Cleaning
Basement
- Seasonal items in air-tight, hard plastic containers
- Spare parts
- Extra parts
- Paints, stains, brushes, rollers, thinner, stir sticks, paint trays
Bathrooms
- Countertops should be empty except for items that you use every day.
- Medical drawer: Bandaides, ointments, thermometers
- Cosmetics drawer: makeup, powder, lipstick, ...
- Hygiene drawer: Toothpaste, floss, ...
- Hair drawer: Curlers, headbands, bobby pins, hair combs, barrettes, ...
- Keep medicines out-of-reach of children
- Avoid putting sharp objects in rummage drawers
Bedrooms: Organizing your Clothes in Closets, Walk-in Closets, Dressers, and Armoirs
- Keep all clothes in closets, walk-in closets, dressers, and armoirs. Hang shirts, pants, and dresses on hangers to keep them clean, organized, and wrinkle-free.
Use thick hangers to avoid damaging clothes.
Replacing single closet rods with double-decker closet rods can help with having enough closet space.
- Keep coordinated outfits together.
- Put shirts and pants that you intend to wear again on hangers, so you can keep them wrinkle-free and separate from items that need to be washed.
- Organize your clothes (shirts, pants, socks) first by season or type as listed below and then from light colors to dark colors:
- winter wear (long-sleeve shirts, flannel shirts, sweaters, turtlenecks)
- summer wear (shorts, short-sleeve shirts, skirts, )
- formalwear (ties, suits, keep coordinated suit jackets and suit pants together, (sweater) vests, cocktail/party/sweater dresses). Grouping your dry-clean-only items together can be helpful.
- dressy casual wear (khaki pants, polo shirts, capri pants, skirts)
- casual wear (keep jeans together, also keep shirts that go well with jeans together)
- leisure wear, t-shirts, cutoffs, tank tops
- "around the house" summer t-shirts, shorts, and sleepwear
- "around the house" winter sweatshirts, sweatpants, and pajamas
- exercise wear (sweatsuits, keep coordinated sweat shirts, hoodies, and sweat pants together)
- sports wear (like golf, tennis, etc...)
- work clothes for cold weather, hot weather, yard work, gardening, lawn mowing, painting
- clothes that need to be altered by a tailor
- clothes to be donated
- Sweaters should be folded and put into a chest, drawer, or armoire to keep them free of dust.
- swimwear (suit, googles, sun hat, beachtowel).
- underwear (grouped into drawers)
- boxers, briefs, panties, tights
- bras, lingerie
- t-shirts, camis, slips
- long underwear, thermal underwear, thick winter socks
- seasonal and holiday clothes
- socks (organized in separate drawers)
- dress socks
- casual, sport, exercise socks
- shoes can be put in a shoe cabinet or shoe bench.
- Avoid buying outfits that you don't wear. Before purchasing any outfit, try it on and make SURE that it is exactly what you want.
Car
Dining Room
- Silverware
- Servingware
- Items put inside curio, china, and corner cabinets that have glass sides and glass doors rarely need dusting.
Garage
- Shelves for
- Gardening: tools, trowel, work gloves, fertilizer, weed killer, seeds
- Painting Supplies: paint cans, stain cans, stir sticks, brushes, paint tray, paint thinner, paint masking/edging tape
- Oil: Motor oil, lawnmower oil, lubricant oil
- LED Light Bulbs: All sizes
- (Heavy things on bottom shelves for safety and shelf stability)
- Install a paper towl holder in the Garage. Place bottle of sanitizer beside it.
- A box of baby wipes can help with cleaning your feet before entering the house after being in the yard.
- Sun hat
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Storage: Using Rooms, Closets, Drawers, Cabinets, Shelves, and Boxes Effectively
- Take an inventory of the rooms, closets, drawers, cabinets, shelves, and boxes in your house, and identify whether each one is used effectively. If they are not being used effectively, then they should be "repurposed". Try to rethink how the room, closet, drawer, cabinet, or shelf could be better used and then make it happen.
- Proper storage is not "hiding" items, it is knowing exactly where they are. A great question to ask yourself is: "By using storage effectively, can I reduce the number of items that are visible in my house by half and still know where absolutely everything is."
- To decide what to put into each drawer or cabinet, simply minimize the distance between where an item is used to where it is stored.
If an item is used more than 8 feet away from where it is currently stored, then it is probably needs to be moved to a closer and more convenient drawer or cabinet.
- Take into consideration who in your family actually uses each item when deciding where to put or store each item.
- Don't use up storage storing items that are NEVER used. NEVER-used items should be recycled, donated, given away (to friends, relatives, kids, etc...), or thrown away.
- Organize shelves so that most used items are in front or on convenient shelves and least used items are in back or on high shelves. Organize items so that all items are visible.
- Move things that you use frequently into the most convenient cabinets, and move things you use rarely to the least convenient cabinets.
- Any storage area (drawer, cabinet, room, etc...) that is never touched and never accessed is not working and should be repurposed.
- Don't be afraid to open rooms, closets, drawers, cabinets, or boxes because they are full or messy. Go through them and you will find (1) valuable things that have gone missing, and (2) stuff that needs to be recycled.
- Just because a room, closet, drawer, cabinet, or box is "full" does not mean it is useful. If the contents of rooms, closets, drawers, cabinets, or boxes are absolutely never used, then perhaps the contents should be recycled, donated, given away (to friends, relatives, kids, etc...), or thrown away. As mentioned previously, take each item and move it to a different location.
Then your mind will be forced to re-evaluate each item based on its actual significance rather than by "it's always been there".
Kitchen
- Food Pantry: reserve bottled water, soup cans, dried goods, unopened condiments.
- Cookware in cabinets
- Food storage containers in cabinet
- Glassware in cabinets
- Silverware drawer
- Cooking Shelf for Cooking
- Stacking like items (especially plastic items) can make a HUGE difference in making your shelves organized and tidy. LOOK for opportunities to stack like items.
- Refrigerator organized so food items (esp. the most parishable) are in front and easily visible so they won't become stale and forgotten. Write current date on any food items (such as restaurant styrofoam take-out containers) that are not already marked with an expiration date.
- Decorative glass jars are great for candy / nuts
- Writing drawer: pencils, pens, notepads, erasers, scissors
- Fix-it drawer: AA AAA batteries, LED flashlight, all-in-one multi-bit screwdriver, matches
- Recipe books, diet books, and healthy eating books and information
Freezer
By freezing the following items, you can use your freezer to conveniently save time and money, reduce trips to the store, keep things fresh, and avoid food waste.
- Cheese blocks or shredded
- Fruit (lemons)
- Veggies (onions, peppers, chilies, ...)
- Baked goods (pies, breads, ....)
- Doughs (cookie, pizza, ...)
- Raw or cooked meats, bacon, ground meats
- Fish, Shrimp, Salmon
- Sauces, Stocks, and Soups
- Whole grains and flours
- Ice cream
- Nuts
- Ready-to-cook meals
Linen Closet
- Hand Towels
- Bath Towels
- Washcloths
- Blankets
- Sheets
- Pillowcases
- Bath mats
- Put long-term storage blankets, sweaters, clothing, and bedding items inside sturdy clear plastic zippered storage bags.
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Make sure your primary workspaces and activities areas are useful for their intended purpose and don't get "corrupted" and become places for piling junk.
- If items are not used very often, then put them into a storage cabinet and don't put them on a table or countertop.
- Kitchen counters are important workspaces for food preparation, not a place for junk.
- Kitchen and dining room tables should be used for eating with your family, not as places for junk.
- Coffee tables are a place for your guests to place a drink, not a place for junk.
- Dressers and vanities are workspaces to prepare for the day, not a place for junk.
- Only put things used every day on bathroom vanity counter tops, other things can be put in drawers.
- Office room desks are important workspaces for processing paperwork and computer work, not places for junk.
- Nightstands are your bedtime workspace (clock, book, light, coaster), not a place for junk.
- Vacuums, ironing boards, cleaning buckets, brooms, and dust pans should be put away when not in use.
- Garage workbenches are important workspace for projects, not places for junk.
- Billiard and ping pong tables are for these activities, not places for junk.
Seasonal Holiday Items
- Holiday (Christmas, Easter, Valentines, Halloween, etc...) decorations, ornaments, centerpieces, door decorations, costumes,
dinnerware, and lights should be displayed during the holiday and put in storage during the rest of the year.
Holiday decorations should stored in large labeled plastic bins with tight lids in a central location.
TV, DVDs and CDs
- Put all of your favorite channels on paper and tape it to the back of your remote.
- Keep your DVD library centralized and alphabetized by title.
- Storage Cabinet #1: Regular DVD's
- Storage Cabinet #2: Children's DVD's
- Keep your CD music library centralized and on a shelf alphabetized by artist last name.
Office
- Desk
- Office Supplies
- Your labeled boxes for storing documents.
- Shredder
Laundry room and Utility closet
- Orphan sock bucket
- Laundry supplies: detergent, dryer sheets, fabric softener, bleach, Shout, Spray & Wash, mesh delicates laundry bags, cleaning vinegar (NEVER mix vinegar and bleach)
- Move clothes hangers not currently being used to the laundry room near the dryer.
- Vacuum, Vacuum attachments, Vacuum bags
- Ironing board
- Mop / Cleaning bucket
- Reusable furniture sliders
- Broom and dust pans
- Step stool
- Extension cord
- Toilet paper
- Paper towls
- Cleaning brushes
- Floor and carpet cleaner
Coat Closet
- Coats
- Jackets
- Hats (ball caps, stocking caps, ...)
- Gloves
- Scarves
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