“…Where extended lives have been addressed within geography, this has largely been in terms of constituting the home -especially 'the material cultures of objects and their use, display and meanings within the home' (Blunt, 2005, page 506;Leslie 6 and Reimer, 2003) -where the linkage of products and practices is seen as what consumption actually involves (Shove and Southerton, 2000;Warde, 2005;Watson and Shove, 2008). The thing is occasionally followed into the domestic world, but rarely beyond it, in spite of the emerging work on second-hand exchange, consumption and disposal (Gregson and Crewe, 2003;Clarke, 2000;Gregson et al, 2007aGregson et al, , 2007bReno, 2009). Taking its inspiration from both Kopytoff and Thompson, this latter work rests on a reading of consumption that emphasises not the realisation of value in the initial point of sale but combines the senses of consumption as practice or making use with the material etymological sense of consumption as depletion, exhaustion and using-up, and as intrinsically linked to ridding, disposal and wasting (Hetherington, 2004;Gregson, 2007;O'Brien, 2008).…”