scrapnnana
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Jun 29, 2014 18:58:47 GMT
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Post by scrapnnana on Apr 20, 2015 11:21:16 GMT
I have collected supplies for 18 years now. I have been a scrapping packrat for far too long.
I need to pare it down. What criteria do you use to purge? What do you do with the scrapping stuff you want to just give away? I am thinking there might be a women's shelter or someplace like that which would be happy to get my scrapping cast offs. How do I find such a place?
It's also not just scrapping stuff that I am trying to weed out. We are going to try to get our house ready to sell this summer in order to finally move halfway across the country, and that means declutter in a very, very big way, as well as renovate.
Right now my rules for what to keep vs. purge are:
1. Do I really love this enough to move it?
2. Is it something I use often? If not, how likely am I to use it again?
3. Is it easily replaced if I get rid of it, and need/want it later? If so, would it be cheaper to replace than to pay to move it?
Any other suggestions? I need to be fairly ruthless since we are expecting to have to pay our own moving expenses.
I also posted a similar thread on the NSBR board, but I need specific tips for where to donate scrapping stuff I purge.
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Post by alissa103 on Apr 20, 2015 14:15:55 GMT
I did something very similar 2 years ago when we moved for DH's job. We moved from a fairly large house with a bonus room over the garage I used for my scrap room (huge) to a much more expensive city. Our new house has a very small bedroom/office that we decided I would be able or make work as my scrap room. But it is probably 1/3 or even 1/4 of the size of my old space. I had a lot of downsizing to do!
Here's what I did. I touched every single item in my room and made a decision. * was I keeping it just because I had space? This applied to a lot of alterable items like blank picture frames, mini albums, etc. I am no longer doing much of that kind of thing so I let most, but not all of it, go. * how old was the product and did I still like it? I had paper & stickers from when I first started scrapping. A lot of it was ugly to me now. I also went through older paper pads and took out paper I did like and put the rest in a sell pile. *test all markers, pens, inks, paints, etc. Throw out dry ones. Sell duplicate colors. * if I havent used a tool in years or never really liked it, I sold it. I had journaling templates and stencils I never used anymore. Those went. * most magazines and idea books were sold or recycled. I wasn't using them for reference and they take a ton of space. * punches that I rarely used were sold bc I can cut shapes with my Silhouette. I kept the basics like circles, hearts, stars...
When I unpacked I was even more ruthless with my paper because it had to fit into a certain storage piece and I had no room for overflow.
During my first purge, I sold stuff in our garage sale. In our new city when I further purged, I found a craft sale that benefitted a woman's shelter. Anything left that we didn't sell we could donate to them and I did that.
Good luck! It's not fun but I'm actually so much happier in my new space with less stuff. It's super organized and neat. I love it.
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GiantsFan
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Jun 27, 2014 14:44:56 GMT
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Post by GiantsFan on Apr 20, 2015 15:41:58 GMT
When we moved to our current house I did a big purge (although my stash was quite a bit smaller then than it is now - Yikes!)
I did what alissa103 did, and touched everything and asked myself why I wanted it when I bought it and if I really intended to use it. Then I made a list and asked all my scrappy friends if they wanted any of it. What they didn't want went into the yard sale. What didn't sell, I asked a K-1 teacher if she wanted (mostly paper and stickers). The leftovers were donated.
I'm in the midst of doing a purge now.
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Post by thracian on Apr 20, 2015 15:59:29 GMT
I don't have any suggestions, but I am cheering you on. I need to do this too!
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Post by mehardy on Apr 20, 2015 16:36:02 GMT
I agree with the touch/go through EVERYTHING! But to it I would add I found I was more successful when I went through stuff a bit at a time. One day I might do all the 12"x12" pattern paper. Another day I might do all the theme pattern paper. And then the next day I would go through ink pads and stamps. By breaking it up I found I looked at items more critically and honestly because I wasn't rushing to do it all at once and get it done. And I didn't actually get rid of the items until I was done. I put all the purged stuff in large shopping bags, so if I changed my mind about something I could always pull it out. I think I only did that one or two times, but I was glad I could.
My other questions for tools or embellishments were:
How long have I had this?
When was the last time I used it?
Truly and honestly, do I see myself actually using this within the next 6 months? If the answer was no, then it got purged.
With the above questions I also asked myself, do I have a specific project in mind for this? If yes, is this a project I am really going to do, rather than one I think I'd like to do or I'll get around to doing?
With paper, it was a little different. I had a bunch of sheets that had come with pads or other stuff, that while nice weren't really ones I was going to use. I ripped those pads apart, which also saved me a bunch of space. Then, I tried to be brutally honest about whether it was a color and a pattern I would use. If it wasn't, I purged it.
The last thing I did, was to try and be really smart about how I organized the stuff I kept. Next to the bathroom I have the smallest room in the house, so I try to store all my stuff as efficiently, but still effectively as possible.
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Post by crazy4scraps on Apr 20, 2015 16:48:35 GMT
This is what I'm in the middle of right now, and it is UGLY. While there has been a lot of stuff that has been easy to toss into the "Dump it!" pile, there are other things that haven't been so easy to throw on that pile. For example, I have a huge, and I mean HUGE, collection of shape stencils. Journaling Genies, paper doll and alphabet tracers, etc. I have not one but THREE electronic cutters so I'm probably never going to use those again and it should be a pretty easy slam dunk to get rid of them. BUT, I also have a preschooler at home who might really like to use those stencils for a while. So now that slam dunk is not so cut and dried. I saved them for her. Another example. I was going through all of my personal papers, stickers, etc. and pulled out a big pile of baby boy and boy type things, thinking hey! Another slam dunk! I can easily get rid of ALL this stuff because I will never have another kid and the one I do have is a girl! Yay! Until it occurred to me that I recently sent in probably 400 slides and had them scanned and saved onto DVDs from DH's baby and childhood days, and some of those pics would be fun to scrap for DD to have. So, back out of the "dump it" pile for all that stuff too. I guess if there is ANY realistic chance I could conceivably use it AND I still like it, I'm keeping it for now and will revisit it again after I've worked through some of those projects on my to do list and look at what's left then. Unfortunately, my to do list is really, really long right now which doesn't help matters at all! It's been a perfect storm of having all of my personal scrapping stuff packed up for years, having no where to unpack anything to sort through it before this, and having virtually no time to scrap anyway. With so many scrapping companies gone now, and access to new stuff dwindling more and more every year, I hesitate to get rid of something I might not be able to find a good replacement for down the road. As for the question of what to do with the stuff I want to purge, I'm lucky because I have some good friends a few hours away from me that hold a huge craft/stamp/scrap rummage sale twice a year and their spring sale is coming up. The small percentage of sales that they take is the seed money for the annual charity crop in the fall. Anything that I think someone might still buy will get priced well to sell, and anything else will be donated either to my kid's school, to a local Girl Scout troop, or to my friend's charity crop garage sale table. Anything that doesn't sell this spring will get donated to the charity crop's garage sale table too, none of it is coming back home with me. The nice thing is I will get a donation slip for the charity crop and can write off whatever I leave there on my taxes. There was a thread on here a while back about good places to donate scrapping stuff to, and it ended up being a pretty comprehensive list. It would be worth doing a quick search. I have been amazed at the things that people have bought at the previous sales my friends have had! Some things I never would have thought would sell did, and other things that I was sure would sell right away just sat there. It's just weird! The storage items and totes are (not surprisingly) usually the first things to sell.
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Post by papersilly on Apr 20, 2015 21:05:00 GMT
I was just looking around my room and realized I have what amounts to a small scrapbook store in there. I am constantly purging and by the time I am done, I am convinced that everything I've kept is essential and will be used. the problem is, I keep shopping and adding to the stash. and I don't shop small, I shop in bulk so I have to purge even more to make room. it's a horrible cycle.
I am definitely going to do an aggressive purge soon. no more of this "you never know....I might need it someday...." stuff.
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FurryP
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To pea or not to pea...
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Jun 26, 2014 19:58:26 GMT
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Post by FurryP on Apr 20, 2015 23:43:52 GMT
I did not read all the responses, but I have this one:
Get a friend that is not interested in crafting to help you purge. To them it will truly be just things. AND then...make sure you have no access to the stuff you decide is donate, giveaway, or trash. Ask me how I know.
My friend helped me to clean out my garage and when she left I took back a least 2-3 things...lol
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Post by 950nancy on Apr 21, 2015 0:18:15 GMT
I have tons of paper packs. One day I went through each pack or pad and just kept the pages I loved. This cut down on a bunch of paper.
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Post by penny on Apr 21, 2015 1:56:01 GMT
I 'shop' my room... I have those bins from the Container Store for my paper and once the piles on my desk and floor get to be too high, I go through all of my papers and can only 'buy' what will fit in the bins... I've given away stuff I've really liked - but it's because I kept something else that I loved...
I do the same when it comes to embellishments too, except that some of that stuff goes into the office/junk drawer or in with the gift wrap stuff (paper clips, labels, twine, tags, etc)...
If you have duplicate tools, pick the one that's the most versatile... I have a bunch of circle punches that I love because they're convenient, but if I had to pare down, I'd get rid of them... I find using my Silhouette a bit of a pain to use to just cut a circle, but in a smaller space I'd rather have the Silhouette and space than the punches and clutter...
Like a pp said, check your inks and markers and pens and paints... Get rid of worn out and dried up stuff... Toss the bottles with just a little bit of glue, packages with two foam dots left... The time and cost of moving stuff like that just isn't worth it...
Purge with the idea that you're setting up a new and better space... One with only your favourite things, with working tools, with fresh new projects to make...
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scrapnnana
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Jun 29, 2014 18:58:47 GMT
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Post by scrapnnana on Apr 21, 2015 10:13:32 GMT
My scrapping stuff and the kitchen will be the two hardest places to pare down. The irony is that I will probably end up with a huge scrapping room, which I have never had before. However, there are no LSS where I will be moving to. There may be one about an hour away, IF if it is still in business when I get moved into our new home. In the meantime, we may end up sharing an apartment with our son, so I really, really need to pare down. However, I struggle with the thought that I can no longer just buy scrapping stuff the way I used to.
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christinec68
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Location: New York, NY
Jun 26, 2014 18:02:19 GMT
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Post by christinec68 on Apr 21, 2015 12:58:35 GMT
I did a big purge a couple of years ago. During my first pass, I finally gave myself permission to get rid of things I know I just won't use like ribbons, naked chipboard, light weight patterned paper (unless I really really loved the pattern), etc. On my second pass, I asked myself would I buy this item right now? If the answer was no, then there was my answer. There were a few things I was on the fence about and I challenged myself to use them on the next 20 layouts - if it didn't make it to page, it was gone too. It took a while to go through all this but I got myself down to things I really love.
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Post by alissa103 on Apr 21, 2015 14:09:38 GMT
My scrapping stuff and the kitchen will be the two hardest places to pare down. The irony is that I will probably end up with a huge scrapping room, which I have never had before. However, there are no LSS where I will be moving to. There may be one about an hour away, IF if it is still in business when I get moved into our new home. In the meantime, we may end up sharing an apartment with our son, so I really, really need to pare down. However, I struggle with the thought that I can no longer just buy scrapping stuff the way I used to. Even if you do end up with a huge scrapping room, it'll be nice to only have stuff you really love and will actually use in there. We also don't have an LSS close here. But there are some awesome online scrappy stores! Plus we have all the big box stores and Tuesday Morning. So it's not like I don't get my fix And I seek out LSSs when we travel, so that's always fun. You will be able to purchase things you need/want, so don't hold on to old stuff you don't like just because you're worried about that! We also lived in a temp apartment while we looked for houses. I brought just what would fit in my rolling tote. Plus I had my monthly kit delivered while we lived there. It was actually ok and I did scrap! It was fun challenging myself to use what I had brought with me. Were there things I wish I had been able to bring? Yup. But it was just temporary, so I made it work.
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Post by scrapcat on Apr 21, 2015 15:06:44 GMT
I find I need to purge just so I can actually use stuff, otherwise I get overwhelmed.
One thing I do suggest is a "maybe" box. When I clean out, I always have a little plastic container where I throw things that I think I want to keep but haven't really used. I keep it in the closet. Then if I find a need to go in a get it out, I keep it, otherwise next time it goes right out to the donation pile.
Surprisingly sometimes I do go back to get something out, but it's usually for someone else to use on a project or something not related to my scrapbooking.
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Post by PepsiGal on Apr 21, 2015 17:43:15 GMT
I'm FINALLY getting rid of all my old scrapbooking magazines. I know a lot of you did this earlier but I just couldn't tear them up. I'm putting 100 magazines in the recycle bins tonight. I feel so much better and have room for more stuff.
Good luck on your move and decluttering!!!!!
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Post by ametallichick on Apr 21, 2015 18:21:38 GMT
I'm doing the same thing right now. We just got new carpet in our house so we've been slowly going through everything as we put it back. I have about 8 mini albums that I got when I worked at a LSS back in the day (I left there in '08) YIKES! I have not used them so they are getting donated. I look for a lot of organizing ideas on Pinterest and that gets me even more excited to purge and organize. I also have a binder full of stickers I need to get rid of. Have fun and Good luck!
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amom23
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Jun 27, 2014 12:39:18 GMT
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Post by amom23 on Apr 21, 2015 21:26:18 GMT
I think I'd start with asking yourself "Do I love it and would I buy this again if shopping today?" Toss anything that is a no. It's also a good idea to part with all those projects you intended to do, but realistically never will. Don't worry about not having a LSS in your new city. There are tons of ways to shop.
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angsandy
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Jul 6, 2014 8:20:45 GMT
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Post by angsandy on Apr 22, 2015 1:10:15 GMT
when I purged I didn't want to spend too much time going through my stash. so anything more than 2 years old I put into the giveaway/throwaway pile. after that I still had lots left.
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Deleted
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Nov 27, 2024 23:42:48 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Apr 25, 2015 2:42:04 GMT
I think I'd start with asking yourself "Do I love it and would I buy this again if shopping today?" Toss anything that is a no. It's also a good idea to part with all those projects you intended to do, but realistically never will. Don't worry about not having a LSS in your new city. There are tons of ways to shop. That's how I did my purge. I also asked myself how do I realistically scrapbook? I rarely stamp, I don't do a lot of techniques, and no need to keep the mini albums. I'm mostly a flat embellishment scrapper. I kept some old stuff I loved that was mixed in with the I'll try the trendy thing I never really loved. I also thought realistically do I need *that* much Christmas paper?
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Post by katyscrap on May 7, 2015 19:09:47 GMT
Another thing that really helped when I did mine was I took everything out of its packaging and then grouped by color into Iris boxes. Just the packaging alone saved me tons of space and I find I use stuff so much more now because I can see it and its organized.
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Post by mikklynn on May 7, 2015 19:57:08 GMT
katyscrap - I put some of my things in clear boxes (smaller than Iris) by color, too. I cut apart sticker sheets when I have used most of the sheet or collection. I agree, it's helped me find and use things I never would have. I like saying "hey, I need an orange thing" and being able to grab my box of orange goodies. When I cut apart the stickers, sometimes I even throw some away, gasp! If I don't like it or can't see how I'd use it, I toss it.
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Post by papersilly on May 7, 2015 20:57:56 GMT
on the old 2peas board, I met someone in another country who made cards for hospitals and such. I donated about 75lbs of stuff to her so far. crazy thing is that it didn't seem to make much of a dent in my stash. probably because I've kept shopping and that void was quickly replaced. LOL
I really need to do another purge. this time mostly embellishments since I already did a major paper purge.
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Post by alissa103 on May 7, 2015 22:34:56 GMT
Another thing that really helped when I did mine was I took everything out of its packaging and then grouped by color into Iris boxes. Just the packaging alone saved me tons of space and I find I use stuff so much more now because I can see it and its organized. yes! I did something similar. I even cut apart sticker sheets that were partially used and divided them up into my color bins too. Getting rid of the packaging was a huge space saver.
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Post by LauraTen on May 8, 2015 19:06:43 GMT
I've purged my scrapbook supply a few times over the years.
I knew we would probably not go to Disney again...
(we've been to the parks 3 times and then the Disney Cruise).
But for some reason, I kept all the papers that I had.
Well now I am making cards for Operation Write Home
(I have in the past but not that many)
and the Disney paper is great to use for cute cards.
I used them for birthday and I miss you cards.
The box I sent in April had 140 cards : )
It makes me happy to craft and have it be appreciated!
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Post by gramasue on May 9, 2015 1:09:59 GMT
There's a lot of good ideas here, with lots of incentive, but I noticed that not many of you actually said what you did with the items you purged. Throw them out? sell them? donate them? One of the best things that happened to me regarding purging was that my niece was making a scrapbook for her Dad's 60th birthday [my brother]. She had asked me if I had old photos of when we were young that I could scan and print for her, and I was happy to do that. I was also happy to go through all my patterned papers and send her a whole bunch of them to help her with the scrapbook. She really appreciated that. Another idea is to go to the local public school and ask if the kindergarten/grades 1-2 teachers would like some supplies. I can't even imagine them saying no. They are always looking for craft items for the kids. And of course, if you're like me and have a whole bunch of grandkids, just put together packs of goodies and give them some. They love it, and the bonus is that you usually get a homemade card that is priceless!
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christinec68
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Jun 26, 2014 18:02:19 GMT
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Post by christinec68 on May 9, 2015 5:01:52 GMT
I mostly gave things away to teachers. I sent one carton to the library where my mother volunteers and another to a woman on a message board I was active on who had a house fire. The rest I either tossed (junk) or sold. Oh and my niece & nephew got a bag of craft supplies.
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Post by mikklynn on May 9, 2015 15:31:36 GMT
My SIL is an activities director at a nursing home. I give her my supplies for card making.
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Post by gotranch on May 9, 2015 17:04:46 GMT
One thing I did was to be honest with my scrapping style, trying to keep only the things I actually use in my pages. I love the look of certain things, but realistically was not using lots of things like punches, stamps, paper style, stickers, etc. Those are the things that I was able to weed out. I need to go through the process again, as I just bought a huge stack of paper at a garage sale. I am getting closer to having the things I use the most.
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Post by Linda on May 11, 2015 22:24:35 GMT
I've never had a HUGE stash but I've acquired my share of stuff in the past 13 years of scrapbooking. I purge and re-arrange probably once or twice a year.
My most recent big purge was my scrapbooking magazines - I thought about what I actually use them for and realised that I'm a sketch scrapper not a scraplifter so I tore out the sketch pages and popped them in page protectors and put them all in a 3-prong plastic pocket folder and recycled the rest. I did keep a couple of idea books that I do turn to often.
I've already pared my stash down to a manageable level so purging is more on-going maintenance at this point. I keep a big ziploc bag handy (the size 12x12 paper fits in - 2 gallon?) at my desk. As I scrap, if I come across something I'm not going to use - big scraps, the last couple of embellishments, themed stuff that I'm done scrapping that theme, paper from a pack that I just don't love, the dregs of an alphabet sheet...they go in that bag.
I pass mine along at our monthly Girl Scout volunteer meetings - someone is always happy to take and use with their troop - and that monthly bit means it leaves regularly and encourages me to have enough to be worth passing along.
If I didn't have that donation alley - I would offer to school-teachers, daycares, senior centres, hospice, nursing homes/assisted living, women's shelters...anywhere that might have a use for random crafty stuff.
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AerynK
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Jul 7, 2014 19:51:37 GMT
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Post by AerynK on May 12, 2015 12:34:38 GMT
We're hoping to move, just as we've been hoping to move for the last 10 years, but we've decided that whether it happens or no we need to pare down the house *as if* we were going to move. I just can't take 1,200sqft house worth of stuff crammed into 700sqft house anymore. I'm talking no mish-mash furniture that can "make do" anymore, no "we used to have space so we might as well keep this", no nothing. I'm being RUTHLESS, even to the point where I want scrapbook pages that I don't like OUT of the albums and I'll re-scrap if I have an actual real story for it.
I'm a minimalist, and the one area I've always had complete control over (no input from husband), is my scrap space. Nice and clean, nice and tiny, and I want everything to be like that. If we ever move husband talks about how I'll have my own scrapbook room, I'll get an entire room for my quilting and crafting. He's sweet, but the idea freaks me out. I imagine this big, empty room and then one little corner with my desk in it, lol! The point is, THAT is the goal really. I'm not moving a bunch of crap. If we move, it'll be states, or across the country, not down the street. I'm NOT hauling supplies I don't like, duplicate items, things for techniques I don't enjoy, basically ANYTHING I don't want to use right now isn't going into a box.
I want to keep that mentality for the entire house too. Anything we don't use and don't touch all the time... why do we have it? I don't have a bunch of decorative stuff, I have functional stuff, so that's what I'm going to focus on. As for where to donate it? General house items always go to Good Will (NOT Salvation Army), but I'll admit to being lost as far as craft stuff. In the past I've pawned it off on friends that either were starting to craft or wanted to, but now I think maybe my nieces? I got the 14yo into scrapping a long time ago, and now her dad (my BIL whom we love) has custody, she'll be able to craft without her half-siblings destroying or stealing her stuff. So maybe them? I guess contacting schools in your town involves a lot of phone calls and driving around? I dunno, never tried it, but with my nieces being in Tucson and paper being heavy to mail, things just kinda have to linger here until we can drive to them.
(I wrote a book)
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