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feel free to dm!
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any prns - 7teen - dni under 14 - big ateez fan :D - new to borrowing !!
feel free to dm!
Unfortunately I did not l1ft this but i needed to let you guys that it is NOT worth the effort of doing so :( itâs so chalky and leaves behind white streaks, iâm so mad i wasted my money on it. It also smells really weird
101: Scoping Out A Store
I recently had an ask pop in my box asking for tips on lifting from a couple stores. I see a lot of new lifters spamming the inboxes of the community with the same âhow do I life xxx from xxx store?â rephrased a few different ways. So let me break down my NUMBER ONE TIP: SCOPING.
SCOPE OUT THE STORE BEFORE YOU LIFT FROM THERE. SCOPE OUT THE STORE BEFORE YOU LIFT FROM THERE. SCOPE OUT THE STORE BEFORE - - are you comprehending what I am trying to say?
What does it mean to scope out a store?
âScopingâ is a verb that shortens âlook around the store for cameras without looking suspicious, and all in all figuring out if and when you can get away with lifting at said location.â
Why should I scope out a store?
Lifting is a CRIME. I will not sugar coat it. If you lift anything from a store you are a CRIMINAL, regardless of being a minor or not. There are more ways to mess up a lift than there are to successfully lift from a store. Plain and simple. When you scope out a store you are deciding what places are best to conceal items, where to avoid, what you can reasonably lift, and how to scamper from the store in a calm manner in the shortest time and distance possible. This is useful if for whatever reason you have to halt your lift and get out of the store. Scoping also aids your confidence when you lift. If you know what to do ahead of time, you will be faster and more intelligent with your choices.
I see tips for lifting from XXX all of the time. Canât I follow their guide and be fine?
Yes and no. Yes, tips are great! Yes, tips are fun! Tips are amazing resources to give you ideas. Yet there is nothing pragmatic about reading tips. No two stores have the same layout. I have three Ulta locations in my area. Ulta does not magically build new buildings for every location so they can look exactly the same with the exact same layout. In this case, Ulta works with the existing building structure to create their store layout. Just because Ulta doesnât have a camera in the high end foundations at one location, does NOT mean the other two Ultaâs in my area ALSO have no cameras in the same section. Based on building structure and shrink (or items lost/stolen), cameras, two-way mirrors, motion sensors and monitors are in different spots at every store. When someone gives tips about where cameras are located they are only giving a generalization based on THEIR knowledge of ONLY THE LOCATIONS THEY HAVE ENTERED.
How do I scope out a store?
This is a complex question, so forgive me if I ramble. I will take you step by step as to how I scope out a store.
NEVER scope out a store on the same day you plan to lift from the store. Try to plan it out at least a week in advance. I donât care if you are a minor and your mommy has to drive you everywhere. If you want to seriously take these tip posts to heart, you will scope the area BEFORE you lift, on a day where you are NOT planning to lift.
Use the store location to your advantage. If it is located inside a mall, wall down the hallway and glance through the store windows to locate any cameras nearby the doors. Sometimes you can clearly see all of the camera locations especially in smaller store locations. If there is seating outside the windows, sit in the chairs, sip on a Starbucks, text or talk on the phone, and continue to study the store through the windows. If it is located outdoors in a stand alone building are there any windows you can stand outside? Slip on your sunglasses as being outside in the sun is a perfectly normal reason to wear them, but it also hides your eyes from where they are looking if they are a dark enough tint. Chat on the phone while doing this so you arenât just standing. Be creative but believable with your conversations. You are waiting for a friend, you are waiting for a ride, you got a call from your boss about work, you were on your way inside when a friend called you for help with a school assignment, or you just wanted to clarify something with a friend. Use this time to hunt for security: cameras, mirrors, SAs (sales associates), bear traps, etc.
Enter the store. If you are greeted be cordial, but do not spill into a long story about how you are just looking around and isnât it such a nice day and oh look at all of these cameras. Spend your time browsing the store as if you are shopping normally. Depending on the merchandise, read the labels, compare products, search for an ingredient or two that you donât understand, take a picture of the product, sniff them, lick them. While you are doing this search every. damn. aisle. Walk up and down each aisle as if you are just looking around at the different products and killing time. (A lot of people walk up and down every aisle if you like to people watch or stalk other shoppers for fun.)
MEANWHILE, meaning while doing step two and browsing the products, be on the look out for more cameras. Even if they are dome cameras and they look incredibly fake, assume they are real. There are companies that make horribly cheap cameras that are easily mistaken as fake cameras, and you would not be the first person caught on film because you made the mistake. Keep an eye out for mirrors.
MEANWHILE, meaning while doing step two and step three, be on the look out for mirrors. Assume all mirrors are two-way mirrors, meaning to you it looks like a normal mirror but if someone stands on the other side it looks like a window and they can see your every action. Â Most people overlook mirrors, and it gets them into trouble. I have seen people IN PERSON, walk up to a mirror until they are practically on top of it, and thinking no one can see them from the angle they are standing, conceal items in front of the mirror. Then LP or a manager waltzes in and confronts the shoplifter in question. Mirrors are dangerous. SAs can see you from certain angles and it is best to avoid them. If they witness you take and conceal an object (and walk past the point of sale) it is grounds for loss prevention to have them assist in filing a report.
MEANWHILE, BE AWARE OF SAs! (Do you see how this âmeanwhileâ stuff makes this post very long and probably somewhat confusing when someone asks be to simply break down scoping out a store?) How many SAs are there? Where are the SAs located? How attentive are the SAs? Are they greeting everyone within ten feet or within twenty feet of their presence? Perhaps ask questions about products to several different SAs? Are the SAs earnestly concerned and are trying to help or do they seem pretty disinterested? If you drop your phone on the floor in the same aisle as an SA do they notice or are they too busy working on a project? The more obtuse the staff is, the more likely you can get away with stealing more volume or stealing more cumbersome items.
MEANWHILE, be on the look out for customers. Assume anyone in plain clothes is a member of their loss prevention department OR a vigilant citizen looking for an opportunity to relive their football days and tackle someone. I donât care if it is a ten year old boy running up and down the aisles while his mother chases after him, or if it is a somber looking granny who is holding onto her shopping cart to keep herself upright. Anyone can snitch, anyone can be LP, anyone can tackle you (Never know - Granny could be doing Cross-Fit four times a week and skydives on the weekends) and therefore ANYONE can get you into trouble. How many customers are in the store? Where do customers like to congregate?
MEANWHILE, be on the look out for exit doors. If you need to make a speedy escape later on how many options do you have? Are there emergency exit doors? Does the door have a label warning of a time lock or a ten second delay?
Mentally make note of the blind spots you have discovered. Hell, you can open up your phone and jot them down - after all, you will look like you are texting. For craft stores check the fabric aisles and the seasonal aisles. Not many people steal an entire bolt of fabric so usually the only cameras in that section are focused on the cutting table where it is easier to stuff small pieces of fabric. Also, not too many people are looking to lift a wreath covered in Easter bunnies and carrots. For clothing stores I usually go the mens department as they are not monitored as heavily. I will even use the mens fitting rooms if I can. They are less busy, usually unattended, and if you are questioned as to why you waltzed into them if you are not a man, there are a billion excuses. You couldnât find the fitting room for women, the other rooms were full, the other rooms were dirty, this was closer and you really need to find a restroom but wanted to try things on first. For grocery stores I usually locate the aisle with instant noodles and other prepared goods. Not too many people WANT to steal packets of Maruchan Ramen.
ATTEMPT TO GO OUT THE DOORS LABELED âENTRANCEâ when you leave. If there are two sets of doors, of course. I do this to test if the doors have motion sensors on the inside. If someone tries to block your exit during a lift, you confidently know you have another option. Or if someone is sent to the front to ask to check your bag as you leave, usually they assume you will go out the exit and not the entrance.
This is also a great time to play around with how you dress. If you are unsure of the storeâs clientele base (meaning what kind of customers walk into their store to shop) you can experiment now. Can you get away with jeans and flats? Is it time to break out the five in heels and an all black designer outfit? Is that MK bag too noticeable? Will a bag from Kohls or F21 look out of place? Try your options then, rather than when you lift. If you need to make several trips to try out several outfits because you are getting negative responses then please do that. It is better to find outfit options that send you under the radar with SAs than something that sticks out. There are plenty of amazing outfit posts out there in this community.
A week or so later, feel free to hit the store. You now know where to conceal without cameras or SAs breathing down your neck! Now you can put into play all of those tips you read about concealing.
I would like to finish my post with two golden rules and an advisory.
First rule of lifting is SCOPE SCOPE SCOPE.
Second rule of lifting is DROP IT LIKE ITâS HOT if you feel uneasy or are sensed by staff or customers, and get out of the store.
Remember, LIFTING is a CRIME. Just because we usually call it âliftingâ does not make it different than âstealingâ. They are synonyms. They are the same damn thing. Lifting is stealing and both make you a criminal regardless of age.
People will tell you that stealing will lead to employees being fired. While this is not directly true at most retail companies, understand that by stealing you may cause employees to burst into flames. Repeat, employees may have to be set on fire. We are basically arsonists that like to collect pretty things.
Don't Do's
Instead of talking about what to do when lifting clothes, letâs talk about what not to do:
-donât give back double tagged clothes -donât pick up any clothes without checking the price tag and/or holding it up to your body to check sizing -donât make too much eye contact with employees, but if itâs unavoidable make eye contact and smile -donât look at cams -donât look around the store, and doooonât look up at the ceiling whatsoever -donât be too friendly -donât be rude to employees -donât detag when the music in store stops playing -donât (or at least try not to) detag when an employee is near by, they WILL know the sound (this goes for customers as well, some may have worked in retail and can snitch) -if youâre not buying anything, donât go into the dressing room more than once -donât steal clothing without bringing a duplicate into the dressing room (ex. donât steal a yellow top without bringing in 1-2 more of different sizes) -donât act nervous (fidget, drop items, stretch a lot, etc). Something that may help is pretending to play on your phone
Thatâs all I can think of, if you guys come up with more feel free to add to this post! đž
does anyone have good tactics for mapping out stores/blindspots >.< iâm gonna go to b&n tomorrow but idk the best places to cĂžnc3al :(
Store policies
taken from: http://www.zoklet.net/bbs/showthread.php?t=8322
Aeropostale: No chase policy/Doesnât prosecute/No LP, staff has little or no LP training/Cameras are not actively monitored
Abercrombie & Fitch: No chase policy/Sometimes prosecutes but often will just ask for merchandise back without civil demand/Only LP is staff, some care, some donât/Cameras are not actively monitored
American Eagle: No chase policy/Will prosecute/Limited LP but will occasionally use plain clothes/Cameras are not actively monitored
Best Buy: Has active and good LP. Will follow you into the restroom if they suspect you, they will also call the police the second they see you conceal something. There is a stationary guard at the entrance who monitors cameras throughout the store.
Burlington Coat Factory: Somewhat dangerous.
CVS: No chase policy but will attempt to get your license plate/Will prosecute/Store managers will sometimes act as plain clothes LP/Cameras are not usually monitored
Dicks Sporting Goods: Poor LP
Dillards: Very dangerous.
Fred Meyers*:
Hollister: Same as Abercrombie & Fitch
H&M: Chase policy and prosecution policy unknown/Very good LP for a small store, even in small stores will use plain clothes or a security guard/Camera status unknown
King Supers: Good LP
Kmart: Will chase.
Kohls: Dangerous store to shoplift at, has active LP who make fitting room stops.
Lord & Taylor*: Will chase you/ Will either prosecute or issue civil demand depending on circumstances/Extremely good LP, plain clothes are used and are often off-duty cops/Cameras are actively monitored.
JC Penny*: Will chase you/Will either prosecute or issue civil demand/LP is decent but not as good as Macys, occasionally uses plain clothes/Cameras are actively monitored
Macys*: Will chase you/Will either prosecute or issue civil demand/Above average LP, plain clothes are common/Cameras are actively monitored
Meijers: Will chase.
Mervyns: Dangerous.
Sears*: Will chase you/Will prosecute, sometimes issues civil demand/Extremely good LP, uses plain clothes/Cameras are actively monitored
Sephora: Will Chase/Will issue civil demand and call police, may prosecute depending on circumstances, will issue a trespass order for 1 year/No plainclothes/No monthly quota on shoplifting aprehensions/Very well and actively-monitored cameras that are full colour, and can pan as well as zoom in/nothing has a security tag/There is one dedicated employee who monitors all the cameras, and has radio contact with all (or just the LPs) staff members in the store/There are generally more than 2 LPs active in the store with the camera guy behind the scenes/LP is well trained and even regular staff has a degree of LP training
Staples: There are two kinds of store layouts. The old store layout consists mainly of rows of aisles, and the new store layout has more of a maze layout like Bestbuy. The cameras in the stores with old layouts are mostly fake, while the newer stores employ several low-profile cameras designed to monitor internal theft. In both stores the cameras are not usually monitored.
Stop & Shop: Chase policy unknown/Will prosecute/Uses plain clothes LP and staff will often look for shoplifters/Cameras are often monitored and are numerous
Target*: Will chase you/Will prosecute, sometimes but rarely issues civil demand/Extremely good LP and employees are given an incentive to look out for shoplifters/Cameras are actively monitored and are very high quality
Walgreens: No chase policy/Will prosecute/Does not have active LP but the staff will sometimes try to act as LP. They arenât supposed to and can not legally stop you/Cameras are not usually monitored although there is usually one employee in the back room near the cameras, so be aware of that.
Walmart*: Will chase you/Will either prosecute or issue civil demand/LP often poor but ranges from store to store/Cameras are actively monitored/Has a policy not to prosecute under $25
*Stores marked with an asterick are known to enter shoplifters into a national database.â
itâs so nerve wracking to l1ft in a city with a high pĂžlice presence :( i really wish i could more but theyâre in literally every single store and i donât have the means to travel any further from my house than around 20 miles away at most
Reminder that my account is FAKE!
This is a role play of a kleptomaniac character with no connection to the real world :)
It always blow my mine that people might think these are real accounts??? Like yes, let me just go felony tumblr to talk about my crimes
i know we arenât supposed to l1ft from locally owned stores, but iâm wondering if there would be an exception if theyâre m@ga/r@cist? or is it still no-go
đšIMPORTANT PSAđš
PLEASE READ THIS POST IF THIS IS YOUR FIRST TIME COMING ACROSS IT!
this is a good post but remember:
companies also advertise fisheye cameras as "no blind spots" cameras but that's a lie â you can literally create a blind spot by turning your back to them. ad speak â truth. AI companies WANT to sell shit to stores for a $$$$ price tag !! They are going to market the shit out of their products by telling them it's groundbreaking!!!
how bad AI works. 6 fingers? ChatGPT telling you whatever?
what does this track? they give examples of "bending" before a shelf (to conceal), turning your back to the camera, circling a display. non-lyfƧing shoppers do these things all the time. none of this is illegal
they claim they do not have many false alarms, but if it flags "leaving without paying after lengthy browsing" and "placing items in bags" how could it not? again, shoppers do these things all the time. they don't find the thing they're looking for, they put their phone in their bag/pockets, check if they have their wallet... it says it's taught on real shoplifting incidents, so i guess very obvious behavior on-camera (think goofy shoplifting PSA)? so concealing should look as smooth as possible (but you should be doing this anyway! and never on camera)
what it does do: send video clips of your behavior to on-floor staff so that they can review you right then&there, and also the person-detection system allows them to esp. follow YOU from different cameras around the store. this is actually the big thing here imo
in my country an AI tagging me as "suspicious" will not be grounds for anything except getting staff/LP to clock and follow me. And this is basically how you should be operating anyway, that someone is watching you at all times and you need to be as stealthy as possible. so know your rights and know the law
Super mini haul !!
I went to nÇrÄstĆĂžm r@ck and l1fted a $13 nail polish a little bit ago :3 It isnât as dark as I was hoping itâd be but maybe iâll go back soon and get another
101: Scoping Out A Store
I recently had an ask pop in my box asking for tips on lifting from a couple stores. I see a lot of new lifters spamming the inboxes of the community with the same âhow do I life xxx from xxx store?â rephrased a few different ways. So let me break down my NUMBER ONE TIP: SCOPING.
SCOPE OUT THE STORE BEFORE YOU LIFT FROM THERE. SCOPE OUT THE STORE BEFORE YOU LIFT FROM THERE. SCOPE OUT THE STORE BEFORE - - are you comprehending what I am trying to say?
What does it mean to scope out a store?
âScopingâ is a verb that shortens âlook around the store for cameras without looking suspicious, and all in all figuring out if and when you can get away with lifting at said location.â
Why should I scope out a store?
Lifting is a CRIME. I will not sugar coat it. If you lift anything from a store you are a CRIMINAL, regardless of being a minor or not. There are more ways to mess up a lift than there are to successfully lift from a store. Plain and simple. When you scope out a store you are deciding what places are best to conceal items, where to avoid, what you can reasonably lift, and how to scamper from the store in a calm manner in the shortest time and distance possible. This is useful if for whatever reason you have to halt your lift and get out of the store. Scoping also aids your confidence when you lift. If you know what to do ahead of time, you will be faster and more intelligent with your choices.
I see tips for lifting from XXX all of the time. Canât I follow their guide and be fine?
Yes and no. Yes, tips are great! Yes, tips are fun! Tips are amazing resources to give you ideas. Yet there is nothing pragmatic about reading tips. No two stores have the same layout. I have three Ulta locations in my area. Ulta does not magically build new buildings for every location so they can look exactly the same with the exact same layout. In this case, Ulta works with the existing building structure to create their store layout. Just because Ulta doesnât have a camera in the high end foundations at one location, does NOT mean the other two Ultaâs in my area ALSO have no cameras in the same section. Based on building structure and shrink (or items lost/stolen), cameras, two-way mirrors, motion sensors and monitors are in different spots at every store. When someone gives tips about where cameras are located they are only giving a generalization based on THEIR knowledge of ONLY THE LOCATIONS THEY HAVE ENTERED.
How do I scope out a store?
This is a complex question, so forgive me if I ramble. I will take you step by step as to how I scope out a store.
NEVER scope out a store on the same day you plan to lift from the store. Try to plan it out at least a week in advance. I donât care if you are a minor and your mommy has to drive you everywhere. If you want to seriously take these tip posts to heart, you will scope the area BEFORE you lift, on a day where you are NOT planning to lift.
Use the store location to your advantage. If it is located inside a mall, wall down the hallway and glance through the store windows to locate any cameras nearby the doors. Sometimes you can clearly see all of the camera locations especially in smaller store locations. If there is seating outside the windows, sit in the chairs, sip on a Starbucks, text or talk on the phone, and continue to study the store through the windows. If it is located outdoors in a stand alone building are there any windows you can stand outside? Slip on your sunglasses as being outside in the sun is a perfectly normal reason to wear them, but it also hides your eyes from where they are looking if they are a dark enough tint. Chat on the phone while doing this so you arenât just standing. Be creative but believable with your conversations. You are waiting for a friend, you are waiting for a ride, you got a call from your boss about work, you were on your way inside when a friend called you for help with a school assignment, or you just wanted to clarify something with a friend. Use this time to hunt for security: cameras, mirrors, SAs (sales associates), bear traps, etc.
Enter the store. If you are greeted be cordial, but do not spill into a long story about how you are just looking around and isnât it such a nice day and oh look at all of these cameras. Spend your time browsing the store as if you are shopping normally. Depending on the merchandise, read the labels, compare products, search for an ingredient or two that you donât understand, take a picture of the product, sniff them, lick them. While you are doing this search every. damn. aisle. Walk up and down each aisle as if you are just looking around at the different products and killing time. (A lot of people walk up and down every aisle if you like to people watch or stalk other shoppers for fun.)
MEANWHILE, meaning while doing step two and browsing the products, be on the look out for more cameras. Even if they are dome cameras and they look incredibly fake, assume they are real. There are companies that make horribly cheap cameras that are easily mistaken as fake cameras, and you would not be the first person caught on film because you made the mistake. Keep an eye out for mirrors.
MEANWHILE, meaning while doing step two and step three, be on the look out for mirrors. Assume all mirrors are two-way mirrors, meaning to you it looks like a normal mirror but if someone stands on the other side it looks like a window and they can see your every action. Â Most people overlook mirrors, and it gets them into trouble. I have seen people IN PERSON, walk up to a mirror until they are practically on top of it, and thinking no one can see them from the angle they are standing, conceal items in front of the mirror. Then LP or a manager waltzes in and confronts the shoplifter in question. Mirrors are dangerous. SAs can see you from certain angles and it is best to avoid them. If they witness you take and conceal an object (and walk past the point of sale) it is grounds for loss prevention to have them assist in filing a report.
MEANWHILE, BE AWARE OF SAs! (Do you see how this âmeanwhileâ stuff makes this post very long and probably somewhat confusing when someone asks be to simply break down scoping out a store?) How many SAs are there? Where are the SAs located? How attentive are the SAs? Are they greeting everyone within ten feet or within twenty feet of their presence? Perhaps ask questions about products to several different SAs? Are the SAs earnestly concerned and are trying to help or do they seem pretty disinterested? If you drop your phone on the floor in the same aisle as an SA do they notice or are they too busy working on a project? The more obtuse the staff is, the more likely you can get away with stealing more volume or stealing more cumbersome items.
MEANWHILE, be on the look out for customers. Assume anyone in plain clothes is a member of their loss prevention department OR a vigilant citizen looking for an opportunity to relive their football days and tackle someone. I donât care if it is a ten year old boy running up and down the aisles while his mother chases after him, or if it is a somber looking granny who is holding onto her shopping cart to keep herself upright. Anyone can snitch, anyone can be LP, anyone can tackle you (Never know - Granny could be doing Cross-Fit four times a week and skydives on the weekends) and therefore ANYONE can get you into trouble. How many customers are in the store? Where do customers like to congregate?
MEANWHILE, be on the look out for exit doors. If you need to make a speedy escape later on how many options do you have? Are there emergency exit doors? Does the door have a label warning of a time lock or a ten second delay?
Mentally make note of the blind spots you have discovered. Hell, you can open up your phone and jot them down - after all, you will look like you are texting. For craft stores check the fabric aisles and the seasonal aisles. Not many people steal an entire bolt of fabric so usually the only cameras in that section are focused on the cutting table where it is easier to stuff small pieces of fabric. Also, not too many people are looking to lift a wreath covered in Easter bunnies and carrots. For clothing stores I usually go the mens department as they are not monitored as heavily. I will even use the mens fitting rooms if I can. They are less busy, usually unattended, and if you are questioned as to why you waltzed into them if you are not a man, there are a billion excuses. You couldnât find the fitting room for women, the other rooms were full, the other rooms were dirty, this was closer and you really need to find a restroom but wanted to try things on first. For grocery stores I usually locate the aisle with instant noodles and other prepared goods. Not too many people WANT to steal packets of Maruchan Ramen.
ATTEMPT TO GO OUT THE DOORS LABELED âENTRANCEâ when you leave. If there are two sets of doors, of course. I do this to test if the doors have motion sensors on the inside. If someone tries to block your exit during a lift, you confidently know you have another option. Or if someone is sent to the front to ask to check your bag as you leave, usually they assume you will go out the exit and not the entrance.
This is also a great time to play around with how you dress. If you are unsure of the storeâs clientele base (meaning what kind of customers walk into their store to shop) you can experiment now. Can you get away with jeans and flats? Is it time to break out the five in heels and an all black designer outfit? Is that MK bag too noticeable? Will a bag from Kohls or F21 look out of place? Try your options then, rather than when you lift. If you need to make several trips to try out several outfits because you are getting negative responses then please do that. It is better to find outfit options that send you under the radar with SAs than something that sticks out. There are plenty of amazing outfit posts out there in this community.
A week or so later, feel free to hit the store. You now know where to conceal without cameras or SAs breathing down your neck! Now you can put into play all of those tips you read about concealing.
I would like to finish my post with two golden rules and an advisory.
First rule of lifting is SCOPE SCOPE SCOPE.
Second rule of lifting is DROP IT LIKE ITâS HOT if you feel uneasy or are sensed by staff or customers, and get out of the store.
Remember, LIFTING is a CRIME. Just because we usually call it âliftingâ does not make it different than âstealingâ. They are synonyms. They are the same damn thing. Lifting is stealing and both make you a criminal regardless of age.
People will tell you that stealing will lead to employees being fired. While this is not directly true at most retail companies, understand that by stealing you may cause employees to burst into flames. Repeat, employees may have to be set on fire. We are basically arsonists that like to collect pretty things.
does anyone know if itâd be easier to use a bike to go l1fting? because like thereâs no way they can get a license but itâs also a lot slower and covers short distance so.. you could get caught :( this isnât urgent or anything but iâm really curious since itâd be my only mode of transportation
hello hustlers đ whoâs still active on l1ftblr june 2026?
i hate paying for stuff when i couldâve lyfted it đ iâm not that experienced though so i didnât wanna get caught
đ Barnes and Nob.le Tips đ
!! disclaimer: these are what have worked for me, i say try this after a little bit of lifting experience !!
âïž okay so, here are some tiny rules for this (and in general for lifting): âïž
đ± donât get greedy
- if they see you carrying a whole bunch of books around the store, theyâll keep their eye on you. stores want to make their daily goal and depending on the location, the b&n may have more attentative employees.
đ± grab some books you may not want
- this is best if you conceal on the floor instead of the cafe, because they might see you w/ like 4 books but suddenly 0? have like 2 youâre not gonna get and put them back where they belong and leave.
đ± check for tags
- from the tips ive received any book that is above $40 dollars, is hardcover, or in the medical section, all have rfid tags embedded in them. do not attempt!!! for paperbacks, âreadâ through them. you might find a rfid sticker in there, just peel it out. youâll find these more in manga, but always check!!
âïž now time for blindspot and concealing tips!!: âïž
đ± b&n cafe
- in my opinion the best place to conceal is inside the b&n cafe, you find a table not too close to the cafe register and place your bag and books on the table. then what i do is take out my wallet (leave my bag open), head to the register and order some food, a snack, or a drink. get my receipt and go back to my table. i then put my wallet on one of the books, hold it together and put it in my purse.
- while eating you can read through the books, making sure thereâs no rfids, and slowly put them in your purse or shopping bag.
- what ive done once is ask my partner or friend to call me and i fake having to rush and leave, so i stuff the books in my bag and leave while on the phone w them (do this after checking for rfids)
đ± concealing on floor
- find your blindspots!! this is a known rule here but it bears repeating, find your blindspots!!! if youâre going to conceal in an aisle, make sure theres no cameras above you or infront of you (thereâs bookshelf cameras!!)
- i like to conceal while sitting on the mini sofas because your purse is in your lap and its a quick sleight of hand to put the book in it. find a chair/sofa in a blindspot!!
- and i see teens do this a lot, sit on the floor in the aisles and âreadâ, its so common to see that at b&n that some SAâs wont bat their eye
đ± kidâs section
- this has its own part because the kids section at b&n usually doesnt have cameras, but they do have: at least one SA walking around (and the kids section isnât exactly the biggest), and parents and kids who might be able to see you conceal. so be careful here
i havenât lifted stationary and accessories at b&n yet so please feel free to add more to this!!! and if i missed anything or was wrong in some of these add that too!!! i hope this helps some of yâall!!! đđđ
PĂNK/VS/ĂĂ
First things first: do you have a magnet or hook? Some locations use hook tags while others use magnet tags. If you do, then you can get whatever you want. If not, youâll have to look specifically for untagged shit. Basically to lift, I only use a big F21/ÀëröpöstĂ€lĂ« bag, jacket and my purse. When concealing clothing I use those the shopping bag or body conceal. Second: I browse around, act very interested, ask a question or two max. Then I get a few things in my hands and get a shopper. I add more items (things I want and some decoys), go into the fitting room, and do my thing. They rarely count for me and if they do it doesnât matter since usually going out thereâs no one even there. While detagging Iâll move around some of the hangers (get some items on hangers!). Iâll just put them in my shopping bag when Iâm done, or wear them under whatever iâm wearing (bras, shirts, etc). For the rare occasion when I do put items in my purse, I will fold the items. For tags, I put them in my booster bag. If you donât have one of these, just bring in a few hooded items or items with pockets. Now the trick is to tag the item where the hoodie covers the back, or INSIDE the pocket so the tag canât be seen.