Martha Stewart's Organizing: The Manual for Bringing Order to Your Life, Home & Routines
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Organization
Time Management
Gardening
Home Improvement
Storage Solutions
Family Bonding
Holiday Celebration
Domestic Bliss
Home Sweet Home
Love Triangle
Coming of Age
Self-Discovery
Mentorship
Prophecy
Power Struggle
Home Organization
Cooking
Home Decor
Cleaning
Storage
About this ebook
Trust Martha to help you master all things organizing—sorting, purging, tidying, and simplifying your life—with smart solutions and inspiration. Here, she offers her best guidance, methods, and DIY projects for organizing in and around your home. Topics include room-by-room strategies (how to sort office paperwork, when to purge the garage or attic), seasonal advice (when to swap out bedding and clothing, how to put away holiday decorations), and day-by-day or week-by-week plans for projects such as de-cluttering, house cleaning, creating a filing system, overhauling the closet, and more. Martha’s indispensable expertise walks you through goal-setting, principles of organizing, useful supplies, and creating systems for ongoing success. A look into Martha’s own personal calendars offers a template for scheduling essential tasks. Last, plenty of strategies, how-tos, timelines, and checklists will help you stay organized all year long.
Martha Stewart
Martha Stewart is America’s most trusted lifestyle expert and teacher, and the author of more than 100 books on cooking, entertaining, crafts, homekeeping, gardening, weddings, and decorating.
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- You Can Become A Master In Your Business - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I thought this was a good book with useful advice. I liked the breakdown of months with suggested duties. Would have liked more photos to illustrate points made.
Book preview
Martha Stewart's Organizing - Martha Stewart
To all of us who want to live fulfilling lives but need just a bit of help organizing everything that will help us attain that goal.
Copyright © 2020 by Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc.
Page 287 constitutes an extension of the copyright page.
Note to the readers: Due to differing conditions, tools, and individual skills, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt assumes no responsibility for any damages, injuries suffered, or losses incurred as a result of following the information published in this book. Before beginning any project, review the instructions carefully, and if any doubts or questions remain, consult local experts or authorities. Because codes and regulations vary greatly, you always should check with authorities to ensure that your project complies with all applicable local codes and regulations. Always read and observe all of the safety precautions provided by manufacturers of any tools, equipment, or supplies, and follow all accepted safety procedures.
All rights reserved.
For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to [email protected] or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016.
www.hmhbooks.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.
ISBN 978-1-328-50825-6
ISBN 978-1-328-50669-6 (ebook)
v3.0521
CONTENTS
PART ONE
Organize Your Year
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
PART TWO
Organize Your Home
Entryway
Kitchen
Bathroom
Living Room
Bedroom
Laundry Room
Home Office
Kids’ Rooms
Utility Spaces
PART THREE
Organize Your Routine
Clean
Launder
Garden
Home
Cook
Entertain
Celebrate
Kids
Pets
Wellness
Templates
Index
FROM MARTHA
Plenty of advice has been offered in the past few years on the subject of organizing: organizing your life, your family, your daily routine, your schedule, your closets and drawers. Some of it attempts to simplify the process—just discard what doesn’t please you, fold everything into tiny packages or put it in small boxes, make lists and pin them to your door or place them on your desk. These are good starting points, but the subject is so much larger and so much more important than that might suggest. An orderly and organized life calls for creating and then sticking to clear rules, pre-set schedules, and to-do lists that are dictated by your own lifestyle and that of your family. This deliberate, individualized approach will save you so much time in the long run when dealing with life’s surprises. It will save you from disorganization and leave you free to spend less time on chores, more time for the activities that prove meaningful to you.
In this book we have arranged living
and organizing
strategies into a clear format to help guide you, concentrating on the items that have to be done on a regular basis. We begin by looking at the year, breaking down what needs to happen, month by month. I’m a big proponent of keeping a calendar and populating it with every task, appointment, and event, big and small, down to staking the peonies, grooming my dogs, sharpening my kitchen knives, setting up my grandchildren’s sailing lessons, and ordering the Thanksgiving turkey. This practice will help you live a more productive and fulfilling life, day in and day out. I certainly couldn’t have managed my busy schedule without it.
We then move through the home, room by room (even section by section, and, in the case of the kitchen, drawer by drawer), offering valuable tips you can easily apply to your own living spaces. Lastly, we outline the most common routines—such as cooking, gardening, and cleaning—into manageable steps, with checklists and schedules to help you handle each one efficiently and effectively.
I’ve shared a wealth of tips and techniques for getting and staying organized in this one book, the culmination of decades of research gathered for Living and my TV shows and online videos, as well as through my personal experience. I hope it becomes your own trusted source of organizing wisdom for decades to come.
How (and Why) to Use This Book
THERE’S A REASON you are holding this book in your hands. Perhaps you’re feeling that there’s too much clutter and chaos in your home. Or maybe you’d just like to see your daily life run a bit more smoothly. This book is here to help you get a handle on all of it—to get organized and stay that way. By using the three-part approach laid out in these pages—month by month, room by room, and routine by routine—you’ll gain a broad grasp of what you need to do, as well as step-by-step how-tos to help you get it all done.
Big-picture advice is complemented by projects
that solve common organizing conundrums (such as making a command center, page 90), annotated images to demonstrate by example (page 102, for instance), convenient charts and checklists for managing recurring chores (such as purging the pantry, page 110), and of course Martha Musts,
offering personal best tips on particularly helpful topics.
Start with the monthly calendars in Part One: There you’ll find entries for each day. These calendars follow Martha’s planner regarding what to do when. Adapt them to your own schedule and lifestyle. They are meant not to overwhelm but to reinforce the idea that doing a little bit at a time can keep you from having to do a whole lot at once—and also to remind you to schedule in the leisure time that helps keep life balanced.
A handful of each month’s entries are bolded in the calendar and described in detail on the pages that immediately follow; they fall into color-coded categories (see key, below), which correlate to routines that will be discussed in more depth in Part Three. Seasonal tasks, especially those pertaining to the garden, will depend on where you reside, so adjust those dates and duties accordingly.
Category Key
CLEAN
LAUNDER
GARDEN
HOME
COOK
ENTERTAIN
CELEBRATE
KIDS
PETS
WELLNESS
Part Two is all about organizing each area of the home. This is where you really take control of your stuff, as well as of the tasks associated with keeping each space in order, using a two-step system: First size up each space to discern its particular needs, and then strategize the storage. Practical, hands-on tips will help you with challenging spots—sinks and counters in the kitchen, shelves and bookcases in the living room, and closets in bedrooms and the entryway.
Finally, Part Three sets forth the supplies, strategies, and schedules for everyday routines (see the color-coded key above), guided by a less-is-best ideology: the fewer the supplies, the less need for storage; fewer steps means organizing gets done faster and stays that way, so you have more time for all the things you’d rather be doing.
There’s no right or wrong way to organize your life and home—that’s why this book is designed to give you options. For example, when updating your own daily/weekly planner at the start of each month (or the beginning of each year), you can turn to the calendars in Part One for reminders and inspiration. When a particular space (such as the pantry or refrigerator) is in need of a refresh, you can go right to the appropriate guide in Part Two. And if it’s time to revamp your cleaning routine or get the kids’ schedules back on track, you can flip to those sections in Part Three. Any way you go about it, clear instruction and easy-to-implement expertise are there to help.
Organizing Principles and Provisions
Before making your way through this book, take a few moments to familiarize yourself with the following best practices.
Getting Started
Clutter prevents you from seeing a room’s potential. To pare down efficiently and effectively, employ the four-box formula (keep, toss, donate, sell) and the following guidelines, which will also help you maintain the space once it is functioning as it should.
Set realistic goals: Being too ambitious can sabotage the best of intentions. Instead of aiming to put your entire home in order in just two months, spread out the tasks over the year. Rather than digging through decades of paperwork in a single session, set aside an hour or two each day to pore over one year at a time, shredding, recycling, and re-filing as you go. Similarly, don’t expect sudden shifts in your everyday routine; recognize that any long-lasting change will take persistence.
Tackle one room or routine at a time: Start with high-traffic areas like the kitchen and bathroom, as this will give you the greatest sense of accomplishment and keep you motivated to go through the remaining rooms. If a whole room is still too daunting, pinpoint one component (kitchen cabinets and drawers, for example) at a time. When evaluating your routines, focus on what’s most important first, whether it’s cooking or gardening.
Do a little every day: In addition to devoting entire weekends to deeper organizational dives, make an effort to take quick and easy steps throughout the week. This will keep matters from getting too out of hand. You’ll find a few time-management tips in Part Three for when you have five, ten, or fifteen minutes; use these as templates for coming up with your own short-order tasks.
Schedule it in: Don’t leave organizing to chance. Using the calendars in Part One and schedules in Part Three, block off time in your planner for daily, weekly, monthly, seasonal, and annual to-dos. Set reminders to stave off procrastination. Reward yourself with a spa day or dinner with friends whenever you’ve ticked all the boxes.
Next Steps
Once you’ve pared down your belongings, you’ll need to establish a system for putting what’s left in good order. There’s no one-size-fits-all solution, but heeding the principles below will ensure you find what works for you.
Give everything a home: Stowing objects in attractive vessels, hanging items on hooks or peg rails, and even having handy catchall baskets and bins will make for a pulled-together dwelling. Knowing where it all goes also makes it easier to put it all back—particularly important for getting kids to pitch in with the on-going cleanup.
Group like with like: Sorting different articles by category (e.g., toy trucks in one bin, puzzles in another; hair products on a designated shelf, cosmetics in a drawer divider; metal spatulas in this crock, wooden spoons in that one) will save time and effort when using them and when figuring out where things go.
Keep it where you use it: Storing things where they are most often needed (pots and pans over an island, a mending kit in the laundry room) can shave precious minutes off your everyday chores. Consider frequency of use as well as proximity, putting staple supplies within easy reach and stashing the rest where they aren’t taking up valuable space.
Make the most of every inch: This maxim proves helpful no matter a room’s size. Exploit the space below a bed or coffee table or above a door or window frame; mine the far reaches of a coat or linen closet; optimize vertical wall space (such as with pegboard, shelves, or towel bars). Use a desk riser to open up space under a computer monitor and an over-the-door rack to create extra storage in a kitchen or bathroom. Add hooks and racks inside kitchen cabinets and doors. Put the side of a refrigerator to work with magnetized systems.
Use multitasking furniture: It’s easy to find versatile pieces that help sneak in more storage. Ottomans and chests are great for living rooms or bedrooms, benches and cubbies for entryways or mudrooms. A dresser can double as a nightstand, a chair in the bathroom is seating and spare-towel holder in one. Rolling carts can be parked anywhere and moved as the need arises. Same for a coat tree, which can be relocated to a guest room when its winter shift in the entryway is over.
Create zones: Similar to grouping like with like, visually or mentally assigning different tasks to different parts of a room can help you stay on-task. This could mean dividing a desk into bill-paying, correspondence, and creative stations, or housing garden and lawn tools, sporting gear, and auto supplies in separate zones in a garage.
Top 10 Organizing All-Stars
With these hardworking supplies on hand, taming clutter will be all the easier—and your home all the neater. Orderliness awaits.
1. Bins and Baskets: Clear plastic bins let you see what’s inside, perfect for a kid’s room or garage (with tight-fitting lids for long-term storage). Fabric bins or woven baskets create harmony in high-traffic areas such as the living room or bathroom; same for attractive totes, which can double as hampers.
2. Food Storage Containers: Airtight, food-safe jars and canisters are a must for decanting bulk purchases and nonperishables in the kitchen. Those made of glass keep the contents visible. Nesting sets are convenient for storing make-aheads and leftovers, and save space when not in use.
3. Labels: There’s a label to match every organizing need, including manila tags or peel-and-stick versions; a label maker quickly prints out IDs for spice jars, pantry containers and shelves, file folders, and other household items.
4. Hooks: Wall hooks keep stuff off the floor throughout the home, including the garage and basement. Cup hooks expand storage under shelves or cabinets; S hooks work with pegboards or towel bars. Adhesive hooks offer temporary storage, such as during the holidays.
5. Trays: Use these to group items for a cohesive effect, such as on a coffee table, dresser, or nightstand—and on kitchen counters, bathroom surfaces, and entry consoles (think small caddies for keys and loose change). A larger tray turns an ottoman or bench into a table, for extra storage.
6. Drawer Inserts: Virtually every drawer has its own solution, from mesh inserts for a desk or junk drawer; bamboo inserts for the kitchen; and fabric or Lucite for dressers and closet bins.
7. Shaker-Style Peg Rails: Mount these in a bathroom to hold robes and spare towels, in the entryway to keep jackets and backpacks off the floor, and in a utility room to hang brooms and dustpans.
8. Shelves: Make the most of unused wall space in practically any room with mounted shelves and ledges, choosing the size and style that serve the greatest need.
9. Tension Rods: They’re not just for curtains but also for organizing cabinets (horizontally to keep cutting boards upright, for example, or vertically to hang cleaning supplies under a kitchen sink).
10. Lazy Susans: Spices are just the beginning; this old-school spinner will keep other ingredients (in a pantry or refrigerator), toiletries, laundry provisions—you name it— within easy reach.
No organizing toolkit is complete without a well-tended planner. On the following pages, you’ll find Martha’s calendars for the year, which address her seasonal tasks and important dates—like when she sharpens the gardening tools, reorganizes her pantries, or hosts a dinner party. Personalize each month with home maintenance to-dos, health care appointments, and special occasions (birthdays and weddings and graduations). You’ll see that each day has an entry, but none has too many—because doing a bit every day is the best way to get everything done without getting overwhelmed. We’ve also made sure to include hiking, apple picking, theatergoing, and other recreational activities, in hopes that you’ll add your own favorite diversions—these, after all, are what make everything else worthwhile.
January
New year, new you, new outlook—this month is about recharging your health and well-being. Set goals that matter, such as staying active and connected. Planning and preparing are also on January’s agenda, using checklists to make sure you cover all the essentials.
ORGANIZE YOUR YEAR
JANUARY
*Chinese New Year Falls between January 21 and February 20, determined by the Chinese lunar calendar.
Wellness
Establish Healthy Habits
Your resolve may have faded over the course of the busy year prior, especially during the holidays, but now is the time to start fresh. Make a list of goals for your health and well-being.
1. Rethink what you eat, with a focus on whole foods (page 18).
2. Reevaluate your exercise routine: Look at what’s working and what isn’t. Schedule sessions with a trainer; sign up for skiing lessons; register for a race in the spring and start training now.
3. Practice mindfulness and meditation: Start with five minutes of deep breathing upon waking and again at the end of the day, using a meaningful word or image as a prompt.
4. Make time for a social life: People who engage with others live longer, happier lives. Take a cooking class with a friend, volunteer at a local museum, or join a running group.
HOME
Review Your Financial Plan for the Year
Prioritize this now, before other distractions set in.
Schedule an annual-review meeting with your financial planner, if you have one.
Evaluate short- and long-term savings goals, and determine if you’re setting aside enough each month to achieve them.
Establish, or review, savings (ideally via direct deposit) and expense-tracking systems.
Order your free annual credit reports and/or sign up for credit monitoring through your bank or credit card provider.
Review home, car, and medical insurance policies and needs.
Reassess your investment portfolio.
Consider increasing 401(k) and retirement plan contributions.
Celebrate
Put Away Decorations
When you take the time to put away decorations in an orderly fashion, they’ll be all the easier to put back up again next season—and in the same pristine shape.
LIGHTS: Test string lights, then loop each strand into a neat bundle, wrapping ends around each one (or a cardboard rectangle) to secure. Place each strand in a resealable plastic bag, leaving air inside to act as a cushion; place bags in a bin.
ORNAMENTS: Store ornaments in a segmented cardboard box made for this purpose (sold at home organization stores), or reuse a box from a wine store. First wrap fragile ornaments individually in acid-free tissue paper. Clear plastic storage bins are also convenient and let you see the contents; keep tissue-wrapped ornaments and delicate bows in zippered plastic bags with some air trapped inside for extra padding. Store decorations where humidity and temperature don’t fluctuate throughout the year.
Celebrate
Recycle the Christmas Tree
Take your tree outside: Lay a drop cloth or old sheet on the floor next to the tree, wrap the trunk in a towel, and then wrap the whole tree in the cloth, enclosing all branches. Carry the tree trunk-first through your door to keep branches from catching on the frame and breaking off.
Use it as winter mulch: Rather than leaving your tree curbside, remove its branches with a handsaw, then crisscross them over perennial beds to a thickness of several inches to protect plants from snow and frost; remove in the spring. If you don’t need the mulch in your own yard, ask your local sanitation or environmental department if it has a program to supply mulch to local residents.
Martha Must
I like to give money plants (Pilea peperomioides) on New Year’s Day and as birthday gifts, because they are believed to bring prosperity. Since they are easy to care for and readily produce new babies,
they make lovely first plants for children.
Cook
Focus on Whole Foods
January is a good time to clean up your eating habits. Fill your pantry with healthy basics that you can build meals around, such as dried beans, whole grains, and pasta. Keep leafy greens and fresh fruit on hand (and frozen berries—a good, longer-lasting pick). Carve out time each week to plan meals and pack lunches and snacks daily to avoid poor last-minute decisions.
For on-the-go breakfasts, assemble fresh-fruit and yogurt parfaits the night before. To make the superfood smoothie parfait shown here, make a pudding
of chia seeds soaked in unsweetened coconut milk, maple syrup, and vanilla extract, then layer with fruit and plain yogurt; refrigerate overnight. Top with a green smoothie (this one is spinach and mango).
IN-SEASON PICKS
BELGIAN ENDIVE This tender vegetable works well in salads or braised as a side dish. Choose endive heads with crisp, tightly packed leaves at the market; wrap them in paper towels and then refrigerate in plastic bags for a week or so.
CITRUS These fruits offer bright