Category Archives: Home & Kids

Organization Station

I’ve been derelict in my blogging duties–more on why very soon. But in the meantime, my sister Erica has come to the rescue and has written this post! Take it away, blondypants!

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Does anyone else out there have this problem? 495 I call it the disaster zone- it’s that place in your house where things just tend to…. accumulate. 503 A sort of vortex of chaos and cripppity-crappity that is as unavoidable as gravity. Mail, keys, bits of paper, grocery lists, glasses, wallets, phones, watches, change…. Random things that need to easily be accessible but that don’t really have a good home. So they end up on side tables, chairs in bedrooms, dressers, decorative entry tables (no longer so decorative with all that junk, eh?), coffee tables, and, in my case, kitchen counters. I mean….seriously. Look at that mess!!! Ugh. Brings me down just to look at this picture. 504 I dearly love order. Things properly put away, uncluttered counters, tidy shelves. Especially with our open-concept general living area, it’s easy for the whole house to feel like a pit of despair when even just one section is chaotic. Okay, okay…. My house isn’t always tidy–far from it with two little munchkins whose delight is to spread puffs, toys, drool, and books about in plentiful quantities. 198 But especially when the counter is messy, the whole place feels awful. And when the counters are clear and clean and lovely, somehow the living room, dining room, and kitchen all feel calm and peaceful and neat, despite the kiddo-chaos. So! For months….really for the entirety of the 2+ years we’ve lived in our house, this area has been a challenge. I would pick it up, frantic to FINALLY get it under control, only to have it devolve right back into it’s chaotic state by evening. Even before the babies arrived! Then….bam. Suddenly, one day about a month ago, it dawned on me. As I try to practice in the rest of my house, each thing needs a place. If it doesn’t have a designated spot to be put away, it will travel around, sit on top of surfaces where it doesn’t belong, and generally bring messiness to an otherwise orderly room. Wow. That took 2 years for me to realize. Haha? The only improvement in the Disaster Zone during the first two years of living here was to hang a little key rack from Tarjay above the counter so we could visually keep track of keys. My husband loved it, as did I, but it wasn’t enough to keep the Disaster Zone in check. In a stroke of inspiration that had been brewing for quite some time, I had a picture in my mind of a sort of hanging organizer with pockets for each item that we wanted easily available, and hooks along the bottom for our keys. This is what I came up with: 218 I love it. I basically just bought a framed chalkboard at Hobbitty Lobbitty (hi mom!) on sale, popped the chalkboard bit out, and fastened onto it some padding and burlap with pockets that I had sewn to the measurements of each item I wanted stored. 512 522 I painted and distressed the frame, picked up some nice and sturdy hooks to hang along the bottom, and attached picture-hanging deedlieboppers onto the back. I secured the now-covered chalkboard part back in the frame, put cute little labels on each pocket (for cuteness more than practicality, to be honest), and threw that little mama up on the wall where our key-hanging thingy used to be. 216 It’s the perfect location! We often come through the back door into the kitchen, so it’s easy to put our keys on the hooks, phones in the pockets for phones, wallets in their spots, etc. I have two little pockets for phone chargers, a pocket for pens and pencils, and we now hang our sunglasses and my normal glasses on a pocket too. 217 One of the reasons I used such sturdy hooks along the bottom is that when we move, and this hangs in a new location, we can use the hooks for heavier items than keys if we want to, like hats or umbrellas, or even a jacket. As a military family, I am always trying to think ahead to our next move so that the items that I make/buy for our home will be versatile enough to work in a different layout, climate, etc. It’s a fun challenge that I’ve really enjoyed as I’ve decorated and made each place we’ve lived into a home. It’s been a little over a month since I made the organization station, and I am very happy to report that the Disaster Zone is STILL clear!!!! Woo hoo!! 215 We have stuck to our resolution of dealing with mail as soon as it comes in, thus keeping the area on our counter clear. I am so pleased with this little project. It has proved to be incredibly useful, hung just in the right place, and with enough space to store what we want to have on hand. The most time consuming part of the project was making and sewing on the pockets. I think next time I will use canvas instead of burlap. I love how the burlap looks, but it’s a very unstable fabric. The amount of use and stretching that each pocket gets warrants a sturdier fabric. Live and learn, eh? Disaster Zone: dealt with. For now. There always seems to be some kind of a disaster-zone elf sneaking around making new areas messy…. I’m curious; what is your way of dealing with the tricky disaster zones in your house?

The source of my favorite outfits (and $20 for you to spend)

I’ve been posting about a lot of heavy stuff recently–and thanks to everyone for all the encouraging comments you’ve left. You guys are wonderful! And today the day has come to post about something just inane and fun. Clothes!

I’ve always been a thrifter. From Plato’s Closet to Salvation Army to the gigantic Rummage sale I’ve been volunteering for (and shopping at!) for a few years, I can barely abide spending full price on an item.

I’ve talked about ThredUp before, but I’m going to talk about it again–so brace yourselves! (part of the reason is because I just got a link that gives you $20 of free money to shop with, or a code that gets you 40% off if it’s your first order).

Basically, ThredUp is an online consignment store. You can use it to sell your old (like-new) clothes by ordering a free clean-out bag, filling it with stuff, and sending it to ThredUp (for free). They will pay you up front for all the “normal” items they accept (high end designer pieces are on a consignment structure instead). You can then cash that money out into your checking account and use it to buy two dozen lattes at Starbucks, or you can use it to shop on their site . . . which is normally the option I take.

You can also earn referral money–$10 for everyone you refer who places an order (so if you join by using my link you not only get $20 but you’re also basically giving me free clothes–thanks!! =)

Let me tell you why shopping on their site is so awesome.

You don’t just go on and randomly browse through random stuff while feeling frustrated that the awesome dress that made your heart go pitter pat is actually an XXS and you couldn’t fit in it to save your life: you can filter by size.

Or you can sort by wardrobe part: pants. Within pants, you can filter so you just get skinny leg denim for example. Or within jeans, so you just get jeggings–the level of detail at which you can break it down is quite impressive.

You can also add brand filters. So I can easily hop on and see all Banana Republic and Gap skinny leg jeans that are a size small or medium, (or 27 or 28, or 4 and 6–all options are available). Like dees:

thredup

If you already know your exact size for a given brand, this makes it really easy to find stuff that will probably look good.

Or you can browse their little boy clothes sizes 12m through 2T, and send a gift package of baby clothes to your friend who just had a baby (their smallest size is 12m–but babies grow!). Seriously–what a fun gift to send when you can’t make it to a baby shower in person!

They have maternity wear, too–next time I have a bun in the oven (Lord willing) I know where I’m headed for those extra long camis I wore day in and day out when I was pregnant with Alice.

My sister Erica and I even looked at cardigans together one time. She’s in Arizona, I’m in Chicago–but for a brief 10 minutes it was almost like we were on a shopping date together . . . almost. Ok, not really, because if we were actually together I’d be having a sugar crash in the Target dressing room and we’d be laughing uncontrollably, but it was still fun.

Another plus: ThredUp has awesome customer service. Once, they sent me a pair of leggings that the website said were Banana Republic, but instead were Rockin’ Republic. Hey, everyone makes mistakes. When I brought this to their attention, they immediately sent me a prepaid label to return the item (which I used to return a number of other things as well).

And one time, I placed an order. About an hour later got an email with a coupon from them for 20% off my purchase. “Ack!” I exclaimed while hitting my forehead on my desk repeatedly. The timing . . . the timing! So I emailed their Support Team saying “um . . . could you apply this 20% off to an order I just placed like an hour ago?”

They were like, “Yes! No problemo!”

and I was like, “Wow.”

I don’t know another company that would do that for you.

Which brings me to returns. Over half the things I order don’t fit right or I don’t end up liking. So being ready to make a return is a must if you’re going to have a happy experience. Returning things is easy: you have 30 days. You print a paper from their website showing what items from your order you’re sending back. If you order via their phone app, you get a prepaid (i.e., free) return label. If you don’t order via the phone app, you do have to return stuff the normal way and make a trip to the post office–but to me, that’s lost its intimidation.

Namely because I’ve come out of the whole shebang with outfits like this:

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It’s a loose-ish Gap dress that is perfect for the summer. It doesn’t cling, but it’s not quite a bag either.

photo 1

I also figured out I can hide my identity by placing the iphone camera over my eyes. Brilliant, eh?

This dress is a recent acquisition . . .

photo 1 copy

. . . and I just love the pattern:

photo 2 copyI was going to give more examples (I seriously wear something I’ve bought from them, like, every other day), but taking selfies is so . . . awkward.

Though here’s an adorable dress I got for Alice:

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So even if you don’t plan on using this site all the time, for your $20 of free stuff you can at least treat yourself to a scarf for $7.49 or $6.99, like one of these:

scarves

Or a T-shirt for $4.99 or $6.99 like one of these:

tshirts

Guys, I have become a shameless ThredUp apologist. And I don’t plan on stopping any time soon.

To get 40% off your first purchase (now through September 30th), use this code when you check out: BTX7Y9.

Hope you’re all having a great week!