Hi Gang,

Louise sent us these articles in the past and I thought they might
especially be helpful to the new member that have joined.

Sherry in FL

What's the Problem?

Most of us are unhappy about the insufficient storage space in our homes,
but what we really have is inefficient storage space. Want an example?
Picture the average American closet: One hanging bar at head-height, one
shelf above it. Imagine this closet full of clothing, and then focus on
the
empty spots. Think of all that unused space between the floor and the
clothes on the hangers, all the dead air between the highest item on the
shelf and the ceiling. Most closets, and most cupboards, have enough
volume
to hold nearly twice as much stuff as they're constructed to hold. With
minor remodeling this can be fixed. The rest of your home has plenty of
potential storage space too, little nooks and crannies that are perfect
storage spaces just waiting to happen. All you need is some help in
finding
that dead space and filling it.

Send Your Inner Packrat Packing

I know, I know. I've said it before, but it bears repeating. Dump your
junk.
In other words, I trust that you're going to use your newly acquired
storage
space for the things you love and use, not for the waffle-maker you got
as a
wedding gift (you hate waffles), your sorority sweatshirt collection
(you're
50 years old) and a broken sled (you've moved to Los Angeles).

Rearrange What You've Got

The existing storage in your home will probably need minor remodeling if
you're going to get better use out of it, because it's full of dead
space,
as discussed above. Kitchen cupboards are simple to rearrange just by
moving
or removing shelves to suit your needs. For instance, if you look in the
cupboard and find three inches of headroom above the dishes on the first
shelf, move the second shelf down a notch. Perhaps it would make sense to
take a shelf out somewhere, or to add a sliding drawer to a cupboard
below
the counter. In closets, a second hanging bar can be added below the
first
one will double the hanging space, or shelves can be put on a side wall
while still preserving the current hanging space. And don't forget
atmosphere - consider whether your closet needs a decent coat of paint or
a
light installed (hardware stores sell inexpensive battery-powered
lights.)
If you find it hard to imagine how your space could be reworked, take an
exploratory trip to the local hardware or housewares store for some good
ideas. But don't buy anything yet! Get your ideas, go home, make a plan
and
take measurements. Then go back to the store and get what you need.

Find Empty Space In Your Home

What's on top of your refrigerator right now? How about the tops of the
kitchen cabinets? Do you have anything except pictures hanging on your
walls? Most homes have plenty of potential storage space. Dave and I
found
room for a much-needed pantry behind the door of the back entry we share
with a neighbor. Our tiny apartment has an unusually large foyer and
hallway, which we've lined with Dave's enormous record and CD collection.
You sometimes need to be a little inventive to mine the potential of
these
spaces, but once again, there are many products out there that can give
you
good ideas (see the end of this article for some of my favorites). Doors
and
walls provide particularly good spaces for storage. Just a few things
that
can be hung here:

Spices on a spice rack.
Shoes on inside of closet door.
Canned goods on shelves that hang on the inside of the kitchen door
Ties on a tie rack in the closet.
Utensils on a tie rack in the kitchen.
Pots and pans.
Tools on pegboard.
Coats and other clothing on hooks.
Mirrors
Shelves for almost everything.

Store Stuff Where You Use It

As much as possible, keep bathroom stuff in the bathroom, kitchen stuff
in
the kitchen, and keep duplicates where it makes sense. It saves you from
running around your house trying to find the scissors or the glass
cleaner,
and it also spares you from dashing butt-naked down the hall to the linen
closet to get the towel you forgot to bring with you into the bathroom.
Most
of us don't have room for a giant central-storage area, and anyway, who
wants to retrieve a fresh roll of toilet paper from the kitchen pantry in
an
emergency?

Keep Like Things Together

Think in terms of tasks. This is why many people store their baking
equipment in one cupboard in the kitchen, their scissors, tape and
stapler
in the same drawer in the office, and the pencils, paper and phone book
near
the phone. This makes it simple to complete a task or project, and lets
you
know when you have too much or too little of something. One junk drawer
is
fine. If you have ten junk drawers, sort the stuff according to the task
it's used for. And don't forget to store the things you use often in the
most accessible places. I kept the flour on the third shelf in my kitchen
cupboard for years before I finally figured out how idiotic it was to
climb
on top of the counter every time I needed it.

You Get What You Pay For

When you do go shopping to improve the storage in your home, buy
nice-looking products. They're going to be a part of your home, and I can
tell you from experience that you'll get sick of looking at cheap plastic
crap and just end up replacing it down the road. I make exceptions for
items
hidden inside of cabinets or out in the garage, but if you're buying a
shelf
for the bathroom, get one that you can stand to look at. After all, you
spend a lot of time in there. While you're at it, make sure that you're
buying good quality, because you won't use it if it's difficult or if it
breaks.

Closed Storage Looks Better Than Open Storage

It may work for Jerry Seinfeld, but it doesn't work for most of us. Open
shelving and glass-door cabinets look fabulous on the showroom floor, but
ask yourself how it will look when your unmatched (and not so neatly
stacked) dishes, your Metamucil or your month's supply of super maxis are
on
display for the world. If the stuff you're storing isn't inherently
lovely,
look for storage that will conceal it.

Aim For Double-Duty Furniture

You've heard it here before. This stuff provides you with more space,
period
(and hence, more space to stash stuff). Consider hide-a-beds (or futon
sofas), old steamer trunks, coffee tables with a lower shelf for
magazines,
beds with drawers underneath and the like. Look for furniture with more
than
one purpose, which allows you to integrate storage space into your living
space.

Buy Bigger Shelves

Get the biggest bang for your square-footage buck by using the biggest,
tallest shelves that will fit. Instead of getting the cute little
shoulder-height bookshelf for the bedroom, why not go for the whole
80-inch-tall enchilada? It will give you room to grow, at any rate. We've
just replaced our medium-size living room bookshelves with taller, deeper
shelves that hold twice as many books, and yet take up just a fraction
more
floor space. You may have other shelving in your home that you can't
quite
reach (kitchens are notorious). If so, do yourself a favor and buy a
stepladder.


Take It To The Limit

But no further! Make sure your storage space provides appropriate limits
for
your belongings. For instance, many of us keep brown paper bags around
for
newspaper recycling, but we don't need two hundred of them. Somehow
though,
they seem to accumulate. Bonnie McCullough provides a very nice example
of
limits when she demonstrates that one brown paper bag, opened up, is just
about the right size to hold a reasonable number of folded bags. When
that
bag gets full, it's time to recycle some of the extras. Try to apply this
principle when you consider where and how to store things in your home.
Then
when your storage space is bulging, you'll know it's time to chuck, toss
and
dump.

Some Products to Think About
I include this section with the caveat that you please, please, please
take
a thoughtful look at your existing storage before considering any of
these
items. Many of us (including Yours Truly) have a difficult time
exercising
restraint when faced with a housewares store stocked floor to ceiling
with
gorgeous, shiny organizing products, and then wonder why we come home so
often with things we don't really need. A few well-selected storage
products
can make a huge difference in your home, so plan, measure and make a list
before you shop.

Most of these items can be found at hardware stores such as Builder's
Square
or Home Depot, and are also available at bed and bath stores and other
stores with housewares departments. None of these products require more
than
a drill and a screwdriver, some require no installation at all.

Double-decker wire baskets that slide in and out are great for under the
sink, where pipes make it difficult to install a full shelf. Single
sliding
baskets in a variety of sizes are also available.
Pot-lid racks hang on the inside of the cupboard door and keep the lids
easily available (Ikea sells one).
Step-shelves allow you to add an extra half shelf to a cupboard with no
installation.
Lazy susans are helpful for collections of small bottles and cans, like
spices and seasonings.
Small, multiple-level shelves allow you to stack spices three or four
bottles deep and still see all the labels.
Shower shelves are easily installed in the corner of the tub or shower
with
suction cups. They hold more than the traditional over-the-showerhead
version, and you don't have to reach blindly through the spray to find
the
shampoo.
Iron and ironing board holders keep these items off the floor and out of
the
way.
Vacuum cleaner holders hang on a wall and keep all of those hoses and
parts
neater than you every imagined.
Broom and mop holders keep the broom from fraying and let the mop dry
out.
Shoe racks can be installed inside the closet door or go on the closet
floor
and forever end the problem of trying to find the left sneaker.
Hardware stores sell hooks and pegs in almost unlimited sizes and styles
to
be used on doors and walls.
Drawer dividers work wonders in the kitchen, bathroom and dresser.
Shelf dividers for the closet make it possible to keep sweaters and
t-shirts
in neat stacks.
Stacking bins on rollers are great for tools, garages and ongoing
projects.
Etageres are shelves that stand on thin legs and are designed to add
shelf
and cupboard space over the toilet.
Pegboard and pegboard accessories make it possible to hang tools neatly.
I
just bought some of these and believe me, if you have the tool, they have
a
way to hang it from pegboard.
Wire bins designed to hang underneath a shelf are a convenient spot for
gloves in the hall closet.
Wire closet components allow you to renovate your own closets just about
any
way you'd like. They include adjustable shelves, hanging rods and rolling
bins. Pieces can be purchased as a package or individually at closet,
hardware and housewares stores. Elfa is one manufacturer.
Hold Everything and others sell tall shelves that take up less than a
square
foot of floor space and are perfect for cramped spaces like bathrooms and
small kitchens.



====================================================================<<<
Have you heard about the new SmartGroups feature? Find out how you 
can make storing and sharing your pictures online easy!
http://ad.smartgroups.com/adclick/CID=000000062c8b020200000000

====================================================================>>>

--
If you want to share pictures, use the calendar, or start a vote
visit http://www.smartgroups.com/groups/-JFC

To leave the group, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


________________________________________________________________
GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO!
Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less!
Join Juno today!  For your FREE software, visit:
http://dl.www.juno.com/get/web/.

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
Journey from clutter List Website
 http://journeyfromclutter.com
Members Only Page
 http://journeyfromclutter.com/MembersOnly/MembersArea.htm

Unsubscribe: email [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word 'unsubscribe' in 
the 'Subject:' field to be removed from the main list.

To Unsubscribe from the Digest version of the list send the unsubscribe message to 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to