AllThingsWorn Is a 'Cesspit': Why the Leading Platform for Selling Panties & Used Items Is Bleeding Creators Money (And What Actually Works)
You're getting requests. Again. Someone wants to buy your panties. Someone else wants your socks. A regular is asking about 'customs' involving items you've worn.
You've heard of AllThingsWorn—the platform everyone mentions when this comes up. Maybe you've seen the TikTok videos promising thousands. Maybe you're thinking about that £60 annual subscription.
Don't.
On January 13, 2026, a cam model paid £60 for an AllThingsWorn subscription. Two days later, she deleted her account. Within hours of signing up, her inbox filled with scammers demanding scat content, bug crushing videos, and requests for 'non-consensual' content involving her friends.
She reported four users for explicit TOS violations. AllThingsWorn did nothing.
This isn't some one-off horror story. It's what happens when you actually look at how this platform works—the one everyone says is your best shot at monetizing physical item requests.
The £60 Subscription Fee That Buys You Access to a Race to the Bottom
Let's start with what you're actually buying when you pay that annual subscription fee.
AllThingsWorn (ATW) runs on a seller subscription model: you pay £60/year for the privilege of listing items and getting messages from buyers. Buyers pay nothing. Right there, you've got a power imbalance where buyers hold all the cards.
What does that actually look like?
Pricing that would make Walmart blush:
- Used panties listed under $10
- Custom videos at $1/minute
- Sellers undercutting each other by pennies to get noticed
- Buyers pitting sellers against each other: "She'll do it for $8, why are you charging $15?"
One creator described it perfectly: "I made one sale that only covered the subscription cost—I essentially worked for free."
Another fell victim to a TikTok 'guru' selling an expensive guide promising thousands in earnings. The reality? "The work required was less than minimum wage." She later found out the TikTok seller was moving money between her own accounts to fake earnings proof.

The Scammer Inbox: What Happens Within Hours of Signing Up
The creator who paid £60 and bailed after two days? Here's what happened to her inbox the second her account went live:
"Filled with men asking for scat, bug crushing videos, vials of vomit, asking me to wrap a friend in duct tape and tickle them til they cry (and they must be non-consenting)."
She reported four users for explicit TOS violations involving scat content requests.
AllThingsWorn's response? Nothing. No action taken. No accounts removed.
When she scrolled through active listings to see what was actually being sold on the platform, she found sellers using emoji codes to hide illegal content from detection:
- Human feces ("🍫 caviar")
- Vials of vomit
- Bug crushing content
- Shaved foot skin
This is what the platform's ID verification and moderation systems are either failing to catch—or just choosing not to.
"I called it a cesspit," the creator wrote. "I'm so glad I trusted my gut and didn't bother replying to any of them."

The Safety Issues No One Talks About
Beyond the scammers and extreme fetish requests that violate platform policies, there's a fundamental safety problem with AllThingsWorn that should concern every creator:
Buyers can request payment via PayPal and bank details.
This isn't just inconvenient—it's a doxxing and stalking risk. PayPal transactions can reveal your legal name. Bank details can expose your real identity and location. Once that information is out there, you can't take it back.
For cam models who work hard to maintain privacy boundaries and protect their real identities, this is an unacceptable vulnerability—especially when you're dealing with buyers whose first messages include requests for illegal content.
The work-to-earnings ratio is another safety issue, though it's less obvious. Multiple creators described pouring hours into the platform—posting, responding to messages, managing listings—for earnings that fell below minimum wage.
"Sellers posting 24/7 for pennies," one creator observed.
When your time is worth so little that you're basically working for free after subscription costs, you become more vulnerable to accepting unsafe arrangements just to make something back on your investment.
The Gender Disparity: Why Men Are 'Making BANK' While Women Race to the Bottom
Here's where it gets interesting—and shows you something fundamental about how these platforms actually work.
One creator in the Reddit thread mentioned that her husband sells on the male side of AllThingsWorn and "makes BANK" with several long-term subscribers and clients.
Same platform. Wildly different results.
Her theory? "Female sellers price too low and ruin the market for everyone."
But it's not just about individual pricing decisions. The female seller side of ATW is flooded with creators competing for the same buyers, driving prices down to unsustainable levels. Buyers know they can wait for someone desperate enough to accept $8 for used panties.
The male seller side doesn't have the same saturation problem, so sellers maintain pricing power.
This matters if you're a female creator thinking about that £60 subscription: you're not entering a balanced marketplace. You're entering a race to the bottom where buyers have all the leverage and your competition is willing to work for free.

What Actually Works: The Strategies That Generate Real Sales
So if AllThingsWorn is a cesspit and dedicated subreddits waste more time than they generate income, what's actually working for cam models who want to fulfill physical item requests?
The answer's surprisingly straightforward:
Sell through your existing cam site relationships.
Strategy #1: The Stripchat Tip Menu Method
One creator who tried AllThingsWorn with zero success makes the majority of her physical item sales through Stripchat using this approach:
- Create a tip menu item: "pm me - I want those panties!"
- When tipped: Send your pricing menu via PM
- Include disclaimer: "This is not for sexting, discussing panties/socks only" (protects you from TOS violations)
- For regulars: Suggest tipping for Snapchat to continue sales discussions privately off-platform
This works because:
- Buyers already know you and have invested in your content
- You're not competing with hundreds of other sellers—you're the only one they're talking to
- No subscription fees eating into your profits
- You maintain pricing power because there's no race to the bottom
Note: This technically violates most cam site TOS, but it's a common practice. Use your judgment about risk tolerance.
Strategy #2: The ManyVids Physical Items Store
ManyVids has a dedicated physical items marketplace built into the platform. Creators report better success here than on AllThingsWorn because:
- Buyers are already invested in your brand through your video content
- Secure payment processing through ManyVids (no PayPal/bank detail exposure)
- Better moderation than ATW
- Less market saturation than dedicated panty-selling platforms
The key difference: buyers on ManyVids are purchasing your physical items as an extension of their existing interest in you—not shopping a marketplace of interchangeable sellers.
Strategy #3: LiveJasmin's Relaxed Approach
Creators report that LiveJasmin appears more relaxed than Streamate about discussing physical item sales. While still technically against TOS, enforcement seems less aggressive.
The same principle applies: you're selling to existing customers who already value your time and content, not competing in an open marketplace.

What About Reddit Subreddits?
Multiple creators specifically mentioned trying Reddit's panty-selling communities with zero success.
The problems mirror AllThingsWorn:
- Massive oversaturation of sellers
- Scammers and timewasters dominate buyer pool
- Race-to-bottom pricing
- Significant time investment for minimal return
One creator summed it up: "No positive experiences with ATW or dedicated subreddits."
The pattern is clear: platforms where buyers are shopping for the cheapest generic items from interchangeable sellers create terrible conditions for creators. Platforms where buyers are already invested in you as an individual create profitable sales opportunities.
The TikTok Scam: Expensive Guides With Fake Earnings Proof
Before we get to the practical stuff, let's talk about the TikTok ecosystem that's actively scamming creators into wasting money on AllThingsWorn subscriptions.
One creator described falling victim to a selling guide that promised thousands in earnings. She paid for the guide, paid for her AllThingsWorn subscription, and invested significant time following the strategy.
The result? "Work required was less than minimum wage."
Later, she discovered the TikTok guru's "earnings proof" was fabricated by moving money between her own accounts to create the appearance of sales.
This scam works because:
- Screenshots of earnings are easy to fake
- Most creators won't publicly admit they failed (confirmation bias makes successes visible)
- The guru makes money from guide sales, not from actually selling items
- Creators are desperate for income diversification and vulnerable to promises of easy money
If someone is selling a guide to making money on AllThingsWorn, ask yourself: why aren't they making money selling items instead of selling guides?

Practical Implementation: How to Actually Sell Physical Items Profitably
If you're getting regular requests for physical items from your cam viewers, here's how to fulfill them without wasting money on platforms that don't work:
Step 1: Assess Your Current Request Volume
Don't invest time building a physical item sales system until you know there's actual demand from your specific audience.
Track for two weeks:
- How many requests do you receive?
- From new viewers or regulars?
- What items are they requesting? (panties, socks, other clothing, customs)
- Are these serious inquiries or timewaster fishing?
If you're getting fewer than 2-3 serious requests per week, physical item sales probably aren't worth the administrative overhead yet.
Step 2: Create Your Pricing Structure
Do not look at AllThingsWorn pricing for reference. Those prices are the result of a race to the bottom and will leave you working for free.
Instead, price based on:
- Your time: How long to prepare, package, ship?
- Your materials cost: Item cost, packaging, shipping supplies
- Your shipping cost: Actual postage plus convenience fee for your effort
- Your value: These are items you personally wore—they have personal value beyond generic marketplace items
Suggested starting points (adjust for your market and costs):
- Used panties (24-hour wear): $40-60
- Additional wear days: $10-15 per day
- Socks (worn during stream): $30-45
- Other clothing items: Calculate based on item cost + 3-4x markup
- Shipping: Actual cost + $10-15 handling fee
Remember: You're not competing with hundreds of other sellers. The buyer is asking you specifically because they're already invested in you. Learn more about maintaining pricing power without racing to the bottom.
Step 3: Set Up Your Fulfillment System
The logistics matter more than you think. A clunky system will make profitable sales feel like a burden.
Payment processing:
- If selling through ManyVids: Use their built-in system (safest option)
- If selling through cam sites: Require tips to your platform account before fulfillment
- If moving to off-platform (Snapchat, etc.): Use CashApp, Venmo, or crypto—never PayPal with your real name
Shipping privacy:
- Use a PO Box or private mailbox service for return address—never your home
- Consider using a mail forwarding service if you want to hide your city/state
- Package discreetly—nothing on the exterior should identify contents
Tracking and communication:
- Always use tracked shipping to protect yourself from "never arrived" scams
- Send tracking number through platform messaging (creates paper trail)
- Set clear expectations: "Ships within 3-5 business days of payment"
Step 4: Implement Platform-Specific Strategies
For Stripchat:
- Add tip menu item: "Want to buy what I'm wearing? Tip here!"
- Set tip amount at 25-50 tokens (just to filter serious inquiries)
- When tipped, send PM with menu and disclaimer about TOS
- For regulars, suggest Snapchat for easier communication (still against TOS but common)
For ManyVids:
- List items in Physical Items section
- Include clear photos of items (worn during recent videos if possible for connection)
- Mention physical items in your video descriptions: "Panties from this video available for purchase"
- Use platform messaging for all communication (protection for both parties)
For LiveJasmin:
- Test the waters carefully (still against TOS but reportedly less aggressively enforced)
- Only discuss with established regulars who have proven spending history
- Move to email or other off-platform communication quickly
- Require payment through tips before fulfillment
Step 5: Set Firm Boundaries
The AllThingsWorn experience shows what happens without strong boundaries: your inbox fills with extreme requests that waste your time and emotional energy. Learn how to handle manipulative clients and former whales who stop paying.
Set these boundaries from day one:
- What you will and won't sell: Create a clear list. If scat/bodily fluids aren't your thing, say so upfront.
- Payment before fulfillment: No exceptions. No "I'll pay when it arrives."
- No haggling: Your prices are firm. Anyone trying to pit you against other sellers gets blocked.
- No personal information exchange: They get your PO Box, nothing more.
- Block liberally: First red flag, they're gone. You're not desperate enough to tolerate boundary-pushing.
Remember: You have pricing power in these transactions because the buyer is already invested in you. Don't give that power away by tolerating bad behavior or racing to the bottom on price.
The Real Economics: Is Physical Item Selling Worth Your Time?
Let's be honest about what physical item sales can realistically add to your income.
If you're following the strategies outlined above (selling to existing customers through your cam platforms or ManyVids), you're looking at:
- Best case: 2-4 sales per month at $40-60 each = $80-240 monthly
- Realistic case: 1-2 sales per month = $40-120 monthly
- Time investment: 2-3 hours per month (communication, prep, packaging, shipping)
That's supplemental income, not primary income. It works best as a low-effort add-on to your existing business, not as a separate revenue stream requiring significant investment.
Compare that to AllThingsWorn's economics:
- Subscription cost: £60 annual = £5 per month
- Race-to-bottom pricing: $10-15 per sale
- Sales needed to break even: 4-6 per month just to cover subscription
- Time investment: Significantly higher due to inbox management, scammer filtering, competition
The math doesn't work unless you're making 6+ sales per month at those low prices—and creators report that's not happening for most sellers.
When Should You Consider Physical Item Sales?
Physical item sales make sense when:
- You're getting regular requests from established customers (not random strangers)
- You have a reliable fulfillment system that doesn't eat significant time
- You can maintain profitable pricing ($40+ for panties, not $10)
- You're comfortable setting and enforcing boundaries around what you will/won't sell
- You view it as supplemental income, not a primary revenue stream
Physical item sales don't make sense when:
- You're not getting regular requests (building it won't make them come)
- You don't have established customers yet (marketplace platforms won't work)
- You're considering it because a TikTok guru promised easy money
- You're thinking of paying for AllThingsWorn or similar platform subscriptions
- You need significant income quickly (this won't provide that)
For most cam models, physical item sales should be a low-effort response to existing demand, not a separate business venture requiring platform subscriptions and dedicated marketing.
The Bottom Line: Why AllThingsWorn Isn't Worth £60
The creator who paid £60 and quit after two days got it right: AllThingsWorn is a cesspit where sellers compete to offer the lowest prices while buyers hold all the power and scammers face zero consequences.
Every structural element of the platform works against creator success:
- Sellers pay, buyers don't: Creates power imbalance favoring buyers
- Massive oversaturation: Drives race-to-bottom pricing that makes profit impossible
- No effective moderation: Scammers and TOS violators face zero consequences
- Unsafe payment practices: PayPal and bank details expose your real identity
- Time-to-earnings ratio: Less than minimum wage after factoring in engagement required
Meanwhile, creators selling through their existing cam platforms or ManyVids report actual sales at profitable prices because they're not competing in an open marketplace—they're selling to invested customers.
The choice is clear: Keep your £60, ignore the TikTok gurus, and if you want to sell physical items, do it through relationships you've already built where you maintain pricing power and don't have to filter through cesspit messages.
Your time, boundaries, and safety are worth more than what AllThingsWorn's broken marketplace can provide.
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Looking for more strategies to diversify your income without wasting money on platforms that don't work? Check out Beyond Camming: Build Multiple Revenue Streams Without Burnout for creator-tested approaches that actually generate income.