Category: Living with Less

  • What Small Homes Can Teach You About Living With Less

    Need to declutter?  Anytime is the perfect time for getting rid of all the unnecessary stuff that accumulates in your home. How does it manage to pile up? Didn’t you just do this last year? Maybe you should just throw it all away—for good. In fact, that’s what a lot of people are doing now. You’ve probably heard about the trend toward living with less—fewer possessions, less space—whether it’s zero-waste living or the tiny house movement.

    There are two factors driving people toward small homes today: the economy and the environment. They are generally more affordable, and for home buyers, that means smaller mortgages. They are cheaper to maintain as well. Building and maintaining large houses have an impact on the environment. A large house takes more building resources and requires more maintenance than a smaller house. People are willing to go smaller to simplify their lives.

    If you’re squeezed into tight quarters or looking to downsize, here are some top tips to maximize the space and storage:

    Prefer an open plan

    When space is limited, you don’t want to carve it up. An open view with clean lines makes a space seem larger.

    Make the most of natural light

    Abundant natural light makes your home feel larger, so capture as much of it as you can. Don’t have floor-to-ceiling windows? Mirrors expand and reflect light. You can transform a small room into a larger and brighter space by using illusion wisely.

    Use a minimalist color palette

    You want to avoid excess in a small space—too much stuff, too many frills, too many colors. Stick to one or two similar shades, max, preferably paler ones that help maintain a light feel.

     

    Built-in furniture is key

    Built-in furniture is possibly the most efficient furnishing solution for spaces of limited dimensions: it frees up valuable floor area makes the space less cramped and unifies the decor.

     

    Make your furniture work double duty

    In a small space, everything has to earn its keep. Furniture can be an effective room divider. It is an excellent solution for studio apartments where different functions share the same space.

    Obsess over your storage

    Think about how you are going to use your cabinets so you can choose the right type of hardware. Look into different door hinges and drawer hardware. Custom doesn’t have to be pricey, either. Design your own modular system with crates of different sizes to bring an industrial touch to your home.

    Living in a small space doesn’t have to feel cramped and inconvenient. A thoughtful approach to simplifying your lifestyle can make a big difference. But still, keep a watchful eye on your stuff—it can pile up without your noticing. Seriously, how does it do that?

  • Less Can be More

    If you’re facing a move or just tired of managing your family’s enormous amount of stuff, you can create a plan to help your family move on from under the clutter.

    The average weight of items you have in each of the rooms in your home is 1,000 pounds. So, for a four-bedroom home with a kitchen, dining room, family room, living room and extra storage areas, all your belongings could top 8,000 pounds. That’s four tons, or for comparison, around the average weight of an elephant.

    The cost of moving that mountain of goods is high, so the more you can downsize, the less it will cost you to move when it comes time to relocate.

    Buying stuff is easy, but storing, managing, and clearing it out is the hard part. Having to deal with overflowing drawers, stuffed closets, jammed cabinets, cluttered spaces, and packed garages/basements/attics can lead to anxiety for many. Before you lose your cool, consider some proven methods to make your home more peaceful and less cluttered.

    Corral Everything

    • Counters, tables, the floor, and other flat surfaces are not storage areas.
    • If there’s no room for a new item to have a permanent home, reconsider what you’re storing in drawers, closets, cabinets, and other storage areas to make room for it.
    • Don’t just box up old or unused stuff and take it to be stored off-site at a storage rental facility. Once items are boxed up and out of sight, you’re unlikely to use, review or deal with them, resulting in costly monthly storage rental fees.

    Curb Purchasing

    • One great rule to institute is for every item brought in (whether it’s a gift or purchase), another item must leave the premises either by selling it, donation to a charity, gifting to another person, or being thrown away.
    • Determine where a new item will live in your house before you purchase it. Every item you don’t buy saves you not only money, but the mental stress of dealing with it. Eliminating purchases also avoids debt if you carry credit card balances.
    • Before you purchase something, investigate whether you can borrow it first. For books, music, and videos, check out your library.