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Angel View Resale Store on Temecula Parkway carries the typical resale-shop mix—furniture, home goods, clothing, books, decor—at the price tier where a modest budget stretches further than retail. The inventory turns constantly, making each visit a browse-and-discover proposition rather than a return-for-the-same-item spot. Merchandise skews toward practical household goods and vintage finds rather than novelty or niche collectibles. The shop draws regular thrift shoppers hunting affordable basics, estate-sale browsers looking for one-off furniture pieces, and gift-buyers willing to hunt for something with character at a fraction of the original cost. For someone furnishing a new apartment, restocking after a move, or simply enjoying the low-stakes treasure hunt of resale shopping, this fits the routine stop. For specific items or particular vintage eras, the outcome is unpredictable; for a Saturday morning browse with no particular goal, the traffic and selection keep it worthwhile.

A consignment-style furniture and home goods outlet on Vincent Moraga Drive, Habitat for Humanity Restore Design Center stocks a rotating inventory of used, donated, and overstock pieces — sofas, dining tables, bedroom sets, kitchen cabinets, doors, flooring, and decor across mixed styles and eras. The stock is unpredictable by design; what's on the floor this week differs next week, which shapes how shoppers approach a visit. The format suits budget-conscious decorators furnishing a new place without new-furniture pricing, homeowners hunting one-off vintage or solid wood pieces to mix with what they own, and DIY renovators sourcing cabinets and materials for a kitchen or bath project. For anyone needing a specific piece in a specific finish by a deadline, the inconsistent inventory is a drawback; for a patient shopper treating the visit as a treasure hunt, the discovery angle and price point outweigh the unpredictability. Proceeds support local home-building programs, making the purchase itself part of the value proposition beyond the furniture itself.
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Get ListedThe American Cancer Society Discovery Shop operates as a resale storefront on Winchester Road, stocking secondhand clothing, furniture, home goods, and books at thrift-tier pricing.
The American Cancer Society Discovery Shop operates as a resale storefront on Winchester Road, stocking secondhand clothing, furniture, home goods, and books at thrift-tier pricing. The inventory turns regularly — typical of resale operations — so any given visit surfaces a different mix of usable merchandise rather than fixed stock. The shopping experience is browse-oriented rather than targeted; the appeal lies in the hunt and the price point. This draws regular thrift shoppers looking for wardrobe basics and household items at a fraction of retail, gift-buyers seeking affordable decorative pieces or books, and budget-conscious locals furnishing rentals or making do. The margin between what you find and what you pay makes it useful for practical replenishment rather than curated shopping. Shopping here also funds the American Cancer Society's local programs, adding a secondary reason beyond cost savings to choose the Discovery Shop over other resale options in the area.
Beautiful shop. Very boutique-like. No bargains. Considering items are donated they are overpriced. Ladies behind the counter were well dressed and groomed but with attitude/ judgemental
I been an off and on shopper here but whoever does the jewelry is out of their mind,I have gone to other discoveries shops and for some reason this place never has gold. I suspect the lady who does works for herself she Says they bring it for the jewelry sale and I have been to a few and never once ...
This store looks like a boutique! Some very unique finds and everything is so reasonable! Love the staff and management there!! Best part is that all the funds raised to go to help families dealing with cancer or cancer research!!
What Locals Know
Winchester Road near Old Town draws steady foot traffic from nearby residents and shopping center visitors. Thrift and consignment shops in this corridor serve both budget shoppers and those seeking secondhand home goods — especially relevant as many Temecula neighborhoods built in the last 15 years have younger families furnishing new homes affordably.
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