Let's Organize Something Today
#431
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2016
Location: West Bend, WI
Posts: 2,229
Over the weekend Tuesday Morning (very near to us) had a sale. Looks like a sewing machine carrier tote but is a "yarn" tote. Got it for $29.99. Holds a lot. I was able to fit extra yarn in it including embroidery kits and some crewel products. Side pockets hold needle packs and darning eggs and crochet and knitting needles. That cleared a large space for nothing, just opened an area for breathing.
Great find, though!
#432
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: Va.
Posts: 5,753
Tkhooper and Nammie- good points! I have been doing better at just pushing through and finishing a project if it's something that can be quickly completed before starting new ones. I don't always have that option since I'm involved in several collaborative projects with another artist. These are the ones that I need to be able to put somewhere out of the way until he can get to work on them.
The other difficulty is that since my creative process involves a lot of experimentation and improvisation, I sometimes get to a stuck point with a piece and need to let it simmer for a while until I can figure out what it needs. These are the ones that I need to figure out how to set aside so that they are out of my working space, but not Out-of-sight, Out-of-mind. -- the poster board idea may be the way to go.
The other difficulty is that since my creative process involves a lot of experimentation and improvisation, I sometimes get to a stuck point with a piece and need to let it simmer for a while until I can figure out what it needs. These are the ones that I need to figure out how to set aside so that they are out of my working space, but not Out-of-sight, Out-of-mind. -- the poster board idea may be the way to go.
#433
If they are larger I'm think of the toy train sets that people used to set up a pulley system so they could be up near the ceiling but cranked down easily when the kids wanted to play with it. If I didn't have a cathedral ceiling I'd be very tempted. But then I'd just have more ufo's.
#437
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Nebraska
Posts: 3,257
I use these project boxes and love them. But I would like to find a good place or way to store them, too. Mine are currently stacked around my sewing area. Will be moving my sewing area to the basement soon and would like a good system for storing them, other than stacking around the room. Currently searching Pinterest for organizing ideas. Would love to hear what others have come up with.
#439
Power Poster
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Between the dashes of a tombstone
Posts: 12,716
Good for you craftiladi..yes work gets in the way, but you persevered...I'm home today, but will be gone tomorrow early so want to get as much done and still get to bed early....
#440
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 9,299
Hey, it's good to read everyone's progress. Every little bit helps. I've been sorting through scraps and giving away everything that I don't want to see again (unless it's in someone else's project!). That's been my focus today (and yesterday and every day this week). Of course my sewing room has so many piles of things headed for various destinations. Looks like the back room of a post office--organized chaos.
The project boxes are great for strings, 2.5 candies, WIPs, etc. So far I've been stacking them in my IKEA storage thing (deep, open, two-shelf nightstand, basically. I don't know the name of it. Had it forever.)
Keep up the good work, everyone.
The project boxes are great for strings, 2.5 candies, WIPs, etc. So far I've been stacking them in my IKEA storage thing (deep, open, two-shelf nightstand, basically. I don't know the name of it. Had it forever.)
Keep up the good work, everyone.
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