Hugs and Happy Organizing! Teen Organizing
/2 Comments/in Family Organizing, Hugs and Happy Organizing, Organizing Skills/by EllenHugs and Happy Organizing posts are about client successes. Here you will find a happy organizing story about teen organizing.
Teens crave organization, but often are too busy to work through the challenges of creating systems and routines that work.
- Offer an incentive and find what is important for your teen. Set a time to work together on the project that works for both you and them.
- Together purge and eliminate items that are no longer useful or needed. Allow your teen the opportunity to let go of items, even if you are not comfortable with that.
- Group items together that are used together, such as media, books, and supplies. Think of this as stations within the room.
- With less items in the space, it is much easier to maintain. Help your teen establish times to get items back into order. Our kids are very busy but it is always important to get organized.
What ways have your helped your teen get organized?
Hugs and Happy Organizing: Organizing your Storage
/1 Comment/in Family Organizing, Hugs and Happy Organizing, Organizing Skills/by EllenHugs and Happy Organizing posts are about client successes. Here you will find a happy organizing story about storage.
If you are fortunate enough to have additional storage, you are truly blessed! Even storage can be in total disarray when we have too much.
- Group items together that are alike. In storage that may be clothes, games, office supplies or furniture. Once gathered, decide what to keep and what to donate, sell or trash. Storage is usually filled with items that you have not made a decision about… so make a decision!
- Take items away immediately. You won’t regret this.
- Place the items on shelving depending on the access you need to the item. Frequently used items need to be near the door and easy to access. If you want your kids to access items, be sure these are low enough.
- Label where the item goes so everyone knows where to put it back.
Hugs and happy organizing!
Summer Organizing for Families
/1 Comment/in Family Organizing, Organizing Skills/by Ellen
Summer time is fun time! It’s the time we think about letting go of all the routines and the responsibilities and building lots of memories. However, summer fun is best when there is a little organization and preparation. With lots of fun scheduled for your family, you’ll want to get organized!
Family calendar
Family fun begins by knowing all the dates and commitments you and your family have this summer. Start by adding all the upcoming dates on a master month at a glance calendar. Host a family meeting so everyone can add their dates, including holidays, camps, vacations, vacation bible school, birthdays, Father’s Day and more. Be sure each family member has their one most important summer activity on the calendar. Once you see the dates, now its time to set dates to prepare and pack. It’s tempting to have back to back fun, but it can also create a lot of disorganization if your camp stuff is not gathered together or you feel frazzled when setting off on a trip. Make a list and set a time to pack, gather together what is needed, and finalize plans. It takes just a few minutes but is well worth your time. With each summer activity you will have less stress and more fun!
Family routines
Summer is a time to set simple routines in place. You and your kids can collaborate on technology limits, summer bedtimes and family chores. It can be a time to start new partnerships for responsibilities such as cooking, clean up, laundry and grocery shopping. Examples of easy routines include:
- Lights out for everyone by 10:30 pm.
- Each person does one load of laundry twice a week, including putting their laundry away.
- Sunday night is family dinner night.
- One hour of technology a day for everyone.
- No one is left in the kitchen alone to clean up.
Be specific so everyone is on board with the routine. Establish deadlines so everyone knows when chores should be complete. Work together as a team on family responsibilities means chores get done quicker!
Family Organizing
Team work is a top priority for family organizing. Think about what needs to be done as a group and schedule a day and time for you to work together. Small projects broken down into baby steps is an easy way organize. Some of these projects include
- Pantry organizing (toss what is expired, group like the grocery store or by breakfast, snacks, dinner)
- Kids clothes organizing (donate what is too small, place one category of clothes in one drawer, then label the drawer.)
- Toy organizing (one shelf or basket per toy, then label the basket)
A parent and one child can work on these together for an hour and feel a sense of accomplishment. If one hour is too long, set a timer for 20 minutes, three times, and you have accomplished your goal. Set up a reward at the end of your work time to congratulate your team on their successes!
What’s on your list for family fun this summer?
6 Summer Organizing Strategies
/1 Comment/in Family Organizing, Organizing Skills, Time management/by Ellen
Summer time fun begins with being organized!
Gather your family together and get all the dates on your family calendar.
Be sure everyone is charged up to go! Keep all the technology charged in a public spot so everyone gets a great night’s rest.
Load up your ipod with summer tunes and your Nook, Kindle or ipad with great summer reads.
Add kid friendly books too to encourage summer reading.
Pack a summer bag for each activity and for extra car time for your kids.
Checklists for travel make packing easier too!
Set up a healthy, organized snack station with kid friendly stuff.
It will be easy for everyone to grab a snack whenever they want to and you will be sure you and your kids are keeping on track with fruits and hydration.
Keep a cooler for water in your car or in case you need to drop by the grocery.
Treat yourself to some fun summer flip flops as a reward for your organizing efforts.
Summer is more fun with preparation and organization.
What will you be organizing this summer?
Spring Organizing: Its the Little Things ~ Crafts
/2 Comments/in Family Organizing, Organizing Skills/by EllenGetting your crafts back into order in the spring makes crafting more fun! We are busy with our kids and jobs, and then our crafts get all wonky! Having a great station for crafts is the first step, but re-organizing them each spring to be sure they are easy to access and categorized by how we use them makes this hobby so much more fun.
The craft station is located in the kitchen, where mess is not a problem. It is set up in a large open cabinet that is an open without shelves. My client and I used the Container Store Busy Boxes(C) for grouping crafts. The Busy Boxes have wheels and becomes carts, which makes them easy to move next to the table. Each section of the Busy Box is different heights so we can take advantage of the vertical space. They are easily attached or separated from each other to be a tray for the craft too.
Within about 30 minutes, we were able to transform the space back to its original organized look and function.
What about the crafts in your home? How are you getting back your organization in your hobby space?
Images courtesy of The Container Store, www.containerstore.com.
Spring Organizing: Its the Little Things: Your Purse
/6 Comments/in Closet Organizing, Family Organizing, Organizing Skills, Work From Home and Work At Home/by EllenSpring organizing is all about the little things. Organizing your purse can be the biggest little organizing you can do. Click on this video to see how I organize my purse.
Click and Ellen shares how she organized her purse.
Ready to start your spring organizing?
Spring Cleaning and Organizing: Guest Post by Katie McCall
/0 Comments/in Closet Organizing, Family Organizing, Organizing Skills/by EllenI love learning other’s perspectives on organizing. Enjoy this guest post by ABC13 Weekend Anchor Katie McCall and her “take” on organizing.
I came up with this blog while jogging at Memorial Park. I love the fact that the park belongs to everyone. You don’t need a membership. Organizing is the same in that regard. It is also a great “equalizer.” Anyone can organize. It doesn’t matter if you have 2 pairs of shoes or 20. You can organize anything you have. It costs you nothing, and, if you do purchase organizing items, there are very affordable ones, at places like Target, T.J. Maxx, and Marshalls Home Goods. Organizing is universal.
At the start of each season, I like to shift my clothing and shoes around, placing my most-worn items in one closet, and organizing the winter items for storage in a less-accessible place. I ask myself helpful questions that Ellen Delap has taught to so many people: Do I have a place for this? How is that space working for these items? If you can give everything a place, you are giving yourself a wonderful gift. You won’t have to worry about “where to stick” your sweaters, for example, because you’ve identified a place where they will live, so you can always find them there. I also love Ellen’s concept of honoring your things by giving them a place. When you complete your organizing, you receive a no-cost gift to you, from you: the serenity of having a place for everything, and everything in its place.
Tools that I enjoy are cheap, for the most part. I like to use clear shoe boxes, or the box in which my shoes came, to get the most use of my vertical space. I recommend stacking your shoes along one wall, or placing shelves from the floor to the ceiling in any area that works for you, and making that your shoes’ home.
Sweaters are a challenge, so I keep all of them, regardless of the season, in one chest of drawers. All of my blazers go together, they are neighbors with my skirts. I put pants and dresses together, one on either side of a closet. You can improvise with portable racks, if your closets are small. The Container Store and Target sell accessories that can give you more space, but are attractive.
The bathroom closet and the cabinets under the sink can be a challenge. So is the linen closet. Here’s my simple solution for both areas. Group things by category. Grab some plastic bins or baskets that fit in that space (it helps to measure before you shop), and put everything that “goes together,” in a bin. Example: pillow cases are in one bin, sheets are in another. Sunscreen is in one bin, soaps and scrubs are in another. Razors, replacement blades, pedicure and manicure tools all “live” together. This can be done in 20 minutes per area. You’ll never dig around in the darkness. You just pull out a bin.
Finally, a word about “white space.” Ellen uses this word, and I love it. By organizing your papers, filing them in filing cabinets by category, and by giving things like magazines an attractive basket or bin that you can also display on your shelves, you can significantly increase your “white space.” It’s the space where there is nothing. I find that it brings serenity and order to any area. What a great gift! You might be surprised to see how organizing, which many people think of as “work,” can actually be fun, if you think of it as a time when you’re creating a space that you will enjoy for years to come.
Spring Organizing: Garage Sale Savvy!
/0 Comments/in Family Organizing, Green Organizing, Organizing Skills/by EllenThinking of a garage sale this month? Check out my blog post on Organize to Revitalize!
http://dallisonlee.com/blog/2013/04/01/5-steps-to-organize-a-family-garage-sale/
Spring Organizing: Its the Little Things: Junk Drawer
/3 Comments/in Family Organizing, Organizing Skills, Productivity/by EllenGet started on your spring organizing with the little things! Your junk drawer may be out of control! Spend just 5 minutes getting it back to organized!
Click and see this junk drawer!
How’s your junk drawer?

















