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Ready
Your Home For Holiday Guests
The
holiday season brings with it great meals, presents, beautiful decorations
and guests
lots and lots of guests coming and going.
Holiday
guests -- be they family members or friends -- often show up early,
stay late or even pop by unexpectedly. And with them can come hectic,
harried moments as you rush to get your house company-ready.
Organizing
expert Vicki Norris calls this phenomenon the dash and stash
-- when we frantically rush around hiding clutter, hanging up coats
or even strategically placing a plant or floral arrangement before
opening the door.
I
recommend people strive to keep the most visible spaces of their
home organized 24/7. Its not nearly as hard as it sounds,
says Norris, author of Restoring Order to Your Home.
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Vicki Norris, author of Restoring Order
to Your Home, and featured expert on HGTV's Mission:
Organization.
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Norris
suggests several simple tricks that can help keep your homes
public spaces, such as your entryway, living room or family room,
neat for holiday traffic.
For
instance, placing flowers or a favorite accessory where clutter
typically congregates does two things: it brightens the room and
prevents future messes from settling there, suggests Norris.
While
your family room probably is your homes superhighway, a few
tweaks can eliminate those piles of roadway rubbish, such as toys
and magazines. And quick fixes that yield permanent results can
help ensure your entryway (the natural drop zone for
your familys coats, shoes, and keys) doesnt become an
unruly hazard.
Because
the entryway is the easiest place to drop things, and is the first
space guests see, your focus in this area should be clutter control.
Determine what types of items are left here and then implement a
clutter capture system.
Look around. Do you see a handful of coats or an entire closet full?
Do you spy a few shoes or a shoe mountain?
Select
and install the right storage solutions, whether they are hooks,
bins, shelving, benches or other furnishings. Think about your aesthetic
preferences. If you prefer not to see clutter, consider a narrow
armoire to neatly store your belongings.
Then
personalize your entryway. Welcome your guests with an inviting
display of family photos, a favorite collection, or fresh flowers
to suit the season. Having these items on tables actually will prevent
future clutter from collecting. Also, a strategically placed floor
plantcan divert attention from less appealing areas.
As
for the family room or living room, Norris recommends determining
the rooms direction, de-littering and finding homes for such
nomadic items as backpacks, toys, magazines and everything in between.
First
decide upon the rooms direction. For example, should it be
an off-ramp of the kitchen or an entertainment hub where you will
gather to watch TV and play games? Set up a go-elsewhere
basket, so at the end of each day you can relocate items that dont
belong here back to their proper places.
Create
a plan of attack for accumulating papers and other misplaced possessions,
including a reference binder to create a permanent home for take-out
menus, gift certificates, coupons and commonly reached-for phone
numbers such as the dry cleaner, your florist, hair stylist and
movie theater.
And
dont be a litter bug! Keep surfaces such as ottomans and tables
clear, and beautify the room with flowers or a plant to reclaim
the space and make it a nice place in which to spend time -- both
for you and those holiday guests.
Perfection
is unattainable and should never be the goal, stresses Norris.
By clearing out the clutter and reclaiming your space, you
create more time for the things that are truly important in your
life.
Click
here for more tips to avoid the dash and stash when the doorbell
rings
Click
here for trends for celebrating the hollidays in style
About
Vicki Norris
Vicki
Norris is a dynamic entrepreneur, author, television host and expert
organizer who helps people live their priorities. As founder and
president of Restoring Order®, an organizing services and products
company, Norris teaches others how to identify their priorities
and create sustainable change in personal organizational habits
that support those choices. She is often quoted in the national
media as a contributing expert and is a regular on HGTV's Mission:
Organization.
Editor's
Note: Vicki Norris is available for telephone interviews, and
high-resolution professional photography is available. Contact Jenny
Stromann at (800) 336-4743; jstromann@safnow.org.
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