Organizing Small Spaces :: Maximize Storage With Shelving

Organizing Small Spaces :: Maximize Storage With Shelving

We are in the midst of a series of articles featuring tips and solutions for Organizing in Small Spaces.

The introductory article highlighted a few simple ways to create more space in small living areas.  One of those points included being on the lookout for shelving opportunities.

Shelving is one of the best ways you can make add a power punch of storage without forsaking much square footage for living.  A few lucky home owners have lovely built-in wall storage, but with a little creativity, even a home with no built-ins can achieve the same look with bookcases or constructed shelving.

 In the Living Room or Den:

 Get brave and creative with furniture placement. Save those walls for some shelves!

  • Line an entire wall with bookcases…

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  • Even a half wall of shelving offers a lot of storage…

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Notice how in all the above images, at least a portion of furniture is in front of the bookcase?

  • Shelves can be utilized to stow books & magazines, decorative items, media collections, special mementos, games, photos/photo albums, or even toys.
  • Create the option of a visual barrier if you wish, by suspending a curtain from wall-to-wall. 
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(an IKEA DIGNITET Curtain wire would be a great solution to pull this look off)


In The Kitchen:

Lacking in cupboard and cabinet storage? 

  • Add some shelving to an open wall!

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Added shelving in the kitchen doesn’t need to be all about function.

  •  Use shelving to showcase some of your favorite decor items along with commonly used kitchen items like cookbooks and cake stands to produce some instant eye appeal: 
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In the Bathroom:

 Bathrooms are notorious spaces to be short on storage.

  • Added shelving in otherwise wasted space near a toilet is a perfect option to stow towels, toiletry gear plus a few decorative items:

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  • There is often ample space above a toilet perfect for open shelving to house cosmetics and/or hair products.
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  •  Over-the-door shelving is a perfect solution to house overstock products.
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In the Laundry Room:

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Need a hand in bringing more organization to your small space? 

Image Sources:
(1) BHG.com  (2) House and Home  (3) Mini Manor via Remodelaholic.com  (4) IHeart Organizing (5) ~from Domino magazine (discontinued), via Shelter (6) Flickr: ‘Marie’s Shots‘  (7 & 8) BHG.com   (9) Molly Frey Design  via Bella Vita  (10A Place For Us   (11The Order Obsessed   (12Small Moments  (13MarthaStewart.com  (14The Mongrel.com  (15) HouseandHome.com  (16&17) The Farm Chicks  (18) Secrets of Getting Organized : {BHG special interest publication}

How to Create Space in Small Living Areas

How to Create Space in Small Living Areas

*  This is the first of a series of articles dedicated to organizing solutions for small spaces  *

Note from Heidi:
The following article was submitted by a guest blogger 
Author’s Bio:  
Lisa is a blogger at Self Storage Deals who writes on the subjects of home storage options and interior design. Right now, she is working on projects that involve the maintenance and organization of storage units in Colorado Springs and storage units in McAllen. “
 Living in a home that’s limited in size certainly creates unique organizational challenges.  Rooms in a small living space can easily become cluttered if you’re not particularly careful about it. The key to avoiding clutter in a small home is to create as much usable space for your belongings as possible. Here are a few practical ways to make that happen:

Make Purging a Habit

 The hard reality is, the less space you have at home, the fewerthings you’re able to keep & store.
Anytime you bring something new into your home,  make efforts to get rid of something old. A helpful guide might be considering items that you haven’t used in the past four months and items you have no intention of using in the next four months. 
Consider Furniture Size
{from the original Domino via Home for the Better}
Take a good look at all the furniture you have in your home. Could you replace your large sofa with a loveseat or switch out the queen bed in the guest room with a twin?  The smaller your furniture is, the more space you’ll have to store other household items in an organized manner. 
Look for Shelving Opportunities
{housetohome.co.uk.com}
Shelves are a great place to store photos, books, DVDs, and decorations. As an added bonus, shelves don’t use up any of your valuable floor space, as a cabinet would. 
Assess Your Electronics
{tchousetohome.wordpress.com}
A flat screen TV that you mount to your living room wall takes up a lot less space than a TV that rests on a large entertainment center. Additionally, a laptop takes up a lot less room than a personal computer that must be stored on an immovable desk or workspace. So, when it’s time for an upgrade, make intentional space-saving purchases.
Putting forth some intentional effort to create more space in a small living area will go a long way to enable you to enjoy and appreciate your cozy home.   
Have you successfully created an organized space with limited square footage?  
Submit a few photos operationorganizationmn@gmail.com with a short explanation to be considered for a feature in an upcoming article!

Need some help strategically creating more space in your home?  

15 Ways a Professional Organizer Can Help You

15 Ways a Professional Organizer Can Help You

In addition to being asked how to become a professional organizer, I’m also often asked what I DO as a Professional Organizer.

Becca Clark of convenientlyorganized.com , a Professional Organizer in central Arkansas, shared this fantastic ‘job description’ in a recent newsletter;


* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

“Professional Organizer” can mean many things to different people, and because the industry is still relatively new we are continually defining and describing the services we offer.
Here are just a few of the job titles and descriptions collected from NAPO organizers –

{in alphabetical order of course}!  


1.  Big Picture Breaker Downer –
Is your goal feeling too big to even begin?  We help you visualize the end result then chunk it into manageable bites to get started.

2. Clutter Adviser – We help you set up a system to manage the clutter and give you new ways to think about stuff and its relationship to your real life.

3.  Coach – Are you stuck?  We help you see the issues, then guide you toward the solutions that will get you moving forward again.

4.  Downsizing Specialist – Moving to a smaller space?  We help you determine what fits your new life and space, and then find the best and most meaningful ways to share the rest.

5.  Environmentalist – Want to eliminate the excess but not add to landfills?  Organizers offer thoughtful and knowledgeable options for donating/disposing of your reusable things. 

6.  Family Mediator – Differing opinions about how to use shared spaces?  We work with entire families  to find compatible systems that everyone can live with.

7.  Feeling Overwhelmed Tackler – Not sure where or how to begin?   We know about that overwhelmed feeling and can help you make that start and find motivation to keep going. 

8.  Laborer – Need helping hands to tackle any situation – from a drawer to a storage unit to a whole house?  Organizers don’t see any job as too big, and we’re ready to jump in!

9.  Money Saver – Tired of buying things over and over because you can’t find what you need?  You’ll save money once you can see and easily access your possessions.

  

10. Permission Granter/liberator – Torn about getting rid of stuff – everything from high school trophies to the less than lovely clock from Auntie Jane?  We give you permission to part with things that no longer serve your life.  Sometimes it’s OK to let go.


11.  Positive Nag – Need reinforcement?  We’ll encourage you to keep going – in the kindest way!

12.  Product Adviser – Don’t know the best storage and organization products and tools?   We do, and we can find the best deals and customize to what works best for you.

13.  Teacher – Want to learn new strategies, skills, and motivators?  Our most important function is to transfer skills so you can take on any organizing project and earn an A+!

14.  Time Saver – Always rushing around, running late, looking for you important stuff?  We teach time management skills and best practices along with organizing your stuff.

15.  Cheerleader – Need a pep talk?  We understand and appreciate your efforts and successes. and we love to celebrate with you!

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Yep, I’d have to say that sums up the work of a Professional Organizer quite well!
 

 Contact me to learn how I might be able to help you!
My Journey to Becoming a Professional Organizer

My Journey to Becoming a Professional Organizer

I get several inquiries a month regarding how I got into the field of Professional Organizing, in addition to a general curiosity about the industry overall.  While I would sincerely love to respond to each inquiry individually, I just don’t realistically always have the time to do so.   It occurred to me that sharing my journey in the form of a blog article would be a great solution!


There are MANY avenues that one could take toward becoming a professional organizer (and there are many types of organizers). While I don’t profess to be an ‘expert’ at starting a business in this field, I’m happy to simply share my own story…

I married my husband 2 weeks after my college graduation.  As a new bride, I entered the full-time workforce with only a vague idea of what I wanted to pursue career-wise.  I had earned a degree in Mass Communications because I thought I would enjoy the coursework and subject matter, and I did!  Though, as time went on, I was not fully convinced I could see myself in a traditional mainstream career that my college training was preparing me for (truth be told, upon enrolling in college as a freshman, my long-term goals were primarily focused on a future in the theater…but that’s another story altogether!).


For several of those newlywed years I worked whatever jobs I could, in the series of towns we found ourselves living in, to support my husband during graduate school.   While I was a hard worker and determined to succeed wherever I was employed, I was never completely satisfied in the work I did.  There was always a part of me that felt ‘untapped’ or unfulfilled.  I also had a recurring desire to work for myself.  This most likely stemmed from the fact that I grew up in a family of entrepreneurs! 

During those years, I had time to contemplate what I really enjoyed about each job I had held, as well as pin-point specific talents or strengths I had that could  translate into some sort of small business.  I read several books that aided in this reflection period. 


The book, Why you Can’t Be Anything You Want to Be, was particularly helpful.

“This book is based on the idea that every person is endowed from birth with a unique pattern of  skills, competencies and motivations, or gifts.  This book describes your Motivated Abilities Pattern (MAP) which indicates your personal giftedness and encourages you to pursue your unique calling and live a purposeful life that is highly productive and richly satisfying.”

Motivated Abilities are the abilities and activities that:

  • You are drawn to
  • You find absorbing and engaging
  • You gravitate to without thinking about them
  • Come so naturally to you that you think of them as ‘common sense’

Many people lose track of time when these abilities are engaged. They represent you at your best.

I observed that in every job I had, I thoroughly enjoyed the role of service that I could supply.  I liked feeling useful and helpful to either customers or my employer.   Other jobs revealed a natural ability with leadership roles that allowed me to develop, motivate and teach in some way.  More than that, I realized that I thrived in settings where I was allowed an outlet of creativity and quick problem solving.  As a life long planner/list maker, I’ve always known myself to be a very task oriented person.  However, I needed plenty of new tasks and challenges in order to keep me interested in my tasks, or I’d soon become quite bored and lose motivation.  I also discovered that I am a people person and that I enjoy my work much more if I can work alongside someone else, rather than alone, at least 50% of the time.

Eventually, I stumbled upon a show on the HGTV network called ‘Mission Organization.’  It was then that I learned that there was actually such a thing as a ‘Professional Organizer.’  After watching several episodes of the show, it occurred to me that this particular trade really did play to a lot of my natural abilities and interests.  

It also occurred to me that organizing is something I had been doing/thinking about (for myself and others) since childhood.  This was a type of task that was indeed easy for me to ‘get lost in’ and that I never tired of.  It also played to my natural ability and interests in helping, serving, and teaching, not to mention the creativity I could exercise in coming up with clever and novel organizing solutions.   Pairing this idea with my personal drive to own and operate my own business, this career path began to look extremely promising!

I knew it would be a few more years before I could realistically launch an official business.  At the time, I had a baby at home, and a husband in the middle of pursuing his Ph.D. I used the next few years to intentionally build my knowledge of the field of organizing in addition to researching how to start a small business.

My personal journey landed me on the website, OnlineOrganizing.com, which has now evolved into getorganizednow.com . I found it to be quite helpful in my early planning stages.  There were articles and quizzes that helped to guide my mental process in understanding the field of Professional Organizing.  Now, there several websites to choose from which provide resources for organizational study/business start-up as well as an on-line training. You can also inquire about hiring a qualified personal coach who can help take your organizing business to the next level. 

I was extremely blessed to be directed and connected with a seasoned Professional Organizer (from a personal friend) that has become a most valued mentor.  She continues to be an amazing resource that I can bounce ideas off of about building my business as well as get general encouragement and practical advice from.  
I look forward to the day that I, too, can act as a coach/mentor to budding professional organizers in the field (most likely when my children are quite a bit older).


My studies and inquiries very quickly acquainted me with The National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO.net).


From the website:

The National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO) is a group of about 4,200 professional organizers dedicated to helping individuals and businesses bring order and efficiency to their lives. Our vision is to have the world recognize the value of organizing and turn to NAPO as the leading organizing authority. Our mission is to develop, lead, and promote professional organizers and the organizing industry.

In addition to serving professional organizers, we aim to help consumers and those interested in becoming professional organizers. We offer programs, information, and guidance for each of these groups.

While a membership with a local NAPO chapter paired with achievement of a certification in organizing {through a guided curriculum that they offer} could certainly increase your credibility, increase your exposure, and help provide general confidence as an organizer, it is not required to obtain in order to offer professional services. 


I opted to initially develop my own self-guided curriculum in the early stages of my business based on the current season of life we were in.  I considered some of the texts suggested on both websites, utilized my local library and whenever we had a date night that led us to a bookstore, I always wandered through the small business and home/decorating/hobby sections to add to my continuing education. 

I honed my growing skills by offering organizing services to friends and family members either for free or for a very low fee {I viewed this process like an Internship} to get experience as well as eventual references/referrals. 

About three years and one more baby later, hubby completed his Ph.D.  The opportunity for officially launching my business was at hand!   I created a list of all that I would need to complete for a very basic start-up with the help of the secretary of state website suggestions (things like taking care of legalities, creating a website and social media presence, getting business cards printed, generating marketing and advertising ideas to get my name out in our new community) and began working toward completing them little by little, one day at a time. 


I’ve made a personal commitment to continue reading and learning something new that will help build upon my skills and knowledge each and every day that gives me the continued confidence and ability to service a variety of organizational challenges.  It is also a goal of mine to eventually achieve a few specific certifications in order to offer specialized support to specific more challenging or chronic disorganization circumstances. 



It is my personal opinion that natural ability, know-how, and a general passion and enjoyment of organizing is but a small portion of what it will take to succeed as an independent Professional Organizer.  You’ve first got to have plenty of guts, ambition, and drive in order to conquer the many challenges you’re sure to encounter as an entrepreneur.   I would also say that it’s possibly equally important to not only have confidence in your skills, but also possess a nurturing and compassionate temperament in order to come alongside to serve, educate, motivate and inspire your clients in their unique organizational goals and challenges.   

Best wishes on your organizing journey!


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