5 Closet Clean Out Correlatives: Keep, Sell, Donate, Toss, Move

In the short life of this blog I’ve already received a lot of questions about how to decide what to keep in your wardrobe and what to ditch. (*For a note about pregnancy and what to hang on to midst multiple body shapes and sizes, see the end of this post.)

To be honest I set about to produce this post using other blog references as fodder rather than my own photos or direct experience. There are some really good articles out there about closet organization. Like Mackenzie Horan’s, Design Darling post, “The Easiest Way To Clean Out Your Closet“, or The Every Girl’s article, “7 Questions to Ask When Cleaning Out Your Closet“. These set me on a good track toward the happy ending. But we’re not quite there yet!

I simply intended to highlight those conversations, or even just link those articles, steal their pictures (with attribution, of course), and call it a day. In other words, I was trying to take the lazy man’s way out. That’s not exactly what happened. In fact, it is the OPPOSITE of what happened.

My googling led to a COMPLETE closet clean out. Please don’t believe I think I am reinventing the wheel here (or continue reading because you believe I have some revelatory way to clean out your closet that doesn’t involve at least a little bit of TIME, EFFORT, WORK, and yes, maybe even a little PAIN, eek!). If you’re here for some reality, read on!

As previously stated, I set about to curate all of these other voices on the subject of closet clean outs. What should I keep, sell, donate, toss, or move. I went to my closet to take pictures… and realized that I should really just DO what I was talking about myself.

So I did.

Here is the state in which I found my closet last night around 9:00 p.m.

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Hello shoe problem! Hello awkward pajama problem! Hello shoved in corners problem!

At this point, just looking at my closet, my resolve to clean and post weakened quite a bit! I was feeling sort of sensitive about the state (read: the messiness) of my closet. I was felling a little shy about sharing my dirt (read: I was edging away from putting messy closet pictures on the internet.) Bah! But if I didn’t get in there and clean it out myself, guess what, no one would else would be!

In the name of de-clutter, in the name of Spring Cleaning, in the name of whatever Saint watches over wardrobes and home organization, I stepped back into my closet and went to WORK.

METHOD(s)

1. Empty. Empty out your entire closet.

2. Zone. Take different sections of your wardrobe and clean each one out as time allows.

Here you have really got to pick your poison, your method based on 2 factors– time allowed, and desired depth of this clean. Are you going to take the ENTIRE contents of your closet OUT of the closet as many organizational experts recommend? Would it be best for you to work in sections and split this job up over a few days.

In the past, I have definitely stayed with the ZONE approach. Taking one evening to clean out and straighten my shoes, another afternoon to go through my t-shirts and sweaters, another to tackle shorts and pants. One of the problems this poses is that I often don’t clean the shelves themselves properly, and the floor doesn’t often get a thorough once-over as I am usually using the floor space to stow the contents of the particular section I’m cleaning.

At this point, however, I believe it was time to rip the band-aid off and give it the FULL GO in one shot. To prove that I really did empty out the entire sucker in one punch (and as a cautionary tail that your entire wardrobe cannot be held up by your shower curtain rod), see the picture below. Sad.

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The story gets better from here on out!

I began by making areas for each of my categories: 1. KEEP, 2. SELL, 3. DONATE, 4. TOSS, 5. MOVE. After collapsing my shower curtain, I moved the “keep” pile to my bed!

MADNESS

1. KEEP

If you’re going to experience the fully cleansing effects of this clean out, you might as well stick with the full monty (after extracting it from your wardrobe) and put each and every article of clothing to the 5 pronged question. Are you going to KEEP, SELL, DONATE, TOSS, or MOVE this item? You can do this on the way out of your closet (recommended), or on the way back in. You can ask that 5 pointed query both ways if you want to further cull your KEEP pile as you return it to it’s home.

Now hear this: this has got to be QUICK. No dilly dallying! The more quickly you can do this, the more quickly your clean will go. You should not hem and haw for more than thirty seconds, that’s right 30 seconds. The longer you spend deliberating the more likely you are to end up right where you started. With a closet full of keep, sell, donate, and toss items right where they were when you began!

You wear it? You like it? You fit into it? You can HONESTLY see wearing it in the next six months? (This can then account for seasonal change.) It makes you feel SPARKLY and HAPPY– keep it. No questions to ask.

You are hanging on to that sweater your first boyfriend in high school gave you for Christmas that you shrunk in college? You are saving that cocktail dress you wore three years ago before you were married, had a baby*, moved to Northern Michigan and don’t see wearing it in the next three? 30 seconds. Sell or donate!

2. SELL

That AMAZING GUCCI shirt you bought in college as a splurge, or with birthday money from your boyfriend? Do you wear it? Or do you hang onto it because the tag reads GUCCI. Cause here’s the thing. If it says Gucci, but it sits in your closet then it might as well say nothing. Brand doesn’t matter at this point, folks. The great thing about BRAND is that it can sometimes hold some value long after it’s season has expired. I like this article about white glove consignment from Ann and Liz. The difference between donating and consigning might only be a few dollars, but that’s more than what was in your pocket before that item exited your closet. And once you’re hooked up with a great consignment store I feel as though it is almost as easy a process as a donation (almost, but not quite).

3. DONATE

Most of the goods culled from my closet are put into a great big black plastic trash bag for donation. Now don’t mis-read, I donate only clothing that is in good condition that I can see will have a happy life beyond me. There is no point in donating worn-out, ripped (we’re not talking tasteful slices here), stained, or otherwise trashed clothing. But there are plenty of clothes in my closet that simply don’t suit me anymore. Donate away!*

4. TOSS

For me, this pile is probably the smallest. I don’t hammer very many of my clothes, but I’ve had a couple pairs of running shoes that turned into dirt shoes that turned into cut-the-grass-shoes that turned into… well, you get the idea. Throw them away.

5. MOVE

I pulled this section from a really great cleaning article “How to Clean Your Closets“, and honestly, I had sort of scoffed when I read it originally. The move section is to REMOVE any item in your closet that should be in another area of your home. I actually had a lot of junk in my closet that needed to be MOVED. For some reason, I had been ferreting away some random keepsakes in my closet. I found my oldest son’s baby book under a pile of sweaters. I had stowed my college diplomas behind my scarves. RANDOM! 🙂 Where else do you keep those babies? Move ’em.

CLEAN

Then came the scrub down. This actually went rather quickly. I used a solution of 1 tsp. dish washing soap, 1/2 C white vinegar, and 2 quarts hot water for all of the shelves. Then I dried them all with paper towels. (I needed to get my crap back in and usable quickly!) I vacuumed and edged the room. I even wiped down the base boards. This is serious business, people! Clean.

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RESULTS

This is where everything started to feel really, really good. It got even better the following day when my three-year-old walked into my closet and said in aw, “Mom! Your closet is SO clean!” Seriously. Those were his words. Then he put the cherry on top with this, “Mom, you’re a really good cleaner!” Thank you son! You made your moma’s day!

Good luck, wonderful readers!

XX, Megan

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*Oh sweet full of life (literally) people! Oh pregnant friends and loved ones. This have a 3 or 5 size wardrobe is SO HARD! Especially those of you trying to cram even a small slice of curated clothing goodness into a micro IKEA wardrobe. Here’s the thing. You’ve got to be even more picky, and even more creative with your pregnant wardrobe (and pregnant closet clean out). Honestly, don’t let the fact that you are 3, 7, even 9 months pregnant discourage you! In fact if you are nesting like crazy, maybe you will end up hell-bent on cleaning your closet. SO, be easy.

Here was the question that sparked this tangent: I have a linen white jacket that I LOVE and have been saving for “when it fits again” which leads me to a question (and perhaps a future post for you???!!!): How do you rotate your wardrobe? When do you get rid of clothes? How many clothes is too many? At what point do you say goodbye to favorites?

KEEP your pre-pregnancy favorites! Keep them even if you have no clue if you will EVER return to them. (I said favorites, not fall-backs.) I say, keep that white linen jacket until you are out of your “child bearing” years. Until your body has a chance to settle back into a more stationary size. This takes time! You don’t have to be hasty! (Unless you have HUGE space issues. Then you have to ask yourself if it sparkles enough, does it make you sing!)

KEEP those first maternity clothes you got when you realized that pants with a stretchy tops are seriously a little piece of heaven and easily hidden by a tunic. You will use those babies (even after baby), I promise. (Here is my dirty little secret. I continued to wear multiple items in my pregnancy wardrobe as every day clothes. GASP! HORROR! For years after I’d had my babies. A black lace skirt, that looked just like it’s non-maternity counterpart minus the more expandable waistband; a brilliant striped top that just looked long when I was thin again; and the most adorable white shorts that seemed to fit no matter what size I was. No one ever knew. Or if they did, it didn’t matter to me. Incorporate, gals. Enough said.)

DONATE. Skip goodwill. Instead, donate to your best friend who is having a babe right after you. Donating your pregnancy clothing to family or friends can often mean that you create a maternity wardrobe LOOP. All you moms know exactly what I’m talking about!

If in doubt, one more courageous clean out article to keep you convinced!

The Blues

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This outfit is a prime example of Spring prep for Summer number. Once the weather turns warmer you can easily ditch this jacket, sub the soft cashmere sweater for an airy T-shirt, and cuff those flowered pants and add sandals. BOOM! Summer ready in a breeze!

Tonal outfits are fun because instead of playing one color off of another you can simply try to add as much punch with a single color palate. Try it sometime. Head into your closet, or open up your drawers and pull out everything you have in ONE color. It doesn’t have to be blue. Make it green to impress the grass, or sunny yellow to accent with those warm rays! You’ll do best if it’s a color you really love. Add textures, prints, variants of your color, or layers. Any of those are embellishments that add some pizazz to your ensemble.

Blue on blue. I hope you are having a beautiful day!

XX, Megan

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Jacket: J.Crew (on sale!), Sweater: J.Crew, Pants: Gap (similarsimilarsimilar for the tiny fashionista), Shoes: J.Crew (similar), Bag: J.Crew (similar), Sunglasses: Ray-Ban Wayfarer Lips: Buxom White Russian

Polka Dot Boyfriend

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This outfit really got me going! May be one of my all-time favorites. It was all sorts of fun to wear and to photograph. I definitely had some pep in my step as we shot these pictures. Shoulder shruggin’, feet hoppin’. That’s how I’d like every outfit to make me feel!

Peppy, jazzed up, just right! In the case of this rig I’m pretty sure it has something to do with the polka dots. Playful, dressed up, and casual all in one look. I’m loving it. What gets you going on a Tuesday? Maybe it’s not what you wear, but a favorite song you have on repeat, or a funny conversation you’ve had with one of your kids. Maybe it’s a play you saw last night, or a movie that really moved you.

Cheers to Tuesday!

XX, Megan

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Blouses: Equipment (save, save), Pants: J.Crew (old, similar and similar), Clutch: Vintage, Shoes: Birkenstock (or here), Sunglasses: Karen Walker ‘Super Duper’, Ring: Vintage, Lips: Stila Beso

Visions of Style: How Fashion Works

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JiaXin Gao here, more here. Interesting commentary here.

Style, fashion, clothing, culture, identity, memory, vision.

What place do those words hold or demarcate in your head? When you think of fashion do you think of a catwalk in Milan, or the rig you wore last Tuesday? When you say style do you picture the latest feature in Vogue, or that crazy gothic teenager next door? When you talk identity, do you feel as though your clothing says something about you? Anything?

When you tap memory do you have a moment in time that is frozen as if it were yesterday and that image includes your garb? When you approach culture, norms, aberrance, dominant tropes of dress, and subtexts, how does fashion fit in? Does fashion fit you?

So many fascinating questions, so little time! (Cause I guess I could stretch this page out as long as I want to go, no?)

I heard an intriguing broadcast on Radio West a few weeks ago about How Fashion Works. Doug Fabrizo, personal hero of mine, interviewed Jackie Lyden and Simon Doonan. Jackie is a longtime NPR correspondent whose broadcast The SEAMS is branching out into a podcast via Kickstarter here. Simon is a fashion maven, personal stylist, global ambassador for Barney’s department store, and blogger at Slate.com. He has a new book out titled The Asylum: True Tales of Madness from a Life in Fashion

I have received so many kind comments, encouraging feedback, and thoughtful compliments from my friends and readers regarding my style posts. Even friends who have offered to let me dress them! Honestly, I’d love to!

I’ve also had some friends make remarks like, “Wow, you look great, I could never pull that off.” Or, “do you have any tips for a frumpy mom?” While there’s nothing wrong with either of those statements, it has caused me to think about my personal style. What is my personal style? How did I come into it? What is the difference between style and fashion? Can high fashion find its way into the every day?

So here’s my schpiel about finding YOUR style in the WORLD of fashion. Yes, fashion is couture, fashion is catwalk, fashion is broader culture, or at least one way to imagine or pick up culture’s pulse. Those visions are the big picture. The arc that connects you to those concepts is YOUR own style. Style is where fasion becomes unique, individual, dynamic. You own style.

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This is what Simon Doonan says about personal style, “It’s all non-verbal communication. For me, it’s sort of a kind of whacky anthropology. When I get on those shows like Fashion Police I’m terrible because I don’t have the disdain thing that you were talking about where people sneer. I was once auditioning for that show Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. They showed me a picture of a dude wearing a Metalica T-shirt with a mullet and I said, ‘He looks GREAT!’ Cause my thing is I think there is room for everything on this vast chaotic landscape.”

Style isn’t simply regurgitation of designer expression, at least I don’t think it is. Style is part imagination, part necessary obligation to wear clothing put on us by society. Style might be one of the first places where your vision of self meets the broader culture. Sometimes utility has a lot to do with it and sometimes, as in the case of haute couture, art and expression are the driving forces.

Take what you are wearing RIGHT NOW for example. You might be hunkered down in bed, in your pajamas reading this post on your iPhone before bed. You might be geared up in your grubbies (like a crappy pair of jeans and a grass-stained shirt) to head outside for some yard work. You might be making that final adjustment to your tie at your cubicle desk in the financial district in city X. You might be headed to brunch with friends. What are you wearing? Why are you wearing it? This is how fashion works for the every person.

Right now I’m wearing a light pair of cotton shants (Short pants), a sweater, a wool zip jacket, and a down puffer. We’re camping and it’s a little cooler than I expected in Southern Utah. So where’s my style? At this moment, for me, it’s in the color combinations– the deep aubergine of the sweater, the burnt pumpkin of the jacket, the pomegranate nylon of my puffer. It’s in the cut of these items, too. But the expression of personal fashion in daily life more often involves those precursors– this moment, for me.

I believe the intersection between fashion, style, AND utility is also one we approach daily. And even if you purport to ABHOR fashion altogether, and shun the latest trends with a passion there is still the reality that most of us have to get up and get dressed every. single. day. And there’s probay some method, formula, or process you go through. Style.

When I think back about how my own personal style has been shaped or how it has morphed and evolved I think back to the story of my five-year-old self on my about page. You can read it here. But for me, style has been important for a long time and I find the expressive ability of dress to be engaging, creative, mood changing, and fun!

To those of you who struggle to find your personal style, fear not! In fact, I encourage you to let loose a little. Try to release the restrictions you’ve tied yourself to. “I can’t wear that, try that, do that because…” Play creatively with your dress. It doesn’t have to take a ton of money, either.

Jackie Lyden explains, “We certainly didn’t have any money. My mother was affectively a single mom. She was divorced when I was six. The idea that you’re inventing your life, and you’re doing it as you go along and the possibilities being endless. Not expensive. Endless. I just find that very liberating.”

When Doug Fabrizo asks, “What does your wardrobe say about you? What do you notice about other people’s clothes? Was there a moment when fashion clicked for you?” Where does that locate you in the landscape of style and fashion, at the intersection of imagination and vision?

Perhaps it’s with the likes of Phylis Diller. Says Simon Doonan, “It’s not a race. It’s not a contest. I feel like at this point in life, you’re growing old. You’re nearing death. Why not just go out with a BANG! Like Phylis Diller!”

You may not be “nearing death”, but why not take a page from Ms. Diller!?!

XX, Megan

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