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Cut out the unnecessary before you
move to a smaller home.
Whether you’re an empty nester moving from
a house into a condo, or a renter trading in a
two-bedroom for a studio, you’ll have to say
sayonara to some of your stuff. Stressed out
by the prospect? Don’t be.
- Write a list of all the items you love and can’t live
without; it will help you bid adieu to things that didn’t
make the list. By keeping what’s on your wish list, you
won’t be upset about the things you can’t keep.
2. Start thinning out your belongings at least three
months before the move. Take some time each day, or
one morning each week, to go through that jammed coat
closet or overflowing filing cabinet. paper is the real killer,
so tackle it one box at a time. The same goes for photos,
which require a lot of attention.
- Get a feel for the size of your new rooms by comparing
them to rooms of similar dimensions in your present
home. For instance, your living-room-to-be might be
roughly the same size as your current bedroom. You
may think you can squeeze in two sofas, but this kind
of reality check could help you realize that only one
will fit comfortably.
- Heavily edit areas with items that don’t have as much
sentimental value. Take the kitchen, for example; most
people don’t need 10 mixing bowls and won’t get tearyeyed
over losing a second spatula. If you’re downsizing
from a house to a condo, target the garage. Snow shovels,
the lawn mower, ladders - you won’t need any of them.
- Don’t throw anything in the garbage. Recycle, reuse,
sell and donate instead. As tempting and easy as it is to
pitch wire hangers, musty clothes and shabby furnishings,
be environmentally responsible and find a home for
everything.
- Label three bins To Keep, To Sell and Charity (bins
should be manageable when full). For the average downsize,
keep only one-third to one-half of your belongings.
- Get an objective opinion. If you can’t decide whether to
keep or kiss that dusty ‘70s-era sewing machine goodbye,
It’s good to have someone who’ll say, you’ll never use that!
- When selling your goods, try an auction for high-end
items. Then look for reputable antique and secondhand
dealers. Often, they can buy all of your wares or put you
in touch with booksellers and other specialty dealers. Some
dealers will come to your home, take what you don’t want
and even drop off the charity stuff. If you can’t sell an item,
donate it to a shelter.
- Use floor plans to prearrange your furniture before the
move. Sketch in a furniture layout. Then look at the plans
realistically; if you’ve crammed in side tables, armoires
and chairs, you need to edit more. Don’t wait until after
you move to contend with furniture you’ll just end up
tripping over.
- Once you get to the packing stage, use a colour-coded
system to organize all of your boxes. Choose a colour for
each room and mark the boxes destined for that room with
a coordinating colour sticker. You can also do the same
thing numerically; for example, if room No. 1 is the
kitchen, then all boxes marked No. 1 will go there.
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