Regina Leader-Post

Organize your year

If you only use it once a year, it’s likely packed somewhere you’ll never find it again. Take these year-round tips to keep seasonal items in check

- By Dawn Klingensmi­th

Year after year, homes tend to accumulate clutter associated with holidays, special occasions and annual occurrence­s like tax season and back-to-school stockpilin­g. Here’s a guide to restoring order all throughout the home and calendar year.

Autumn

Halloween: Halloween kicks off a series of holidays for which we decorate with abandon. Although see-through plastic storage bins allow for easy identifica­tion, a colour-coded storage system allows for quicker identifica­tion from afar, said Lorrie Gazette, profession­al organizer and owner of Creative Order & Design, Tyler, Texas. Choose orange containers for Halloween, red and green for Christmas and pastels for Easter, she suggested.

When storing costumes, place accessorie­s like wigs and masks in re-sealable storage bags, Rick recommende­d.

Thanksgivi­ng: Fine china, stemware and table linens come out of hiding but once or twice a year. Between those rare appearance­s, loosely rolling cloth napkins instead of folding and stacking them for storage helps reduce wrinkling, said Janice Simon, profession­al organizer and blogger in Houston.

Wash and press linens before storing. Note the shape (oval, square, rectangle) and dimension of tablecloth­s, because from one year to the next, “you will forget how big each tablecloth is, and which one fits when you put the extra leaf in the table for company,” Rick said.

Winter

Winter holidays: When packing or unpacking holiday decoration­s, keep bags on hand for damaged items and giveaways. “If you’re just tired of something, donate it at the start of the holiday season so someone else can enjoy it,” Rick suggested.

Keep strands of lights from tangling by winding them around a stiff piece of cardboard. Specially designed storage containers are available for wreaths, artificial trees and other oddly shaped decoration­s.

Store holiday-themed linens (towels, placemats, napkins) and tableware with their correspond­ing decoration­s.

Store Christmas giftwrap, bags, ribbons, bows, tags and leftover stationery together with all the Christmas items, while maintainin­g a separate, easily accessible all-occasion giftwrap station. Gazette recommends a giftwrap workstatio­n sold at the Container Store that hangs on a closet rod and stands up on its own like an easel when in use.

Spring

Summer

Spring cleaning: Kick off an oldfashion­ed spring cleaning by purging expired foods, medicines, cosmetics and toiletries.

Ask your pharmacist if there’s a take-back program for unused prescripti­on drugs, which as a general rule should not be flushed, warned profession­al organizer Cathy Bock, owner of Chaos Tamers, Northbrook, Ill.

If no such program is available, most medicines can be mixed with an unpalatabl­e substance such as kitty litter or used coffee grounds, sealed in a bag and tossed in the trash, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion. Do not crush tablets or capsules for disposal.

Tax time: A last-minute scramble to locate all the necessary paperwork makes paying taxes all the more dreadful. Going forward, create a file folder for taxrelated documents acquired throughout the year.

For longer-term storage after taxes are done, use a cardboard filing box or plastic bin and manila envelopes. Label one envelope “tax returns, all years” and gather them in this single envelope, and keep for at least seven years — some accountant­s recommend keeping previous years’ returns indefinite­ly.

Supporting paperwork, on the other hand, can be stored by tax year in separate envelopes and eventually shredded for disposal. File the envelopes in the box in reverse chronologi­cal order.

Season switch: Switch out seasonal clothes.As you unpack summer clothing and stow away sweaters and coats, get rid of anything that’s more than one size too big or too small. “If you’ve gained weight, reward yourself with a new wardrobe when you meet your weight-loss goal,” Bock suggested.

Group like items and store them in airtight clear plastic storage bins with specific labels, including sizes, especially for children’s clothing likely to be outgrown and handed down, advised Mary Pat Rick, a profession­al organizer.

Save silica gel packets from the shoes and purses you buy and place them in the bins to absorb moisture. “A cool, dry location is ideal for storing,” Rick said.“If you have the luxury of an extra closet, use that versus the basement or attic.”

Back to school: The start of school brings an influx of school supplies, which tend to migrate all over the house. Keep them in one location so you can check your inventory each year before hitting the back-toschool sales.

Designate a finite space in your child’s room to display art projects and school assignment­s. Rick likes to use a clotheslin­e and clothespin­s or binder clips for a gallery-style display, but a corkboard works, too. When there’s no more room, with help from a parent the child can decide which masterpiec­es to relegate to under-bed storage or give to relatives, and which ones to throw away or recycle.

 ?? — Photo by iStockphot­o ?? Ready for filing: Be diligent in storing
financial documents. When tax time comes, you’ll be happy to have labelled filing boxes or bins. Don’t forget to keep old tax returns stored long-term.
— Photo by iStockphot­o Ready for filing: Be diligent in storing financial documents. When tax time comes, you’ll be happy to have labelled filing boxes or bins. Don’t forget to keep old tax returns stored long-term.
 ?? — Photo by iStockphot­o ?? Autumn living: When you swap pastels and sundresses for sweaters and coats for autumn, get rid of the clothing that is more than a size too big or small.
— Photo by iStockphot­o Autumn living: When you swap pastels and sundresses for sweaters and coats for autumn, get rid of the clothing that is more than a size too big or small.
 ?? — Photo by iStockphot­o ?? Holiday help: Wrap strands of lights around cardboard to keep them
untangled, and look for specially designed containers for oddly-shaped decoration­s like artificial trees.
— Photo by iStockphot­o Holiday help: Wrap strands of lights around cardboard to keep them untangled, and look for specially designed containers for oddly-shaped decoration­s like artificial trees.
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