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Organizing Your Linen Closet
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Organizing the Linen Closet | Tackle Your Closet
Organizing Your Home: Your Linen Closet
by Shaan Randow
Description: Tips for organizing all the towels, bedding, and other linens in your linen closet.
I’m so proud of you—committing to organize your home is the
first step in actually doing it! Let’s hit the Linen
Closet!
If you have excess laundry to deal with, you probably have a
linen closet that is less than user-friendly. Once you have
clean towels, rags, and other linens to put away, you won’t do
it if your destination is less-than-appealing.
So let’s organize it! This is the first place where you’ll have
to be brutally honest with yourself about what you keep and what
you get rid of. When I say, “get rid of,” I don’t necessarily
mean it ends in the trash—if it’s towels, bedding, etc., that
are in bad condition, your local animal shelter would be
grateful for your donation. They always need things for the
dogs and cats to lay on in their runs and crates, and your
cast-offs in this area will be eagerly accepted.
1. Take stock of what you have for shelves. Do you have wooden
or wire shelves? Do you have problems with things “falling
through” if you have wire shelves? If so, you don’t have to
worry and go buy scrap wood to line the shelves with—a simple
piece of shelf-lining (you know, that bumpy green stuff that
comes in rolls) will lay nicely and prevent small things from
falling through. If necessary, put some of that down.
2. Now take a look and see what you’ve got in terms of extra
bedding. How many beds in your home? You should have a minimum
of 1 extra bedding-set for each bed, a maximum of 2. Think
about it before you start to write me and tell me why you need
6 sets of bedding for each bed—-if you have small children who
have nighttime accidents (or get the stomach flu in the middle
of the night), you might have to change sheets in the morning
(or the middle of the night if it’s barf!), and you’ll have
some clean ones to put on. You’ll put the dirty ones in the
washer and get the machine started on that task. Then you’ll
swap things to the dryer. You’ll still have clean sheets on the
bed and if you’ve got 2 extra sets, another clean one in the
linen closet. So now with that argument won, go through your
bedding. Do you have mis-matched pieces? If so, put them in the
donation pile. Do you have twin pieces mixed in with king
pieces? If so, separate them in to piles. Make sure everything
is folded (I’ll give you a pass on the fitted sheets—those are
impossible to fold neatly!). Now set aside one or two shelves
for your bedding. Make sure that the bedding for the queen bed
is not piled up with the stuff for the crib or twin bed. You
can fold the stuff in squares or fold it in to long rectangles
and then roll it. Either way is acceptable—it just depends on
how much space you’ve got.
Reprinted with permission.
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