Before I ever began the process of renovating I took some
graph paper and drew out a scale version of the new room’s shape. I then
measured my furniture and took a piece of heavy cardstock and drew and cut-out
squares and rectangles the size of all my furniture. I labeled each one so I
would know what they were.
This really helped me in designing my space. I must
have tried a hundred designs before I settled on what I felt would work best. Before
I decided to get my Kallex from Ikea I went online and got the measurements for
the piece I wanted and made a rectangle to size to figure out the placement. It
turned out to be too big, so I went with the next smallest size. I also decided to get rid of several items
because they were either not needed anymore, or I was able to consolidate my
things to fit in 1 cabinet instead of two.
As you can see, it was a perfect fit! I still have some more paper packs to put away, but I've gotten my stash to a much more reasonable amount.
One end of the room complete |
As I put things back
into my newly renovated craft room I asked myself, “Do I really need that?” If
the answer was “No.” then I would put it into my give away pile. If the answer
was “Yes” then I would quiz myself.
“When will I use it?” “What will I use it for?” ”How many of these do I really need?” (you know what I mean!) This question helped me really narrow down my
paper stash. I had multiple sheets of the sane themed paper. I’d keep 2-3 and get rid of
the rest. And in the case of storage containers I
asked myself, “Do I have something that will work better or hold more?”
Any paper that was faded, torn or wrinkled I threw away. The
good sheets I packaged up by color and gave them to anyone that was interested.
The rest I donated to a women’s shelter for their store. I went through all of my paints, pens, and
color pencils. If they were dried out, hard to write with, or I had duplicates
they went into my give away box. Once something went in there it stayed in
there and I tried to remove at least one box from the house weekly. I sold some
of my equipment and furniture on an online garage sale. I’ve kept the money
from the sales in an envelope and it’s now my rainy day craft fund.
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