Saturday, January 4, 2014

Like many others, I've been using ice cube trays to store my earrings.  It's a great solution--each ice slot is the perfect size for one pair of earrings, and they stay sorted nicely, so I'm not constantly digging through piles and piles of earrings to find a matching pair.



However, for me, the ice cube tray system isn't ideal.  I have a lot of earrings, since I like to make jewelry, and the trays actually take up a lot of space.  Even though they fit perfectly (two deep and four across) in the top drawer of my nightstand, look at all that wasted space!



Plus, as any apartment-dweller will understand, knowing that I'm using an entire drawer for something as frivolous as earrings will keep me up at night.  That space could be put to such better use.

I thought for so long about so many possibilities.

  • I could suck it up and buy some stackable jewelry trays for 10-20 bucks a pop... but with so many earrings, that would get really pricey really quick.
  • I thought about making custom divided trays out of cardboard, but the engineering process exhausted me to think about.
  • I thought about trying to find smaller, shallower ice cube trays.  I didn't think it would really solve the issue.

Then, the other day, I had an epiphany.

I had some candles lit, and one burned out.  I picked up the empty plastic tea light cup, and I marveled at its quality.  We've all burned the cheap tin tea lights that you can get in a pack of 100 for five bucks.  But these are the really nice ones that come in sturdy plastic cups.  I don't buy them often (wait for sales!), and when I do, I'm very stingy about burning them.  I have maybe four or five dozen packed away in my spare bedroom.



The sheer quantity of tea lights in my possession is even more of a reason to stop and wonder.  Can I use the empty cups for anything?

I know you know where this is going, but I wasn't thinking about earrings at the moment, so it didn't occur to me.

So I threw it away.

Yes, I had my epiphany about ten seconds later, and yes, I retrieved the tea light cup out of the trash.  Don't judge me.  Obviously these would be perfect for earrings.

I thought about the logistics.  I couldn't just put them in my drawer--there needed to be some way to stack them.  There also needed to be a way to keep them in place, so they won't roll around when I close the drawer and won't move out of place when I reach inside to take a pair of earrings out.

I went and got one of my boxes of tea lights to brainstorm some ideas.  Duh!  The box was the perfect size to hold twelve tea light cups--because that's what it was made for!  If I cut one of the sides off, I could use it as a tray.  I could cover it with scrapbook paper to make it pretty.  And I could glue the cups in place so they wouldn't move!

Needless to say, there have been a lot of burning candles in my apartment over the last few days.  But the payoff was soon worth it, and I had a prototype!



It gets better.

I found out after (if you're trying this out at home, it may be wise to check out the space before) that one tea light tray fits perfectly in my drawer and takes up way less space than an ice cube tray!



If you care to do the math, if I were to create enough trays to fill the space, I can now store ninety-six pairs of earrings in the same amount of space where I used to have thirty-two.




And I now only use half the drawer, and can use the other half for other things!


What an amazing recovery of poorly used space.


Operation: Success

What about the rest of us?

Let me start by saying I am ADDICTED to organization blogs.

You know the ones I'm talking about.  Written by housewives who give only homemade presents, re-purpose anything old that could be put to new use, and store everything in perfectly labeled bins.  Written by the perfectly coiffed women who have entire rooms devoted to craft projects, and then share their best tips for making the most of their tiny, tiny homes.

The blogs that make me dream of my future house, the days when I'll have a bedroom for guests, a pantry for food, a foyer for shoes and coats.

I have dreams.  I have plans.

But as I pin yet another blog post about how to turn a "spare" closet (because we all have those lying around) into a gift-wrap craft station, I can't help but think, what about this is so appealing to me?  Why am I so drawn into the lives of people who are clearly more well-off than I will ever be?

What about my life, as it is right now?

Some of us don't have hours of free time to devote to our homes every day.  Some of us don't have budgets for remodeling projects, or even houses to remodel.

And don't we deserve tips and advice?  Those of us who don't even have a craft desk, much less a craft room?  Those of us for whom laundry room tips are pointless because we have to take our washables out to the coin-operated machines in the hallway?  Those of us who don't know what it means to have a spare bedroom or bathroom that never gets used?

I don't have all the answers.  I don't know what to do when your fiance usurps your deepest bookshelf, or when your kitchen is so poorly designed that there isn't even room for a garbage can.

But I do have ideas.  Lots of ideas, for practical organization.  I won't tell you how to make a flower box out of an old bookshelf, but I will tell you how to turn it into a sidebar when you don't have enough cabinet space for all your glasses.  I do make use of labels and bins, and I do take on projects.  Lots of projects that, succeed or fail, I will learn from.

So this is my blog.