At www.tradingstandards.gov.uk, is instant online help for any queries, issues and difficulties that you may be receiving from services, retailers that is within your consumer rights.
I personally had not heard of tradingstandards and was so afraid of it being complicated and worried that I would have hassles with solicitors, that I would always try my own methods of solving a purchase problem that is not at all satisfactory. However I assumed they might have an online service, which I found through google, which made the issue a little less daunting to deal with.
The first time Courts had ripped me off. Please don't buy from them. After saving up for ages for a double bed, it was delivered but bumpy. They did send eventually after many calls and revisiting the store a person out to inspect. He saw the problem and said he would ...
Advantages: Great quality, styles and prices Disadvantages: Too cramped store
Well the answer to my title is quite simple, um.... cash for clothes and accessories and in this case DECENT, GOOD QUALITY Bay Trading items, sorry about the dodgy title but I couldn't really think of anything else! I've only really noticed Bay Trading in my local town centre recently, I've only just started shopping there too so her goes my opinion on the shop itself.
The store itself is relatively small but have been in bigger branches, with racks down the sides of the small, thin, long store and 1 single rack all the way down the middle of the store, things can get a little cramped. When loads of people are in the tiny store all at once, things can get a litte out of hand.
Luckily the store uses the floor above it too for the changing rooms. The changing rooms are great with a big communal area and then 2 smaller changing rooms ...
Advantages: A very interesting book about an important part of British history Disadvantages: The specific details about Bristol will not be of interest to all readers
The Trade
What is this book about?
In short, this book tells the story of the part Bristol played in the transatlantic slave trade. Bristol benefitted hugely from the so-called triangular trade, whereby manufactured goods, weapons, cloth and so on were shipped from Bristol mainly to the west coast of Africa, slaves were taken from Africa to the America?s and the Caribbean and sugar, tobacco and rum were taken from these locations back to Bristol.
Evidence of this trade still exists. Fry?s Chocolate Factory was at Bristol (cocoa and sugar), indeed there were 7 sugar refineries at one point, Hartley?s Jam was made locally (sugar again) and Imperial Tobacco was there (and partly still is). The slave trade made Bristol ? and a small number of Bristolians ? rich, although very few slaves were ever seen in Bristol.
The book is ...