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Crafty Storage Solutions
Creating storage for craft and hobby items can be quite challenging
- what to do with all those parts and pieces? Here are some of my
favorite tips for conquering craft clutter, and finding a storage
solution you can live with.
GENERAL HOBBY STORAGE:
Stash It! Under bed storage boxes with lids (I recommend plastic
since they last longer than cardboard), tackle boxes and fishing
lure boxes for storing small items. Purge! Get rid of some of the
things you've tucked away but are out of style (or your taste has
changed). Donate to church craft groups or senior citizens groups.
BONUS ROOM:
Use business furniture or a double clothes closet in a bedroom to
create a niche for crafting or sewing. The doors can be closed to
hide your work in progress. A folding screen can easily disguise a
work area.
WORKTABLE:
A card table or metal banquet table stores under the bed when not
in use. This is great if your hobby room doubles as a bedroom. My
husband has even used a large piece of plywood over the spare
bedroom mattress as a workspace. This can easily be stored when
guests visit.
SPECIAL NEEDS STORAGE
- Utilize caddies or totes for tall items.
- Vertically hung knotted rope or horizontal dowel rod dispenses
spools of ribbon.
- Use toilet paper rolls (covered in cloth or contact paper) to
organize tall things (paintbrushes, scissors, pencils) in shallow
tubs or totes.
- For glues and paints, make a 3-sided box with 45 degree
slanted sides and notched back for upright bottle storage
(constructed from foam board or cardboard), then tuck into a
plastic shoe box. If you really feel creative, list the contents
of each box on an index card. The card can then be taped to the
box, or stored in a card file or binder. This makes a portable
inventory to take to the craft store when purchasing supplies.
- Tackle boxes are great for storing needle work. They are
portable, and the small trays are just the right size for needles,
thread and buttons. Film canisters with lids store small buttons,
and empty thermometer cases with lids are ideal for long needles.
- Beads: For smaller things (beads, for instance), you can use
divided fishing lure boxes (the clear plastic ones with a hinged
lid). It keeps them separated and is portable. There also is a
rolling plastic box that keeps lots of small items intact. I've
seen these at discount stores and in mail order catalogs.
These are a few tips sent in by readers that are not only useful
but very frugal. By utilizing these simple tools for organizing
your hobby materials, you will spend less time searching and more
time crafting.
Debbie Williams is an organizing strategist and parent educator
who offers tools and training to help you put your house in order.
She is the author of Put Your House In Order. Learn more at
http://www.organizedtimes.com/
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