[h-cost] having it all in one place

2009-09-03 Thread Mary + Doug Piero Carey
Oh, are you building?  We were not so ambitious.  We only moved from a 
1911ish American Foursquare into a 1960 Ranch.  It is a lovely house, 
but the proportions are SO different!  The closets are a completely 
different shape  NONE of my boxes fit into them.  We had to completely 
repack everything that was in seasonal storage boxes into different 
shapes.  And the Pantry shelves were DEFinitely not spaced by anyone 
with a clue about the dimensions of food packages. 


Marjorie Wilser said:

Oh, huzzah for having it all in ONE place! I have yet to achievethat 
nirvana. . . have to make the place first

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Re: [h-cost] having it all in one place

2009-09-03 Thread Alexandria Doyle
I use to have it all in one little room, sigh, then there was this
host of family members moving in and out - my daughter and
granddaughter are here now and everything is scattered.  I know I have
tubs full of stuff that I won't use again, that were once organized on
shelves and occasionally used, but now they are out of sight, out of
mind and I buy new frequently rather than rummage through the stash.
Next year on my job I'm up to three weeks of vacation, and I'm
sincerely thinking that maybe I should take one of those weeks and
clean out the stash.  I'd have space to work in again and know where
things are...

alex


On Thu, Sep 3, 2009 at 2:43 PM, Mary + Doug Piero
Careymary.d...@pierocarey.info wrote:
 Oh, are you building?  We were not so ambitious.  We only moved from a
 1911ish American Foursquare into a 1960 Ranch.  It is a lovely house, but
 the proportions are SO different!  The closets are a completely different
 shape  NONE of my boxes fit into them.  We had to completely repack
 everything that was in seasonal storage boxes into different shapes.  And
 the Pantry shelves were DEFinitely not spaced by anyone with a clue about
 the dimensions of food packages.
 Marjorie Wilser said:

 Oh, huzzah for having it all in ONE place! I have yet to achievethat
 nirvana. . . have to make the place first
 ___
 h-costume mailing list
 h-costume@mail.indra.com
 http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume




-- 
So much to do and so little attention span to get it done with…
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Re: [h-cost] having it all in one place

2009-09-03 Thread REBECCA BURCH
I wish you luck with this project. I tried a similar exercise a couple of years 
ago. My husband and both boys were going on a Scout trip to the Boundary Waters 
and were going to be gone for two weeks. House to myself, nobody to cook for or 
drive around - perfect time.

Before they left I had them cart all the boxes out of the storage area (some 
had been there since we moved here in 1994) and shifted everything out of my 
workroom into the living room.

Two weeks later they came home - I had made a pretty good dent in the piles, 
but had made the mistake of trying to finish up projects as I came to them. 

Unfortunately, before I could finish up we had family come to visit and 
everything that was in organized piles in the living room got shoved back into 
my workroom all higiggly piggly and had never been so close to organization 
since. 

My advice - have a friend help you sort and get rid of stuff. At the very least 
you might be persuaded to shift some of your stash to her sewing room. 

Rebecca Burch
Center Valley Farm
Duncan Falls, Ohio, USA

The only twelve steps I'm interested in are the ones between the flat folds and 
the brocades.  --Anonymous Costumer--


--- On Thu, 9/3/09, Alexandria Doyle garbaho...@gmail.com wrote:

 From: Alexandria Doyle garbaho...@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [h-cost] having it all in one place
 To: Historical Costume h-cost...@indra.com
 Date: Thursday, September 3, 2009, 3:58 PM
 I use to have it all in one little
 room, sigh, then there was this
 host of family members moving in and out - my daughter and
 granddaughter are here now and everything is
 scattered.  I know I have
 tubs full of stuff that I won't use again, that were once
 organized on
 shelves and occasionally used, but now they are out of
 sight, out of
 mind and I buy new frequently rather than rummage through
 the stash.
 Next year on my job I'm up to three weeks of vacation, and
 I'm
 sincerely thinking that maybe I should take one of those
 weeks and
 clean out the stash.  I'd have space to work in again
 and know where
 things are...
 
 alex
 
 
 On Thu, Sep 3, 2009 at 2:43 PM, Mary + Doug Piero
 Careymary.d...@pierocarey.info
 wrote:
  Oh, are you building?  We were not so ambitious.  We
 only moved from a
  1911ish American Foursquare into a 1960 Ranch.  It is
 a lovely house, but
  the proportions are SO different!  The closets are a
 completely different
  shape  NONE of my boxes fit into them.  We had
 to completely repack
  everything that was in seasonal storage boxes into
 different shapes.  And
  the Pantry shelves were DEFinitely not spaced by
 anyone with a clue about
  the dimensions of food packages.
  Marjorie Wilser said:
 
  Oh, huzzah for having it all in ONE place! I have yet
 to achievethat
  nirvana. . . have to make the place first
  ___
  h-costume mailing list
  h-costume@mail.indra.com
  http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume
 
 
 
 
 -- 
 So much to do and so little attention span to get it done
 with…
 ___
 h-costume mailing list
 h-costume@mail.indra.com
 http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume
 
___
h-costume mailing list
h-costume@mail.indra.com
http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume


Re: [h-cost] having it all in one place

2009-09-03 Thread Lynn Downward
Rebecca, it seems your only mistake was in letting your husband and sons
back in the house. ;)

Plese bear with me, I'll get to my point soon.

We (Greater Bay Area Costumers' Guild, San Francisco, CA) had a costumers'
rummage sale last weekend. I know that although I sold lots of vintage
patterns, trims and ribbons, I'm afraid I brought home more than I left
with. I bought fabric and books, and they're much bulkier than what I
brought. It was amazing the variety of what was brought to the sale, and
there were only 20 of us selling our stashes and outcasts. By the end of the
afternoon, I would questimate that about half of the items were no longer in
the room and had found new homes.

When you've got a sale specifically for costumers, you know what they'll
want and they know what they can hopefully find there, rather than a flea
market where it could be anything from a broken toaster to brand new jeans.

May I suggest that you try to get an event like that to happen in your area
amongst your friends and co-costumers and sewers. In getting ready for it, I
found missing projects, got rid of those shoes I love that hurt every time I
wear them, located duplicate books, that sort of thing. It actually helped
me organize parts of my stash. Fabric, trim, books, hats, accessories,
patterns, even real costume pieces and vintage pieces moved from loving hand
to loving hand.

We were lucky that we were able to use an air-conditioned room in a
community center but I know that the Southern California group have had
several very successful costumers' sales in the past, some in back yards
when necessary. The consensus was that we all had a wonderful time. I think
that everyone felt they had gotten a good deal and we got to visit with
like-minded people. At the very least we got to visit and stuff moved from
one closet to another. Our wonderful organizers had snacks and water there
for us. We were charged $5 per table and those not in the GBACG paid a door
charge of $5. It was a minor amount and helped defray costs of holding the
sale.

LynnD

On Thu, Sep 3, 2009 at 4:26 PM, REBECCA BURCH ctrvlyf...@sbcglobal.netwrote:

 I wish you luck with this project. I tried a similar exercise a couple of
 years ago. My husband and both boys were going on a Scout trip to the
 Boundary Waters and were going to be gone for two weeks. House to myself,
 nobody to cook for or drive around - perfect time.

 Before they left I had them cart all the boxes out of the storage area
 (some had been there since we moved here in 1994) and shifted everything out
 of my workroom into the living room.

 Two weeks later they came home - I had made a pretty good dent in the
 piles, but had made the mistake of trying to finish up projects as I came to
 them.

 Unfortunately, before I could finish up we had family come to visit and
 everything that was in organized piles in the living room got shoved back
 into my workroom all higiggly piggly and had never been so close to
 organization since.

 My advice - have a friend help you sort and get rid of stuff. At the very
 least you might be persuaded to shift some of your stash to her sewing room.

 Rebecca Burch
 Center Valley Farm
 Duncan Falls, Ohio, USA

 The only twelve steps I'm interested in are the ones between the flat folds
 and the brocades.  --Anonymous Costumer--


 --- On Thu, 9/3/09, Alexandria Doyle garbaho...@gmail.com wrote:

  From: Alexandria Doyle garbaho...@gmail.com
  Subject: Re: [h-cost] having it all in one place
  To: Historical Costume h-cost...@indra.com
  Date: Thursday, September 3, 2009, 3:58 PM
   I use to have it all in one little
  room, sigh, then there was this
  host of family members moving in and out - my daughter and
  granddaughter are here now and everything is
  scattered.  I know I have
  tubs full of stuff that I won't use again, that were once
  organized on
  shelves and occasionally used, but now they are out of
  sight, out of
  mind and I buy new frequently rather than rummage through
  the stash.
  Next year on my job I'm up to three weeks of vacation, and
  I'm
  sincerely thinking that maybe I should take one of those
  weeks and
  clean out the stash.  I'd have space to work in again
  and know where
  things are...
 
  alex
 
 
  On Thu, Sep 3, 2009 at 2:43 PM, Mary + Doug Piero
  Careymary.d...@pierocarey.info
  wrote:
   Oh, are you building?  We were not so ambitious.  We
  only moved from a
   1911ish American Foursquare into a 1960 Ranch.  It is
  a lovely house, but
   the proportions are SO different!  The closets are a
  completely different
   shape  NONE of my boxes fit into them.  We had
  to completely repack
   everything that was in seasonal storage boxes into
  different shapes.  And
   the Pantry shelves were DEFinitely not spaced by
  anyone with a clue about
   the dimensions of food packages.
   Marjorie Wilser said:
  
   Oh, huzzah for having it all in ONE place! I have yet
  to achievethat
   nirvana. . . have to make the place

Re: [h-cost] having it all in one place

2009-09-03 Thread REBECCA BURCH
The Extension office has an event like this every spring. Called the Sewers 
Smorgasbord. They partner with the Wool Growers Board and a couple of the 
quilter guilds and put on quite an event. Workshops, demos, presentations and a 
large room where you can sell fabric/trim/notions etc.

Unfortunately, I have the same problem you do - I always come home with more 
than I take. I rationalize it by telling myself that the cost is offset by the 
money made. (It never is, but I can lie to myself quite well.)

Rebecca Burch
Center Valley Farm
Duncan Falls, Ohio, USA

The only twelve steps I'm interested in are the ones between the flat folds and 
the brocades.  --Anonymous Costumer--


--- On Thu, 9/3/09, Lynn Downward lynndownw...@gmail.com wrote:

 From: Lynn Downward lynndownw...@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [h-cost] having it all in one place
 To: Historical Costume h-cost...@indra.com
 Date: Thursday, September 3, 2009, 8:19 PM
 Rebecca, it seems your only mistake
 was in letting your husband and sons
 back in the house. ;)
 
 Plese bear with me, I'll get to my point soon.
 
 We (Greater Bay Area Costumers' Guild, San Francisco, CA)
 had a costumers'
 rummage sale last weekend. I know that although I sold lots
 of vintage
 patterns, trims and ribbons, I'm afraid I brought home more
 than I left
 with. I bought fabric and books, and they're much bulkier
 than what I
 brought. It was amazing the variety of what was brought to
 the sale, and
 there were only 20 of us selling our stashes and outcasts.
 By the end of the
 afternoon, I would questimate that about half of the items
 were no longer in
 the room and had found new homes.
 
 When you've got a sale specifically for costumers, you know
 what they'll
 want and they know what they can hopefully find there,
 rather than a flea
 market where it could be anything from a broken toaster to
 brand new jeans.
 
 May I suggest that you try to get an event like that to
 happen in your area
 amongst your friends and co-costumers and sewers. In
 getting ready for it, I
 found missing projects, got rid of those shoes I love that
 hurt every time I
 wear them, located duplicate books, that sort of thing. It
 actually helped
 me organize parts of my stash. Fabric, trim, books, hats,
 accessories,
 patterns, even real costume pieces and vintage pieces moved
 from loving hand
 to loving hand.
 
 We were lucky that we were able to use an air-conditioned
 room in a
 community center but I know that the Southern California
 group have had
 several very successful costumers' sales in the past, some
 in back yards
 when necessary. The consensus was that we all had a
 wonderful time. I think
 that everyone felt they had gotten a good deal and we got
 to visit with
 like-minded people. At the very least we got to visit and
 stuff moved from
 one closet to another. Our wonderful organizers had snacks
 and water there
 for us. We were charged $5 per table and those not in the
 GBACG paid a door
 charge of $5. It was a minor amount and helped defray costs
 of holding the
 sale.
 
 LynnD
 
 On Thu, Sep 3, 2009 at 4:26 PM, REBECCA BURCH ctrvlyf...@sbcglobal.netwrote:
 
  I wish you luck with this project. I tried a similar
 exercise a couple of
  years ago. My husband and both boys were going on a
 Scout trip to the
  Boundary Waters and were going to be gone for two
 weeks. House to myself,
  nobody to cook for or drive around - perfect time.
 
  Before they left I had them cart all the boxes out of
 the storage area
  (some had been there since we moved here in 1994) and
 shifted everything out
  of my workroom into the living room.
 
  Two weeks later they came home - I had made a pretty
 good dent in the
  piles, but had made the mistake of trying to finish up
 projects as I came to
  them.
 
  Unfortunately, before I could finish up we had family
 come to visit and
  everything that was in organized piles in the living
 room got shoved back
  into my workroom all higiggly piggly and had never
 been so close to
  organization since.
 
  My advice - have a friend help you sort and get rid of
 stuff. At the very
  least you might be persuaded to shift some of your
 stash to her sewing room.
 
  Rebecca Burch
  Center Valley Farm
  Duncan Falls, Ohio, USA
 
  The only twelve steps I'm interested in are the ones
 between the flat folds
  and the brocades.  --Anonymous Costumer--
 
 
  --- On Thu, 9/3/09, Alexandria Doyle garbaho...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 
   From: Alexandria Doyle garbaho...@gmail.com
   Subject: Re: [h-cost] having it all in one place
   To: Historical Costume h-cost...@indra.com
   Date: Thursday, September 3, 2009, 3:58 PM
    I use to have it all in one little
   room, sigh, then there was this
   host of family members moving in and out - my
 daughter and
   granddaughter are here now and everything is
   scattered.  I know I have
   tubs full of stuff that I won't use again, that
 were once
   organized on
   shelves and occasionally used, but now they are
 out