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?

GIVEAWAY–Red Gold tomato kit (winner announced)

Hello my lovelies! Happy Monday morning. I just hopped on the Random Number Generator. There are 25 distinct comments (not counting my replies, or duplicate commenters) and . . . Random number generator The winner is lucky #13, Phyllis Slavens! (my “kindred spirit in the squiggly line, heh heh). Congratulations Phyllis, and I’ll shoot you an email in a few to connect you to the Red Gold people sending your kit.

Thanks to everyone for commenting and participating! You guys are the bomb-diggity. You all got tomato kits in my heart. =)

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Hey guys! Red Gold sent me a lovely little kit with various flavors of diced and crushed tomatoes, a bright red apron and a wooden spoon (a nice wooden spoon too–thick and smooth and ready to stir some large pot of stew or something). They’re doing some promotions like crockpot giveaways (for 3 weeks starting Sept 17th) that sound pretty cool. So when they kindly offered to send the same kit to one of my readers, I was like, why not? Especially since they’re Indiana-based, and grow their tomatoes in Indiana, Ohio and Michigan. Go Midwest, go! (yes, we love the Midwest) Plus, everyone can use a can of diced tomatoes. If you need ideas, let me suggest this Lentil and Sweet Potato Soup, which I’m slated to make later on today (and I’m using one of my free cans of tomatoes from Red Gold). DSC_0097 Or this amazing, flavorful Pollo Alla Cacciatora. Mmmmm. It’s a great meal for freezing the leftovers, fyi. DSC_0074 Or one of my all-time favorite recipes, this Indian-style Chicen Curry. DSC_0181 This recipe will use up those crushed tomatoes for a good cause: your palate. Now I’m hungry. Anyway, if you’d like to receive the free Red Gold kit (and are located in the U.S.), just leave a comment below! You can say anything–like your favorite thing to make with tomatoes if you’d like to be theme-appropriate. Or a superhero sound like KAPOW. Or you can be a rebel and leave a single character, like + or =. Or, my favorite, the squiggly line: ~ (and does anyone know what that squiggly line is, and what function it serves?) I’ll draw a random number on Monday September 22nd and let you know who the lucky guy or gal is. I’ll contact the winner by email and Red Gold will send your treat in the mail. Good luck!