards customers expect. It’s not exactly the glamorous side of running a preloved maternity store, but examining each piece like I’m conducting a forensic investigation is one of the most important parts of the job.
The funny thing is that after doing this for a few years now, I’ve realised that clothes are only part of the story. What you’re really learning about is people. How we care for our clothes. How we remember our clothes. And how differently we all define phrases like “excellent condition.”
The good news is that the vast majority of pieces submitted to Mother Dragon are beautifully cared for and meet the strict intake criteria. Only the best pieces make it onto the site. But spending years reviewing, buying and selling preloved maternity clothes has taught me a few things. Some of them are about fashion. Most of them are about human nature. And a few of them might surprise you.
The pieces that sell fastest aren’t the ones you’d expect.
When I started Mother Dragon, I assumed the stand-out pieces would be the first to sell. The knockout pieces that lift an outfit, the investment dress, the thing that looked incredible hanging on a rail. And sometimes they are. But the pieces that consistently disappear fastest are the ones that make life easier.
It’s the piece that works with everything already in your wardrobe. The pair of maternity jeans that actually stay up. The soft top that works across trimesters and doesn’t require anyone to stand in front of the wardrobe muttering, “I’ve nothing to wear” at 7.15am. The kind of piece you can throw on while eating toast, searching for a shoe that will fit and wondering why pregnancy suddenly requires seventeen snacks before lunch. Those are the heroes.
And honestly, it tells me everything I need to know about what pregnant women actually want from their wardrobes. When your body is changing by the week, you’ve already made hundreds of decisions before breakfast, and you can’t remember why you walked into the room in the first place, clothing that simply works feels like a gift. Not complicated. Just comfortable, reliable and yours.
Fabric matters, but care matters more.
I used to think fabric was everything. And to be fair, natural fibres do help. Linen, cotton and jersey tend to wear well and often last through multiple pregnancies. But over the years I’ve learned something even more important: how a piece has been cared for matters far more than what it’s made from.
I’ve seen polyester dresses arrive looking almost brand new. I’ve seen beautiful cotton pieces that have clearly lived a very full life. The fabric is only the starting point. The real story is how it’s been washed, dried, stored and looked after.
If you’ve been washing gently, hanging things properly and storing them carefully, it shows. If things have spent six months folded in a basket because life happened, that shows too. And honestly? Life does happen, but let’s just be honest about the impact on our clothes.
Brand new with tags doesn’t automatically mean best condition.
This one surprises people. A piece with tags attached sounds perfect. And often it is. But “new with tags” and “like new condition” aren’t necessarily the same thing.
If you bought something, tried it on, decided it wasn’t for you and put it back in the wardrobe, wonderful. But if there are makeup marks on the collar, a pulled thread or evidence that the wardrobe has been doubling as a storage facility for everything else in the house, the tags don’t magically cancel that out.
The condition is the condition.
Everyone thinks their clothes are in excellent condition.
This is the big one. I know some people won’t like this, and even I have been guilty of it but we all remember our clothes as they were, not necessarily as they are.
Part of my job is being honest about condition. Because if every piece is described as like new, the words stop meaning anything, and the person receiving it ends up disappointed.
The good news is that this is genuinely rare at Mother Dragon. Most of the pieces submitted are in fantastic condition because I’m selective about what gets accepted. I’m not putting pieces up for the fun of it — I want clothes, loved clothes, to stay in circulation. But every now and then, a piece reminds me just how subjective condition can be. A tiny mark someone genuinely hadn’t noticed. A little bit of wear that wasn’t obvious from the photographs. The faint trace of someone’s favourite perfume — and only once, something worse.
Which is exactly why having clear standards and preloved definitions matters. Transparency is what makes the preloved market work. Without it, we’re all just taking a chance and hoping the parcel that arrives is as lovely as the listing suggested (hello, Vinted).
The goal isn’t perfection. It’s trust.
The uncomfortable truth about how we all value preloved.
This is the one that usually gets the strongest reaction. And I include myself in it because I realised I was doing exactly the same thing before I started Mother Dragon.
Almost everyone approaches the preloved market with the same instinct: sell your secondhand clothes for as much as possible and buy other people’s secondhand clothes for as little as possible. The problem is that this doesn’t really work.
I see versions of it all the time. Someone has a beautiful maternity dress they originally paid €120 for and hopes it might still be worth close to that. The very same person then spots a gorgeous preloved coat for €35 and wonders if that’s still a bit expensive. We’re all doing the same maths. And we’re all doing it from opposite directions.
The version that actually works looks different. It means investing in quality from the very beginning, looking after things properly, being realistic about their value when you’re ready to pass them on, and recognising that good-quality preloved clothes still have value simply because they’re in terms of preloved condition, they are quality clothes. Preloved should be our default, not the last resort.
When preloved works properly, everybody wins. People get access to better-quality clothes. Less ends up in landfill. Great pieces continue doing exactly what they were designed to do.
That’s a system worth protecting. And I genuinely believe there’s enough of the preloved pie to go around.
Jo
