Categories
Professional-Organizer

Getting Ready for Winter: Wardrobe Organizing Tips for Cold Weather

When it’s time to get organized for the changing season…

scarves_declutter_decluttering_organize_bella
Roll scarves and place them in a hanging bin, basket, or drawer for easy access.

If you’re like most of us and have limited closet space, you may need to store seasonal clothing. In preparation for cold weather, you might consider storing away the summery things and bringing out what you’ll need to stay warm and comfortable. It’s also a good time to purge.

Purging Tips

Say “goodbye” to clothing, shoes, and accessories when:

  • You have worn or used it to the point of fading, pilling, stains, stretching, or tearing
  • You have not worn or used it for an entire year or two
  • It is no longer your color, size, or style

 How to store off-season items.

  • Use containers with lids or large storage bags; cover to protect from dust, dirt, fluctuating temperatures, and little critters.
  • Treat them well. Clean, de-wrinkle, and fold or nicely hang before storing. Cared for clothing lasts longer, takes up less space, and can be worn immediately when it’s time.
  • Store items in a temperature-controlled environment, particularly natural materials such as leather, wool, and silk. Never store clothing in damp places that tend to breed mold or mildew, nor in extreme hot or cold temperatures.
  • Label bins or bags with a description of contents and store under the bed, high on a top shelf, in the guest room closet, on a garage shelf, or on a covered rolling rack.

Keep sweaters, jackets, scarves, warm hats & socks, cozy boots, gloves, and an umbrella within reach.

  • Sweaters keep their shape best when folded and stacked in dresser drawers or on reachable shelves. Lightweight sweaters do well hung as long as you wear often enough to retain their shape.
  • Roll winter scarves and place in a slim hanging canvas organizer  in the entry closet (which I also like for small purses, hats & beanies, gloves, compact umbrellas, and other accessories,) or stack them in a dresser drawer or bin on a shelf.
  • Keep gloves close to scarves or within coat pockets. I buy several sets of $1 gloves at CVS or Target and store a pair in the pocket of each jacket. They’re always there when I need them.
  • Keep long socks, thermal underwear, and cold-weather leggings together. More tips to organize tights, leggings, and long socks here.

Take the time to organize your closet and wardrobe for the changing season, and you’ll have what you need in a cold-weather flash.

____

Ready for more? Call (510) 229-7321 today to schedule a complimentary estimate for your wardrobe and closet organizing goals. Gift certificates are available.

Categories
Professional-Organizer

Fabulous Thrift Store Finds

Welcome to my new Thrift Store Finds page!

You can always find me dropping and shopping at thrift stores. Rarely do I buy new clothes at full price…there are too many good deals to be found at second hand, resale, consignment shops, yard and estate sales. It makes for fun and guilt-less retail therapy! No shopping remorse here when I only paid a few bucks for my latest find. I’m being green, and find unique things all the time.

During one of my recent donation drop-offs for a client, I scored this size medium Kenneth Cole skirt at Goodwill for only $3.25! Here I am wearing my thrift store find on our road trip to Big Basin this weekend.

I scored this size medium Kenneth Cole skirt at Goodwill for only $3.25!
I scored this size medium Kenneth Cole skirt at Goodwill for only $3.25!

 

Love this design!
Love this retro design.

 

Just my size!
Just my size. It’s made of 100% polyester but looks and feels like suede. No need for dry cleaning; it goes right into the washer on the cold gentle cycle and hangs to dry.

I will post my finds here regularly, so check back now and again to be inspired to shop green with me. Read about some of my favorite consignment shops in the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond HERE.

____

READ MORE BELLA ORGANIZING TIPS, IDEAS & TRAVELS HERE.

Isabella Guajardo, also known as Girl With A Truck™, is a professional home organizer and a member of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO). Living in Oakland and Monterey, she travels in her truck to work with clients throughout the SF Bay Area, East Bay, South Bay, Silicon Valley, Santa Cruz and Monterey Peninsula. She shares simple and creative ways to stay organized and stylish while reducing, recycling and re-purposing. Join Bella Organizing on Facebook. Gift certificates are available.

Call (510) 229-7321 to schedule a complimentary telephone consultation.

Categories
Professional-Organizer

How to Organize and Pack For A Trip

I often help my busy clients prepare for their vacations and business travels. This includes creating packing lists, organizing and packing suitcases and carry-on luggage. Here are packing tips for easier traveling:

Pack clothing tightly but without over stuffing the suitcase. Tight packing means no loss of space and fewer wrinkles. There are two basic ways to pack efficiently:

  1. The Rolling Method – Roll clothing including t-shirts, pajamas, sweaters, and slacks. Use a rubber band to keep items from unrolling. Tightly rolled clothing take up less space and are less likely to get wrinkles from fold creases.
  2. The Bundling Method – Bundle like-garments. This keeps items together and accessible. If you pack three t-shirts, neatly fold or roll them together. To reduce wrinkles, place each bundle in an airtight zip-lock bag.

More tips:

  • Make a packing list of things you need to take on the trip days or weeks in advance.
  • Know the airlines updated baggage policy and Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) rules. Changes happen all the time; read up on the airlines latest fees, policies and rules before you start your packing list.
  • Prevent wrinkling by layering clothes with tissue paper saved from holiday gifts.
  • Make use of empty space by rolling underwear, socks, ties, scarves, etc., and placing into small  zip-lock baggies, removing as much air as possible while zipping. Gently stuff the baggies into shoes.
  • Use sample-size toiletries (contact lens cleaner, shaving cream, toothpaste, etc.) or fill your own small, reusable bottles.
  • Store valuables (jewelry, medicine, cell phone charger, important paperwork) and pack a change of socks and underwear in your carry-on.
  • Minimize wrinkles by unpacking garments right away. Lay tissue paper inside hotel room drawers prior to placing your items and hang whatever clothing you can upon arrival.
  • If traveling with a passport, photocopy the page with your photo and bring an extra picture. If you lose your passport, this will make it easier to replace.

See how a flight attendant from Los Angeles demonstrates how to pack for a 10-day trip in a single standard carry-on using the rolling method.

____

READ MORE BELLA ORGANIZING TIPS, IDEAS & TRAVELS HERE.

Isabella Guajardo, also known as Girl With A Truck™, is a professional home organizer and a member of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO). Living in Oakland and Monterey, she travels in her truck to work with clients throughout the SF Bay Area, East Bay, South Bay, Silicon Valley, Santa Cruz and Monterey Peninsula. She shares simple and creative ways to stay organized and stylish while reducing, recycling and re-purposing. Join Bella Organizing on Facebook. Gift certificates are available.

Call (510) 229-7321 to schedule a complimentary telephone consultation.

Categories
Professional-Organizer

Basement Declutter and A Mohawk

This Oakland, CA client initially planned for us to tackle her basement exactly one year ago this month, right after we finished organizing her garage. I didn’t hear back from her, and thought that perhaps she was unhappy with my services! It turned out (as it usually does) that personal life stuff happened and so she didn’t get a chance to move forward until now. I think I’ve finally come to terms with the fact that people sometimes have more important things to do than organize their homes.

When we first looked at the basement a year ago, it looked more like an extended storage closet. Things were too piled high to walk through and around the back to where more stuff was…things my client had long forgotten. What she did know was that all her precious Christmas ornaments were scattered, she wanted to find and organize them, and that there might be something dead back there…

basement declutter - before 1

This client lives on a hillside, with the garage at street level, the main floor of the house down a long set of stairs a level below, and the lower part of the house and basement a level below that. There was a lot of things to remove from the basement, all of which needed to be thoroughly sorted and assessed as to whether it stays or goes. Some needed to be stored in the street level garage, other things carried up to my truck and hauled away to be donated, the rest placed into the recycle bin on the street. Lots of stuff and lots of stairs meant lots of exercise today!

While digging through boxes and pulling things out, I had in the back of my mind to keep an eye out for critters, live or dead. I came across boxes of poison that had been there a while, the pellets eaten away and cardboard containers obviously attacked by rodents. Then I came across droppings…I was sure I’d find a furry skeleton soon! But there was no foul smell so I thought whatever was here must be long gone…until I saw this on the floor and squealed…

basement declutter cat toy

A mouse with a purple mohawk and studded collar. Obviously a toy belonging to the cat of the house. An incredible adrenaline rush, a burst of laughter, and I was pumped to keep moving with this basement closet project. Luckily I didn’t have any more surprises.

What I did find was lots of holiday ornaments, clothing, boxes of salvaged childhood memorabilia, and house rebuilding papers documenting the Oakland Hills Firestorm of 1991, a fire that killed 25 people and injured 150 others. The fire destroyed 1,520 acres in the Oakland hills and southeastern Berkeley, including 3,354 single-family dwellings and 437 apartment and condominium units. [1] My clients house was one of them.

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oakland_firestorm_of_1991

We sorted through and dusted off everything in the basement, removed cobwebs, swept the floor, properly packed and labeled treasured ornaments, placing those she uses more often close to the front of the stack.

basement declutter- after 2

During the consolidation and repacking process we got rid of several empty containers that took up space. After a few boxes to be stored in the garage and items for haul-away sorted out, we ended up with a clean and clear basement. And the cat had her toy back.

basement declutter- after 3

 

____

READ MORE BELLA ORGANIZING TIPS, IDEAS & TRAVELS HERE.

Isabella Guajardo, also known as Girl With A Truck™, is a professional home organizer and a member of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO). Living in Oakland and Monterey, she travels in her truck to work with clients throughout the SF Bay Area, East Bay, South Bay, Silicon Valley, Santa Cruz and Monterey Peninsula. She shares simple and creative ways to stay organized and stylish while reducing, recycling and re-purposing. Join Bella Organizing on Facebook. Gift certificates are available.

Call (510) 229-7321 to schedule a complimentary telephone consultation.

Categories
Professional-Organizer

Interview with Betty A. Sproule, co-author of The Stuff Cure

I am interviewing Betty A. Sproule, co-author of The Stuff Cure: How we lost 8,000 pounds of stuff for fun, profit, virtue, and a better world.

What a catchy title, Betty, who should read your book?

Our book is for anyone who feels that they have more stuff in their home and garage than they really need.  When stuff becomes a burden, rather than a joy, it’s time to slim down.  Often people need to unstuff when they are planning to move, a child leaves home, or when they need to downsize. Sometimes people need to move stuff along so they can clear enough space to park their car in the garage.

What about the fun, profit, virtue, and a better world?  How can getting rid of stuff help in all those areas?

We know that buying stuff can be fun.  We believe that getting rid of stuff can also be fun, if you have the right approach.  You can sell your unneeded stuff for cash or you can take a deduction on your taxes. Donating to worthwhile agencies, such as Goodwill, St Vincent DePaul, and Hope, does a lot of good for our community.  Reusing and recycling help us to be better stewards of our environmental resources.

When you talk about getting rid of stuff, how do you know what to keep?

We have three criteria to define a keeper. When it’s

    • Currently functional,
    • Really valuable, or
    • Outrageously sentimental

If something doesn’t qualify under one of these three headings, then it’s a candidate for unstuffing.

Once you decide to get rid of something, how do you make it work? 

We use the principles of gift, shift, and thrift to find our stuff a better home.  We discuss the seven morphs of leading an unstuffed life: Refraining, Restraining, Returning, Reusing, Renting, Recycling, and Rendering into trash. We include a discussion of our Stuff Cure Method and the 7 rules of the game. We share a proven recipe for success in getting rid of excess stuff without regret or guilt. We give a lot of specific suggestions for how to responsibly move your stuff along before resorting to just throwing it in the trash.

When do you need a professional organizer in your unstuffing process?

We recommend using a professional organizer to help you achieve your goals even faster.  If you get rid of some of the stuff that you don’t need, it helps you to get more value from the time with your professional organizer and you’ll be more pleased with the result.

Mike and Betty Sproule, co-authors of “The Stuff Cure”

If you’d like to read the book, you can order it on Amazon, in either paperback or Kindle form.

Read more about The Stuff Cure on the website: http://www.stuffcure.com/

____

Isabella Guajardo, also known as Girl With A Truck™, is a professional home organizer and a member of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO). She travels to work with clients throughout the great San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay, South Bay, Silicon Valley, Santa Cruz and Monterey Peninsula. She shares simple and creative ways to stay organized and stylish while reducing, recycling and re-purposing.  

Call (510) 229-7321 today to schedule a complimentary estimate for your home organizing goals. Gift certificates are available.

Keep up with Bella Organizing on Facebook and Instagram.