
My 4-year-old decided the best use of our kitchen white board, which we typically use to help the older two kiddos with homework, was to display her drawing of the family.
I just had to share.
Love Your Home,
Sue
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My 4-year-old decided the best use of our kitchen white board, which we typically use to help the older two kiddos with homework, was to display her drawing of the family.
I just had to share.
Love Your Home,
Sue
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I’m finally wrapping up this mini-series on Home Organization in the Real World, which I could have titled: “The-Best-I Can-Do Home Organization in the, Crazy, Busy and Messy World of a Family Like Mine.”
Frankly, I was getting bored with the whole series and as I learned from the experts at a Social Media conference I recently attended: if I’m bored with my blog, then you’re bored with my blog. (A shout out to Pittsburgh Podcamp4 organizers and campers: great weekend!)
With that said, here are my favorite tips (most stolen from actual home organization experts and put to use in my home.)
Shelves with boxes, dedicated to specific/like items, I find are the best tools in the war on clutter. Linen closets, kids rooms, home offices, and pantries are the perfect spaces to use boxes like the ones in the photo, left. (Okay, these beauties are a little over-the-top-perfect but you get the idea.) If you also invest in a label-maker that lets you create sticky labels for your storage boxes, files, etc. well, then there’s no stopping you in your quest for organization.
So there ya have it. My brain purge of big-bang-for-the-buck Home Organization tips.
Now my mind feels a bit less cluttered and I’m ready to blog about something else. Please stop back.
Love Your Home,
Sue
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Beautiful Dining Room by designer, Elizabeta Skorucak.
This Home Organization blog entry is not as much a tip as it is a question: “Does this happen to any one else?”
The Dining Room table. It’s just sitting there, empty, rarely used for “dining” and just begging to serve as a dumping place for all things paper: halfway completed school projects, Girl Scout administrative forms, library books due to go back and of course, mail (the overflow pile.) Remember, this series is Home Organization in the REAL world — that’s my real world.
So, do you find this to be true: As the dining room table goes, so goes the rest of the house? Once it gets to the point where I see more paper than wood, somehow the rest of my home follows suit. It’s psychological I guess. Maybe it’s because my dining room is visible from much of the first floor and seeing it cluttered just puts a damper on my organizational spirit. In the same vein, a tidy table gives me a boost.
Anywho, if you can find a tip of some sort in this blog entry, that’s great. But I’d love to hear from you: let me know if you experience the same weird connection between the dining room table and the rest of your house.

Me, I’m going to clear away this week’s mess from my dining room table, which is pictured above…just kidding.
Love Your Home,
Sue
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