The way a day starts is often the way it continues, and nothing can ruin your day faster than not being able to find what you need in your closet, or worse, find that the outfit you were planning to wear is stained, missing a button or doesn’t fit. Everything in the closet should be ready to wear. That’s why the bedroom closet is one of the areas I’m most frequently called in to help with. So, let’s get your day going on a positive note.
Everyday clothes belong in your everyday closet – special occasion clothes belong somewhere else, if you decide to keep them. There is no reason to take up valuable space in your every-day closet with clothing only worn once or twice a year unless you have no other places to store them. You can always bring out the holiday clothing for a month or two then put them back in storage, but the rest of the year you don’t need to have them jamming up your closet.
OK, now we’re going to go step by step through the process of how to sort the contents of your closet.
Hanging clothing
Set up boxes for “Donate”, “Toss”, “Repair and Clean”.
Take EVERYTHING out of the closet. As you remove them, take anything you don’t like, know you won’t wear, or know doesn’t fit and put it in the donation or throw boxes. It does not matter if the price tags are still on them, how much you paid for them or if they were a gift. If you don’t like them, you won’t wear them anyway. Let’s get them to someone who will love and wear them NOW. If you have clothes with dust on the shoulders, they are a candidate for donation too.
Do a quick wipe down of all the shelves, the closet rod and vacuum the floor. You won’t ever have an easier time for doing this than when it’s completely empty.
Try on all the items left after the quick sort. Pick a category and try on all of that group. For example do all the pants at once, and then move on to the next group. Even if you know it fits, still put it on and go through all the steps.
Here are the questions you have to answer for EVERY item going back in the closet:
1. Does it fit NOW? Not “When I lose those last 5 pounds”, etc.
2. Does it look good on you? Does the color and cut compliment your figure and skin tone?
3. Do you feel fabulous in it?
4. Does it fit the life you are living NOW? If you used to be an executive but are now a stay at home mom, it’s time to let go of most of the suits – if not all.
5. Does it need repair? Inspect every item carefully. You don’t want to pull out a shirt to wear and then find out it needs a button or there is a problem with a seam pulling out. Put it in the repair box. Commit to getting it repaired in the next week or donate it or throw it out.
6. Does it need to be cleaned? If so, clean it or take it to the dry cleaners during this week. If it is still stained, it goes into the trash. You won’t want to wear clothes that are stained, so why let them take up valuable space in your closet?
One exception to this rule is one or two “grubby” outfits for painting, etc. These outfits can be folded and put in a drawer, but they DON’T belong in the closet.
If an item qualifies on ALL questions, hang it back up with the hanger facing backwards. Since you are trying them on in groups, they will automatically be sorted by type on your rod. If you didn’t already do this, sort them as they go back in the closet. This way, you can see you have 10 pairs of black pants, etc. You can pick which ones you like the best then donate the extras. It will also make it easier to choose your outfit without having to look thru all the clothes on the rod.
Now go through your remaining clothes and make sure that you have other items that coordinate with each item. There is no point hanging on to a skirt or pair of pants if you don’t have anything that you can wear with it.
Once you wear something, face the hanger forward when you are returning it to your closet. This way, one year from now, you will know what you have not worn during the year. Anything on a backwards facing hanger should go for donation – no matter how cute it is. If it has not been worn at all in a year, it won’t be.
© 2011 – Maria Spetalnik
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