MAKING SPACE,
CLUTTER FREE by Tracy
McCubbin is a wonderful and rather unique resource. McCubbin has spent a decade working with
clients of dClutterfly, an organizing and decluttering company based in Los
Angeles, as well as writing and being interviewed about ways to reduce clutter.
Her book is filled
with vignettes concerning various clients and she writes in a comforting,
personal tone. An entire chapter is devoted to seven emotional clutter blocks
(e.g., my stuff tells me who I am or being trapped with other people’s
stuff).
For each one, she lists a few
clues to see if it pertains to the reader, then describes a bridge and helpful
phrases to transition from the clutter. The emotional aspect is very
interesting and actually liberating in a way.
In addition, subsequent chapters generally break down the clutter into
room by room issues, including a clutter freedom quiz which should help most
readers be more objective as they assess their personal situation. Similar to Marie Kondo’s question of whether an object sparks joy or not,
McCubbin offers five questions to consider (frequency of use, income
generating, cost to replace, ease of storage, and whether you truly love it)
when evaluating items.
Always practical, some of her later
chapters offer systems for organizing after a purge and a downsizing guide. Another
resource on this topic,
Simple
Organizing Wisdom (edited by Laurie Jennings) is filled with images and
offers 500+ quick & easy clutter cures, but often advocates buying more
stuff (baskets, furniture, etc.) to help with storage and organizing. While it
would be more appealing if there were some images in
MAKING SPACE, CLUTTER FREE, McCubbins subtitles her text “the
last book on decluttering you’ll ever need,” and that could very likely be true.
Starred review from
Booklist.
THE CONSCIOUS CLOSET by Elizabeth L. Cline is subtitled
“The Revolutionary Guide to Looking Good While Doing Good” and deals with ways
to reduce fashion waste and thereby have some positive impact on climate
change, pollution, and poor working conditions in the fashion industry.
Cline has been raising awareness since she
wrote
Overdressed and is certainly an
expert in an area which is drawing increased interest from corporations and
retailers. For example, Macy’s and JC Penney just announced plans to work with
ThredUp, as reported by various media outlets, including
NPR
and
The Wall Street Journal.
Cline
divides her newest book into six sections (each with multiple, short chapters),
beginning with a “closet cleanout,” then offering tips on wardrobe building and
how to follow styles more consciously by exploring resale and renting.
She later explains ways to choose more
eco-friendly fibers, how to take better care of clothing you do have, and how
to “link up with like-minded others.”
I
can see aspects of this book (e.g., gauging quality by looking for serged
seams) being incorporated into a Practical Arts or Business budgeting
class.
There is definitely
more interest in vintage clothing, too, so this topic would likely be popular
for a student-centered seminar day. While most of the readers for
THE CONSCIOUS CLOSET, whether
students or older, will already be pretty heavily invested in fashion, there is
still much to learn from the tips, lists, and diagrams included in this title which
received a starred review from
Booklist.
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