I bought a dead lady's closet sight unseen for $13 - I was wildly unprepared for what I now owned
PEOPLE have been able to buy almost anything at an estate sale, and in this case, it's before actually seeing it.
One woman documented her thrifting adventure on TikTok to pick up someone's entire closet.

Kennady (@cowgrrrl) has almost 50,000 followers on her page which shows a little bit of everything.
Her most popular video has over 5million views where she won an entire closet worth of clothes for only $13.
It starts with Kennady explaining that she bid $13 for the closet on an online auction website and was on her way to pick it up.
She won the closet sight unseen, so she had no idea of the number of items she'd be picking up or what any of the clothes looked like.
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The TikToker expressed a slight concern over where to pick up the clothes because she wasn't given an exact address.
"They didn't even give me an address, just a street in a f*****g city, so we'll see," Kennady said.
After getting temporarily lost in Tacoma, she was able to find the closet.
It was a walk-in closet that covered one and a half of the four walls.
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"This is all mine now, and I have to figure out how to put it all in my car," she told her viewers.
Despite being "wildly unprepared for the quantity of stuff, Kennady was able to make it all fit in her car taking up her entire truck and most of the back seat.
Looking at her loading job she began questioning what exactly to do with all of these clothes.
"OH MY GOD wtf am I gonna do with all of this?" text across the screen read.
Some of her commenters helped answer this question.
"Whatever you don’t want donate to a women’s shelter," someone commented.
Others expressed how sad they'd feel if their entire wardrobe only sold for $13.
"If I died and 13$ was the highest bid for my entire wardrobe I’d feel so sad," a comment read.
"It's so sad to see someone's whole wardrobe sold for $13 though. Like someone's mom/grandma's clothes just all went," echoed another.
Some commenters had a more positive outlook on the concept.
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"For anyone who feels sad, I like to see estate sales as a way to continue on someone's legacies by people who actually care and will cherish them," a person commented.
"For people saying they feel bad, my grandma loved fashion and she would absolutely love that someone was getting her clothes to be used instead of just letting them sit in like a storage bin for years…" wrote another.

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