National Match-Up Day

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Happy Monday! Today is the day officially designated as “National Match-Up Day” by my friend and fellow blogger, Sara, over at GoGingham.com.

No, this is not the day you have to wear the same clothes as your significant other. Thank gawd.

No, this is not the day you have to get all of the socks into pairs. Thank gawd.

No, this is not the day you have to put all of the right school forms in the right backpacks. Thank gawd.

No, today is much easier!

Today is the day that you make sure all of your food storage containers have matching lids! Yay! I love doing this because it means I get to throw things away. With no regret whatsoever! Less stuff means – well, less stuff! To clean, to keep track of, to wish I could find a lid for!

As you may know, I live in a fairly small house. Less stuff is kind of the holy grail around here. I swear, I will fill up whatever space I have with “stuff.” In New York City, we lived in a two bedroom apartment with three kids. All of our stuff fit in that apartment. Including strollers. And high chairs. Now I can barely fit our stuff in a 3 bedroom house with a garage – and there is one less person living here!!! It is a constant battle between me and the stuff.

My secret weapon in the fight against too much stuff is to make things do double duty. These are my drinking glasses.

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When used with a plastic lid, they become food storage containers. I love this. It just makes me happy. SONY DSC

I try to keep only a few essential food storage containers beyond the drinking glasses. A couple of big squares, a container I could give away in case I need to share soup with someone, and a few portion-sized containers for leftovers. Luckily, our main food staple, leftover pizza, fits nicely in a plastic bag which can be used several times.

This is the place I keep my food storage containers. Yes, it is small.

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Here are the contents of that little nook. Yes, that is a lot of stuff.

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Once I matched up everything, got rid of extras, put other things away where they belong, this is what I ended up with.

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Technically, the salad spinner and blue egg cooker are not food storage containers, but they are plastic, so for some reason it makes sense to me to keep them with the food storage containers.

Everything fit into one wire basket drawer. Making the lids and containers easy to grab keeps things from getting out of control. If you have to dig for something, you are definitely going to make a mess.

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I was able to organize some of my other small appliances (I love small appliances!) in the second wire basket drawer. Winning!

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This extra storage space was a bonus I didn’t expect. (Also, I don’t mean to brag but did you notice the very clever use of the copper water line to the refrigerator as a custom salad spinner holder? Are you jealous?)  You never know what good things will happen on “National Match-Up Day”!

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Do you clean out your food storage containers on a regular basis? Did you do it today?

Storing Kids’ Artwork

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Do you know what is going on at my elementary school these last few days before summer vacation? Absolutely nothing. No homework is coming home. No tests are being taken. Certainly no learning is going on. I swear those teachers are just throwing parties and the kids are just watching movies while they collect up every last paper – drafts, notes, reports, worksheets, and quizzes – so they can send it all home to me in a paper bag.

Do you know what happens to that paper bag filled with a year’s worth of school papers? Absolutely nothing. It sits in my kitchen, or dining room, or office, or living room – depending on where we need to clear space. Sometimes that paper bag sits untouched all the way until the following school year begins! I am that much of a slacker.

I tell myself I am going to go through all of the papers and admire my child’s progress, but I don’t. Once, the paper bag was sitting in the basement when the washer overflowed and it got wet. Oh, too bad. I had to throw it all away. Didn’t even get to look at one thing. And – whoo-woo! – nothing bad has ever happened from this kind of slacking. So far.

The things that actually mean something to me are my childrens’ artwork. I love whatever they do – I am an over-praiser in this area. It may be giving them the wrong impression of their actual artistic ability when I gush and “ooooo” over their work, but I don’t care. Let someone else tell them they can’t draw. Isn’t that the school’s job?

Some artwork I just have to keep out because I love it so much (and it is nearly impossible to store), like the wire face in the picture above. I always have lots of kids’ artwork up all over the house, framed and unframed. I even tape it to my walls, with painter’s tape!

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I clearly have a children’s artwork problem. I can’t stop. When I finally ran out of wall space, I had to find a way to store their artwork which would be easy for me to access (because lord knows I will NOT put it away if it isn’t easy!) and which would keep the papers from getting bent and ripped.

Here is my solution for storing some of the most troublesome items I have encountered – kids’ over-sized artwork. I found this portfolio for artwork on Amazon.com. It costs for $35.99 for one portfolio or you can get 5 portfolio’s for $192.27. They are absolutely worth every penny.

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These portfolios have an internal frame made of wood, so you can stack them or store them sideways. I have a portfolio for each child and I just slide their work in – easy as pie.

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Stock up now so you will have a place to put the important works of art that are headed your way on the last day of school. Once you have taken care of the important things, you can rest easy knowing that the bag of school papers will take care of itself. Or not. That is the plenty perfect way. Maybe you will be lucky enough to have your washer overflow and save you from the guilt of not paying attention to it!

How do you deal with the onslaught of papers that come home from school at the end of the year?