Los Angeles Times

Purposeful packing

BY BONNIE MCCARTHY >>> Trimming the tree and decking the halls is a party — taking it all down and packing it away is not. If you’re the one left holding the bin when it comes time to stow the stockings and retire the mistletoe, read on:

- home@latimes.com

Where to start

Dorothy Breininger, a.k.a. Dorothy the Organizer and contributi­ng expert on the A&E show “Hoarders,” said she asks clients to set a date for un-decorating. “Calendar it now,” she said, “and write down a song that motivates you so you can have it playing while you are taking stuff down … the associatio­n helps get us going.”

Start prepping for next year

Certified profession­al organizer Laura Ellis, president of the Los Angeles chapter of the National Assn. of Productivi­ty and Organizing Profession­als (NAPO) and owner of Organized by Ellis, recommends taking pictures of decoration­s before taking them down. “It will help with setup next year and make it easier to delegate if a family member wants to pitch in … they can use the pictures as a guideline.”

Gather tools and supplies

“I suggest bringing in a folding table,” Breininger said. “I want you to be putting your decoration­s away on something that is at least waist-high … somehow that makes it all so much easier.”

Then grab the stepladder, packing supplies, containers, labeling items and anything else you might need. “Bring out all these things in advance,” Breininger said, “rather than, ‘Oh, shoot, now I have to go get the ladder …’ ”

Set a goal

Approach un-decorating with a goal of eliminatin­g two to five items. “As you’re putting decoration­s away, think about something you didn’t like, didn’t use, didn’t work or didn’t have the same meaning this year,” Breininger said. “Give yourself the gift of having less next year.” She adds: “Put up a sign to eliminate two to five things — I bet you’ll do more than that. There’s freedom that comes along with that, and you know you’re making your life easier for next year.”

Just ditch it

Ellis suggests starting with the lowhanging fruit: broken or faded decoration­s.

“It’s good to be constantly editing,” said Ellis, “every year when you open that box be honest about what you really use” and get rid of the rest.

When it’s hard to part with items that

never see the light of day, Louisa Gravelle, a Redondo Beach-based profession­al organizer and owner of New Leaf Organizing, suggests packing them into a holding box to review in six months.

Gravelle plays this game with her clients: Put all your decorating items into one of these three categories: the strangers, the friends and the acquaintan­ces. “The strangers have to go, donate them; the friends are who you keep; and the acquaintan­ces are where you have to choose.” Put those into the holding box, too.

When it comes to storing holiday cards from friends, Gravelle advises limiting what you keep to two to five cards per year, then culling through the stash annually.

On your mark, get set …

Time yourself. “Find out how long it takes you to take down the decoration­s,” Breininger said. “Write it on a piece of paper and put it in with your decoration­s. … Next year you’ll know how long to expect and it won’t be so daunting.”

That’s one resolution down ...

 ?? Ryan McVay Getty Images ?? AS HOLIDAY DECORATION­S are taken down, keep them organized and labeled for storage. It’ll make next year easier.
Ryan McVay Getty Images AS HOLIDAY DECORATION­S are taken down, keep them organized and labeled for storage. It’ll make next year easier.

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