Entries tagged with “declutter”.


While nothing can beat boxing up your books and donating them to clear out the shelves, there’s a lot of cases where you want to put a little more thought into it. Here’s my strategy for keeping the book collecting from getting out of hand. Declutter your book collection in a few easy steps.

Related: book-collection-trimming

Make a card cable organizer to prevent your cords from falling and keep them nicely organized at the back of your desk.

Having trouble laying your hands on the smaller items in the toolbox?

Think outside the toolbox!

I purged about 3/4 of my art supplies I’ve been collecting over the years. The area I kept them in (a floor to ceiling shelf with boxes on each shelf) did not inspire crafts for my family because it was overrun and not terribly well organized. I had done a few passes over the years to gather like materials together, but it was too much.

Here’s how I organized it. The discarded materials were gathered together to give to Goodwill, they are all still usable, I just had too much!

  • If I found the craft, in general, pretty much uninspiring even in theory, I removed 100% of the items. For instance, there was a loom and an unbelievable amount of tiny beads that I couldn’t picture ever using.
  • If I had too much of an item, I reduced the amount of materials to a manageable set. For instance, any felt piece smaller than 5″x5″ I stuffed in a bag and removed. I did lose some color options, but the remaining large pieces are more likely to be used.
  • I took a reasonable quantity (a shoe-box full) of fresh-looking pens/markers in good condition, saved them, and condemned the remaining ones to be removed.
  • I removed lots of small and large duplicate paints, but kept dry tempera. I removed paint-brushes and paint that were unsalveagable.
  • I threw away unsealed clay, lots of partially used colored paper, etc.
  • I allowed myself one ‘misc’ box for crafts that didn’t fit into one of the ’standard’ categories. A reasonable ‘misc’ box is a bit of a conceptual breakthrough, I think over-categorizing demotivates a lot of decluttering projects.
  • I allowed myself a ‘unique’ set of tools, and gathered them together. While having a melon-baller in the craft tools is arguably useful, it’s much harder to justify having three.
  • I removed finished art-works and never-to-be-finished projects from the craft shelf. They don’t belong there.
  • When I finished I had a shelf that had about 1/4 of the material, but it was much more approachable, and allowed for about 90% of the craft types that it did before the purge. That’s a pretty good clutter trade-off. Like any other decluttering project, just getting started creates nearly all the momentum you need to finish.

    Good luck!