8 Organizational Strategies That Will Actually Make Your Home More Cluttered

Mondo Digital Updated on 2024-01-30

Color-coded closets are pleasing to the eye, but not very functional.

While this may seem like a good idea, color-coding clothing is very impractical and expensive to maintain, requiring you to follow the color after every laundry**. What's the point of spending time in a color-coded closet that won't even last two weeks?

Grouping garments by season, and grouping tops by long or short sleeves is more useful.

It's your house, you know everything is in**, there's no other reason to label common household items.

Tags are very useful in kitchen pantry, and they can help you distinguish flour from other white ingredients that you keep in your storage jar.

When book lovers see a library sorted by color, they know they're looking at a home that is not a reader. No one can remember a book by the color of the cover, so it is useless as an organizational system.

Sometimes it's helpful to sort items into colors, other times, it's really not necessary, like when you're sorting through books, children's toys, chip holders. ”

For libraries that are really useful, group books by genre. If you really like it, you can sort them again in alphabetical order by author.

There is no need to put items in a bin that is very easy to find on a shelf.

Putting everything in the bin creates more chaos than order, and bins only make sense if you're trying to group similar small objects.

Trash bins are most useful when you don't have to sort through the chaos to find what you're looking for.

Dumpsters are useful, but also take into account that they will keep the East ** up from being seen by others.

Dumpsters aren't for everyone, and many people need to see their belongings to remember what they have. Hiding an item in the trash can cause you to lose track of it, never use it, or replace it if you think it's lost.

If you find yourself nesting boxes within boxes, stop and ask yourself if you're just creating a system that looks good or one that really helps you find what you're looking for.

Take it from us: overcategorization can be a bit overkill.

Systems need to be simple and easy to maintain, which is why they come into play, and instead of having many small, specific categories, aim for a wider range of categories.

Eight cases containing beauty items of various travel sizes can all be combined in one case. Keeping them apart is more difficult to maintain.

Who doesn't love the perfect spice rack, with everything in a matching jar, filled, wiped clean, and labeled?A busy chef, that's it!No one who cooks a lot has the time to maintain this primitive order.

The uniform spice rack or spice drawer looks lovely and coordinated, and the useless part is what to do with the original packaging when the contents can't all fit into the matching jar. Now you need more than one place to store spices!

If you wholeheartedly covet the perfect style spice rack, choose some of the spices you use regularly and decant the wine. Display them on a counter or shelf, where you can appreciate their uniformity. Leave the rest in their original packaging and store them out of sight.

Some closets look more like a clothing museum than just a place to hang clothes.

The use of matching slim flocked hangers in your wardrobe has become popular like wildfire, but one type of hanger doesn't fit every piece of clothing. Instead, I recommend using one type of hanger for each category – all trouser hangers are the same, all clothes hangers are the same, and so on. It still looks unified.

The purpose of a hanger is to keep clothes wrinkle-free and ready to wear, so use the one that best suits each piece of clothing.

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