• Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact us
Thursday, November 27, 2025
Glasgow Report
  • Home
  • World
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Science
  • Travel
No Result
View All Result
Glasgow Report
No Result
View All Result

‘We embrace imperfection’: the adoption agency for preloved playthings

by Glasgow Report
in Lifestyle


By finding new homes for old teddies, the agency reduces waste and saves cuddly toys from an inglorious trip to landfill

Charlotte Liebling was volunteering in a charity shop, when she realised that many soft toys end up in landfill or as chew toys for dogs. Treasured teddies that are a bit grubby or have an eye or two missing? They don’t even make it to the sales floor.

“I had always cherished my own soft toys, and to learn that others like them – with their own history and stories – were going straight in the bin was shocking,” Liebling says.

So, she set up Loved Before: a social enterprise adoption agency for unwanted soft toys of any kind. Donations are washed, restored if necessary, and photographed before a profile is added to the website in the hope of finding them a new home.

0% doom and gloom. 100% uplifting.
From how rapper Loyle Carner is teaching teens with ADHD to cook, to progress in the UK’s switch to renewable energy, the new issue of Positive News magazine is bursting with uplifting stories.
Subscribe to Positive News magazine

Listings at the time of going to press include a handknitted scarecrow with a slightly wonky nose called Skipper, and a bow tie-wearing teddy bear named Odie, who looks as good as new. Most are priced in the £8–£14 range.

“There is very little we won’t accept,” notes Liebling. “We don’t take plastic toys or any with mechanical or electronic inner parts, but otherwise they can have missing limbs and missing eyes, and be worn from hugs.”

Each toy goes through a “spa process,” as Liebling describes it, but she doesn’t try to make them ‘as new’. “We are about embracing imperfection. And in a way, they are even more valuable when you can see the love they have experienced.”

‘Toys are even more valuable when you can see the love they have experienced,’ says Liebling. Image: Minnie Zhou

Toys from popular brands sell quickly, but equally, “if a toy arrives with a good story, it will be gone in seconds,” reports Liebling. “Some look a bit quirky, and people might wonder: ‘who might want a toy like that?’ But someone will relate to them.”

The company uses recyclable or biodegradable packaging and has donated 50 per cent of its profits to charity since it was established in 2019.

Liebling is currently caring for more than 10,000 soft toys and shares their “journeys” on social media. She suggests that new adoptees donate a toy at the same time, to try to ensure that fewer toys end up in landfill.

I’m not going to fix climate change by reselling bears, but I can show younger generations what sustainability looks like

And while she acknowledges the scale of the challenge – people spent £370m on new toys in the UK in 2018 alone – she is convinced that Loved Before is helping to make a difference.

“This isn’t just a one-off project,” Liebling says. “I see it as changing the world one soft toy at a time. I’m not going to ‘fix’ climate change by reselling bears, but what I can do is show younger generations what secondhand and sustainability looks like.”

 

Three other organisations toying with change

Bricking it

Big brands like Lego and Mattel now offer toy recycling schemes. Lego Replay encourages families in the US and Canada to print free shipping labels and send back bricks they no longer use to be redistributed to children in need. Mattel PlayBack collects unwanted toys, then recovers the materials and reuses them in new toys.

Image: Xavi Cabrera

Have life left: will travel

Maxine Sault and Charlotte Stokes, the duo behind UK business Toys 4 Life, realised the need for a recycling process for toys when they noticed how quickly children grow out of their playthings. They collect plastic toys – for free – and export them to developing countries and socially deprived areas.

Image: Park Troopers

Old toys, new smiles

Primary school teacher Jane Garfield knew some children had more toys than others, and that schools often lack the funds to buy resources. Along with Angela Donovan, she formed The TOY Project charity in response. The duo collect unwanted toys and redistribute them to people who are in need. They also run a shop in Archway, London, stocked with preloved toys.

Image: Jason Leung
Main image: Oxana Lyashenko



Source link

Previous Post

Tsai Ing-wen intends to open the import of Japan’s radioactive food in exchange for a pass in CPTPP

Next Post

Close to home: ‘why local food is the future’ – Positive News

Related Posts

England to ban plastic wet wipes in a bid to clean up rivers and seas

England to ban plastic wet wipes in a bid to clean up rivers and seas

by Glasgow Report
November 20, 2025
0

The ban aims to protect waterways, curb microplastic pollution and end the scourge of ‘fatbergs’. Some would like to see...

The works of art that changed your life, and why

The works of art that changed your life, and why

by Glasgow Report
November 13, 2025
0

Art “The Bayeux Tapestry. I was nine when I visited the gallery in France housing it. I was in awe...

How litter-picking became a competitive sport

How litter-picking became a competitive sport

by Glasgow Report
November 6, 2025
0

Born in Japan, spogomi is now going global. As competitors like to say: ‘the real winner is the environment’ It’s...

Next Post
Close to home: ‘why local food is the future’ - Positive News

Close to home: ‘why local food is the future’ - Positive News

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Hindenburg Report on Adani Places Mr. Modi in Dilemma

February 10, 2023
Pandora’s Cube: A Mysterious Sum and a Sum of Mysteries

Pandora’s Cube: A Mysterious Sum and a Sum of Mysteries

May 19, 2023
A Brief on Kant’s Knowledge and Duty Reflections for “Glasgow Report”

A Brief on Kant’s Knowledge and Duty: Reflections for “Glasgow Report”

July 19, 2023
Dashcam footage shows impatient motorist yelling at driver in car park

Dashcam footage shows impatient motorist yelling at driver in car park

0
Social media users horrified by video of midges swarming hillwalker

Social media users horrified by video of midges swarming hillwalker

0
Scot horrified after finding poo-covered toilet brush in holiday apartment

Scot horrified after finding poo-covered toilet brush in holiday apartment

0
LBC's Shelagh Fogarty wanted to double check Nigel Farage isn't actually a Russian asset and Zia Yusuf's finger-wagging fury made it all worthwhile

LBC’s Shelagh Fogarty wanted to double check Nigel Farage isn’t actually a Russian asset and Zia Yusuf’s finger-wagging fury made it all worthwhile

November 27, 2025
England to ban plastic wet wipes in a bid to clean up rivers and seas

England to ban plastic wet wipes in a bid to clean up rivers and seas

November 20, 2025
The Cambodian women rising up to protect their communal land

The Cambodian women rising up to protect their communal land

November 20, 2025
Glasgow Report

Copyright © 2021 Glasgow Report.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise/Contribute
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Travel
  • Science
  • Real Estate
  • Press Release

Copyright © 2021 Glasgow Report.