At a time when transparency is at an all-time high for consumers, it's puzzling when a fashion brand like Babyboo chooses to cloak the very fibers of its making—keeping fabric contents shrouded in mystery.
In online shopping, specific details regarding materials can be make-or-break for consumers seeking quality items for their money spent. This blog post seeks to stitch together the hidden seams behind Babyboo Fashion ’s secretive stance on hiding their clothing's fabric content and 'made-in' country origin.
Could silence signal low quality items? Or is Babyboo simply playing by the rules, or lack thereof in online e-tailing? Let’s unravel the enigma of concealed compositions and what it means for you, the buyer, as we dissect why Babyboo Fashion keeps its fabric recipes under wraps.
A dissatisfied customer purchased from BabyBoo Fashion, only to find the quality their near $200 purchase to be closer to a cheap $19.99 dress: "So I bought a dress, it was the most shoddy piece of clothing. Sleeves different widths and lengths, seams were wonky, loose threads, and just overall horrible material.
I spend weeks messaging with customer care, showing evidence, they are trying to stop me get a refund. However under aus consumer law they have to refund if an item is faulty. Eventually they agree after I jump through all the hoops, then it took another week to even get a returns label.
The item is now returned and I get a notification saying “your gift card is ready”. The dress was $183, but looked and felt like it was ~$20," said a Reddit post . "This company is so shoddy I regret ever being sucked into their social media ads." When looking at any of the product pages, you will notice under…
Discussion
0 Comments
No comments yet.
Sign in to join the discussion.