Kind of stupid question, actually. I Googled up clothes for one-armed children (tried knitting, didn’t go as planned, thought I’d donate it), and there were much fewer search results than I’d expected. Is it because one-armed people just have their clothes re-sewn from ordinary stuff, or what? Or are there different key words for it?
I wonder if there would be enough interest to support a kind of matching app that would let people put their Amazon wishlist up and then match them with someone who had the same item but opposite needs (ie left vs right shoe), and then split the cost.
Kind of stupid question, actually. I Googled up clothes for one-armed children (tried knitting, didn’t go as planned, thought I’d donate it), and there were much fewer search results than I’d expected. Is it because one-armed people just have their clothes re-sewn from ordinary stuff, or what? Or are there different key words for it?
I would think they would just buy regular clothes. The same way that you cannot buy only one shoe of a pair of shoes.
Still seems kind of inefficient, though :(
I wonder if there would be enough interest to support a kind of matching app that would let people put their Amazon wishlist up and then match them with someone who had the same item but opposite needs (ie left vs right shoe), and then split the cost.
Could be. But it is still only shoes… and sending them to two different customers might drown any difference in cost.