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Mobile wardrobe to visit Victoria's Central Highlands to provide clothes to people hit by rising cost of living

The bold Cafs Thread Together van will tour the Central Highlands region over the next six months. (Supplied: Cafs)

A mobile wardrobe van will deliver brand-new clothing to a rising number of people doing it tough in regional and rural parts of Victoria.   

The multi-coloured van has been modified to include a change room and shelving that will soon be brimming with clothing sourced from more than 1,000 fashion partners. 

The initiative is a collaboration between Sydney-founded charity Thread Together and Child and Family Services Ballarat (Cafs).

Cafs program and volunteer lead Nicole Roberts said people dealing with hardship, including women and children escaping family violence and those experiencing homelessness, will be able to visit the van to "shop" a brand-new outfit at no cost.

Cafs Thread Together program and volunteer lead Nicole Roberts. (ABC Ballarat: Lexie Jeuniewic )

"They come to the van, and we help them with brand new clothing which they take away and will hopefully allow them to take those next steps in life," Ms Roberts explained.

A referral is needed from a support agency such as Cafs to access the service.

Over the next six months, the Cafs Thread Together Mobile Wardrobe will visit locations across the Central Highlands with the help of dedicated volunteers. 

Cafs chief executive Wendy Sturgess said the community was "hurting" amid a "perfect storm of high interest rates and inflation".

"It's costing more to fill up at the petrol bowser, utility bills are on the increase … supermarket costs are going sky-high. It's been really tough this year," she said.

"Coming into winter, we're very concerned about what will happen. Particularly when you go out into those rural and regional areas."

The modified van has a variety of features, including a pop-out changing room.  (ABC Ballarat: Lexie Jeuniewic )

The mobile initiative would complement the existing Cafs Thread Together hub in Ballarat's CBD, which Ms Sturgess said had facilitated many success stories.

"We've had young men come and get an outfit for their dad's funeral because they said they wanted to feel like they were honouring him, and themselves. That's the kind of thing that reduces you to tears.

"It gives people dignity and hope."

Ms Roberts said an extra benefit of the initiative was stopping excess clothing from partnering retailers from going to landfill.

"In previous times they'd be paying for [the clothing to go] to landfill, so they donate to it to Thread Together. It's free for them, it's free for us, and then we get to pass it on to the community."

People doing it tough are able to "shop" for an outfit from the van for free once they have received a referral. (Supplied: Cafs)

Funding push to extend van's reach

Cafs does not currently receive any ongoing funding for its Thread Together program. 

Ms Sturgess said the charity was now searching for a benefactor or state government support to extend the service beyond six months.

"We really need more people to give us that funding. We'd love it if [state] government would step in and take their responsibility as well. That would be sensational."

In a statement a Victorian government spokesperson said statewide, it had "invested almost $2.9 billion over the past three budgets for children and families’ services".

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