5 More Ways to Clear Closet Clutter

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Posted March 8, 2010 in: In the Bedroom

One of my all-time most popular posts is one I made back in the early days about Clearing Closet Clutter Here are 5 more tips to help declutter your closet.
Photo by Liz

1. Start with a blank slate
To truly beat the clutter, remove everything from your closet. Everything, including hangers and bins. Wipe all the surfaces with a micro-fibre cloth to remove dust so it’s nice and clean when you put items back into the closet.

2. Decide on a sorting system
There are many ways to sort your clothing within the closet. You could sort things by colour, by article of clothing (shirts together, pants together, etc.) by type of clothing (“work clothes”, “casual clothes”, “party clothes”, etc.), or even sort by outfit. Pick a system that works for you and stick with it. With a sorting system in place, you’ll know where each item will be located when you need it, rather than flipping through the hangers looking for a particular shirt.

3. Store out-of-season items elsewhere
The fewer things you keep in a closet, the easier it will be to keep organized. Keeping out of season clothes elsewhere is a great way to do this. Bulky sweaters don’t need to take up space in your closet during the hot summer months, and shorts and t-shirts don’t need to be in the way during winter. If you have a guest room, put out of season items in that closet, and swap out when the seasons change. If you don’t have an additional closet, bins that slide under the bed are a great place to store out of season clothing.

4. If you need to lose or gain weight to wear something again, let it go.
Clothing that doesn’t fit properly just takes up space in your life. You either don’t wear it, or look and feel awkward if you do. Odds are by the time you change your body shape in order to wear something again, the clothes will be out of season or out of style. Consider donating these items to a local charity or homeless shelter, or try selling them on Kijiji or Craigslist.

5. Use all available space in your closet
Store things vertically instead of horizontally. Instead of spreading your shoes out along the floor of the closet, get a show rack and store them up vertically, and you’ll have more floor space available. You could add additional short shelves in your closet for sweaters and other items that can be stretched out by hanging on hangers. These items can be folded neatly below hanging shirts to maximize storage space.

Remember to use unconventional space too. The back of the closet door can be used to store smaller items. Hang a full-length mirror there, or put up small hooks for scarves, belts, or ties. Muli-tier hangers can store multiple skirts or pants in the space previously taken up by one.

Bonus 6th tip
Remember that the 80/20 rule applies here; you wear 20% of your clothing 80% of the time. When you put your clothes back inside the closet, turn your hangers backwards. As you wear each item, return it to the closet and face the hanger properly. After a month or two, check how many hangers are still backwards. These items can be donated or sold, since you are clearly not wearing them right now.

What is your best closet decluttering tip? Do you have any tricks to share?

Proof Decluttering Works

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Posted March 4, 2010 in: Crafty Clutter

Back when I first started this blog, I tried to keep track of how much clutter was costing me in terms of money. One day I wrote about how simply being cluttered cost me $11.60 and 50 minutes of my time, just because I couldn’t find some serger needles that I misplaced.
Photo by Teresa Boardman

Last night as I was sewing, I broke another serger needle. This happens more often than I’d like, actually. :P
The point is, I reached for a spare needle to replace it and they were right where I was expecting them to be. I did it! I decluttered the area and gave something a proper home and it worked!

This is the goal I am working toward for everything in my home. I’m not even close to accomplishing this for everything yet, but it feels very nice to get some confirmation that the hard work is all worth it in the end.

I know I’ll probably never actually have a home that looks like one of the out of pristine (and often minimalist) homes in Real Simple or Apartment Therapy, but my goal is to end up with a neat, functional, organized home. Everything will have a place, and while it may not always stay there all the time, I’ll know where it goes and I’ll put it back after I use it and it will be there the next time I need it.

Have you recently had some proof that decluttering will all be worth it in the end? Tell us about it in the comments!

Spring Cleaning Pays Off

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Posted March 1, 2010 in: Physical Clutter

It’s getting to be the time of year when we all start thinking about spring cleaning.
It can pay off big time, too. Not only will you get the satisfaction of making your house just that much neater and tidier, but you could also find something valuable that you’ve misplaced.


Photo by Patrick Talbert

A woman in Australia found out she won the lottery when she cleaned up her desk and found a lottery ticket from last September. Taking a few minutes to tidy up netted her a sweet 2.5 million dollars! Talk about making decluttering worth it, eh?

Ito of Clutterbrained found $200 while cleaning up earlier this year.

I found a $50 Canadian Tire gift card that had fallen behind a table when I was decluttering this weekend.

Spring cleaning is a great time to declutter. Everyone talks about it, so there’s lots of encouragement to do it. Stores hold sales on traditional spring cleaning items (brooms, cleaning sprays, garbage/recycling bins, books about decluttering and cleaning, etc.) so you can get some good deals. Just be sure to watch that you don’t buy extra things just because they are on sale. Remember, you’re decluttering, not adding new things into your home.

What’s the most awesome thing you’ve found while cleaning up?

Curing Clutter Newspaper Article

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Posted February 25, 2010 in: Website/Blogging/Internet

I was lucky enough to be included in a newspaper article along with professional organizer and author Marilyn Bohn! Awesome! Hello and welcome to anyone who found this site through that article!

The article is published in the Deseret News, in Salt Lake City, and is called Curing Clutter: Staying organized year-round is key to spring cleaning.

My quotes are on page 2 of the article.
Here’s a snippet:

Caitlin Thompson, founder of www.cluttercubed.com, said she started a blog to share advice from someone dealing with clutter and to help her get motivated.

“If I’m feeling overwhelmed by my clutter and want to give up, I remember that my readers are expecting me to accomplish something and that usually provides the extra push I need,” Thompson said. “My readers leave encouraging comments when I post progress and that really helps motivate me to keep going.”

It feels pretty neat to have my name and words published in a newspaper, especially for something like this that I’ve been working hard on. :D I also really appreciate how they linked the URL in the online version, I’ve received a number of hits from this paper and a couple other Utah-based papers that picked it up.

If you are new to this site, here are some other posts that may be of interest to you:

42 Essential Ways to Take Action Against Your Clutter

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Posted February 18, 2010 in: Physical Clutter

This is a guest post by Everett Bogue. It was supposed to post automatically this morning, but I guess I didn’t do that right. Oops. There may or may not be a post this coming Monday, since I’m busy doing awesome things at Con-G this weekend. Unfortunately, “awesome things” doesn’t include sleeping. Oh well.

Written by Everett Bogue | Follow him on Twitter.

We spend a lot of time talking, debating, thinking things over with our intellect, before we take actions.

But it’s important to remember that the actions are what actually speak.

With every object you choose not to buy, you are bringing about the salvation of the planet.

With every meaningless task you strike off your list of things you feel obligated to do, you are bringing about your own personal liberation.

None of this starts until you stop analyzing and start doing. Make a difference now, because every moment that slips by is bringing you one step farther away from your goals.

Here are 42 simple actions you can take now to bring about a little bit of freedom from the endless cycle of consumerism.

1. Stop doing something that means nothing to you.
2. Pay off a credit card, cancel it.
3. Move to a city that has decent public transportation.
4. Support an artist, instead of a corporation.
5. Up-cycle something into art.
6. Cook a dinner from local raw ingredients.
7. Write something positive about someone who you admire.
8. Share a dinner with friends.
9. Eat at a table.
10. Put 15 things in a box, get rid of it.
11. Explain to your family, friends, significant other that you plan to make a difference by becoming more minimalist.
12. Vow to make more time for your own projects.
13. Write a blog post about being minimalist.
14. Reclaim 15 minutes of your time.
15. Cancel one commitment
16. Donate all of the clothes you haven’t worn this year.
17. Donate all of the clothes you haven’t worn this week.
18. Think about the place you’ve always wanted to move to, but thought it was impossible.
19. Decide it’s not impossible.
20. Move.
21. Unfriend 15 people on Facebook that you don’t know.
22. Unfollow every person on Twitter who only tweet about themselves.
23. Put down the cellphone for one dinner.
24. Text someone you love them.
25. Unsubscribe to every newsletter from those non-profit you don’t care about that comes in your email.
26. Destroy your TV.
27. Turn off your Internet.
28. Write something about change.
29. Stop whining about what you can’t.
30. Spend 15 minutes in silence after you get off of work.
31. Instead of thrashing, smile.
32. Automate your bills.
33. Archive or trash all your unanswered emails.
34. Start something, finish it.
35. Research one way to automate a small amount of income.
36. Work towards putting that automation into effect.
37. Plant a tree.
38. Watch TED before bed instead of whatever is on TV.
39. Make a choice that makes you uncomfortable.
40. Turn off the lights.
41. Stop checking email.
42. Make a list of the 100 things that are most important to you, leave it in the comments.

You make your own decisions. You can choose to opt out of the perpetual cycle of busy consumption that is destroying our planet and your life.

You are the one who will save us.

Thank you for making a difference.

Everett Bogue blogs about living a simple minimalist existence at Far Beyond The Stars, he is the author of The Art of Being Minimalist. [full disclosure: affiliate link]