Monday, July 30, 2012

8 Tips to Keep You Child's Room Organized

Walking into a child's room can be like walking into a war zone.  No one wants to step on that very sharp foot of a Barbie Doll or sprain their ankle tripping over a Tonka Truck.  In order to prevent injuries and chaos, a child's room should have an organizational plan that is good for the parent and child.  Organized Home has some great tips to keep your child's room in the best shape all year around.

Take a child's eye view

Get down to your child's eye level to help him or her get organized. Look at your child's space, storage, furniture and possessions from his or her vantage point. The view may surprise you!

Adult furniture and organizing systems don't translate well to children's needs. Sticky dresser drawers are hard for small hands to manage. Folding closet doors pinch fingers and jump their rails when pushed from the bottom. Closet hanging rods are out of reach, while adult hangers don't fit smaller clothing. Traditional toy boxes house a tangled jumble of mixed and scattered toy parts.

To organize a child's room, solutions must fit the child. For younger children, remove closet doors entirely. Lower clothing rods and invest in child-sized hangers. Use floor-level open containers to hold toys, open plastic baskets to store socks and underwear.

Devise a simple daily checklist for maintenance. To organize a child's room, tailor the effort to the child.

Bring the child into the process

Resist the urge to wade into the mess alone, garbage bags flying. Gritted teeth and threats of "You will keep this room clean!" don't touch the root of the problem: teaching children organization skills and maintenance methods.

Instead, look at the organization process as a learning activity, and put the focus on the child. Professional organizer Julie Morgenstern, author of Organizing from the Inside Out, recommends that you view your role as that of organizational consultant to your child.

As his or her guide, survey what's working, what's not, what's important to the child, what's causing the problems, and why the child wants to get organized.

Partnered with your child, you stand a better chance of devising an organization scheme and system that makes sense to him or her. If they're involved in the effort, children are better able to understand the organizational logic and maintain an organized room.

Sort, store and simplify

It's a conundrum! Children's rooms are usually small, often shared, and generally lack built-in storage. Yet these rooms are host to out-of-season and outgrown clothing, surplus toys, and even household overflow from other rooms. Kids can't stay organized when the closet is crammed, the drawers are stuffed, and playthings cover each square inch of carpet.

The solution: sort, store and simplify. Begin with clothing: sort it out! Store out-of-season or outgrown clothing elsewhere. Finally, simplify! Does your son really wear all 27 T-shirts crowding his drawer? Remove the extras so the remainder can stay neat and orderly in the available space.
For younger children, a toy library is the answer to over-abundant toys. Using a large lidded plastic storage container, large box or even plastic garbage bag, entrust a selection of toys to the "toy library." Store the container in an out-of-the way place for several months.

Some rainy day, bring out the toy library, swapping the stored toys for other playthings that have lost their savor. The stored toys will have regained their interest and freshness--and they won't have been underfoot in the child's room.

Older kids can utilize higher closet shelves to "store" some of their belongings. Clear plastic shoebox storage containers hold little pieces and identify the contents.

Contain, corral and control

Toy boxes and open shelves are no place to store children's possessions, particularly those involving many tiny parts. To organize toys, think "contain, corral and control."

Contain toys and other belongings before you store. Use plastic shoebox containers for smaller toys 

(Barbie clothes, Happy Meal give-aways), larger lidded bins for blocks, trucks and cars, light-weight cardboard records boxes for stuffed animals. Use specialty organizers to corral magazines and comic books, video games, or CDs and cassette tapes.

A bonus: containers help parents control the number of toys out at any one time: "Sure, you can play with the farm set, just as soon as the Matchbox cars go back into their home!"

Make it easier to put away, harder to get out

The premier rule for efficient children's storage? Make it easier to put something away than it is to get it out.

For example, store picture books as a flip-file, standing upright in a plastic dishpan. The child flips through the books, makes his selection, and tosses the book in the front of the dishpan when he's done.

Compare a traditional bookcase, where little fingers can pull down a whole shelf faster than they can replace one book. Build the effort into the getting out, not the putting away.

Organize bottom to top

Befitting a child's shorter stature, start organizing from the bottom of the room, and work to the top. Most used toys and belongings should live on lower shelves, in lower drawers, or on the floor. Higher levels are designated for less-frequently-used possessions.

Working bottom to top, the best-loved teddy bear sits in a small rocker on the floor, while the extensive Grandma-driven bear collection is displayed on a shelf built 6 feet up the wall.

Label, label, label

When it comes to keeping kids' rooms organized for the long haul, labels save the day!
 
Use a computer printer to make simple graphic labels for young children. Pictures of socks, shirts, dolls or blocks help remind the child where these items belong. Enhance reading skills for older children by using large-type word labels.

Slap labels everywhere: inside and outside of drawers, on shelf edges and on the plastic shoebox storage containers that belong there, on boxes and bookcases and filing cubes.
Playing "match the label" can be fun--and turns toy pickup into a game.

Build a maintenance routine

The usual peaks and valleys approach to room cleaning can vex and frustrate children. Their room is clean, they play, and suddenly, their room is back to messy normal.

Help children stop the cycle by building maintenance routines into the family's day. "Morning Pickup" straightens the comforter, returns the pillow to the bed, and gets yesterday's clothing to the laundry hamper. "Evening Pickup" precedes dressing for bed, and involves putting away the day's 
toys.

For more information please see Organized Home.



Monday, July 23, 2012

Photography Exhbit at Harris Art Center shows Afghanistan Behind the War.


 Harris Art Center is hosting a unique and beautiful photography exhibit called "Beyond the Mountains: The Interior Life of Afghanistan". The special photographs give viewers the chance to see what Afghanistan is like with the war and politics being stripped away.  This exhibit is free to the public and opens August 20th.
 Harris Art Center is hosting Lisa Schnellinger’s, “Beyond the Mountains: The Interior Life of Afghanistan,” a photography exhibit, as its August show for 2012.L3VR_harris_art_center_A.jpgIn this unusual show, Lisa takes us with her for an inside view of Afghanistan beyond the headlines. The special series of color prints allows viewers to walk among ordinary Afghans on their own scale. Life sized portraits on satin glow and move with the light, as they drift among walls of mountain landscapes. Expanded from its first showings in Jasper and Blue Ridge in 2010 and 2011, the exhibit of 28 large photographs are arranged to make best use of the natural light and open space.

Though Americans have heard much about Afghanistan for more than a decade, few have seen it in the way that this Pickens County resident has viewed. She and her husband Tom Willard moved to post-Taliban Afghanistan in 2002 and have continued to work there over the past 10 years. They helped to create and sustain a national Afghan-owned news agency, and supported the rebuilding of a girls’ school.


The show’s sponsor, John Seibel Photography of Dawsonville, is producing most of the prints. He has donated many hours in pre-production and designing the show.


“Beyond the Mountains,” is free to the public every Monday through Friday. The show will open August 20 and run through September 14.


Lisa and Tom also will give a presentation to offer their personal insights and experience on Thursday September 6 at 6:30 p.m., followed by a reception. Lisa is a frequent speaker in North Georgia, and her talks are colored with stories of Afghan colleagues and friends whose lives have changed greatly in the past decade.


In addition, Afghan handmade pashmina shawls, soaps, embroidered purses, silk scarves and other textiles will be for sale during the exhibit. The goods are produced by two Afghan cooperatives in villages there, and all profits are returned to Afghanistan to support a girls school.

For more information go to the Calhoun Times.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Charity Ride for Griffin and Jake Prince

 A charity bike ride for Griffin and Jake Prince will be held August 11th in Dawsonville.  This ride and car show will benefit the memorial fund set up for the boys, who were in a boating accident in June.  There is a rain date for the bike ride on September 1st. 

The circumstances could not be any more unfortunate, but “Rumble in the Streets” – a police-escorted motorcycle ride and Classic Car Cruise-In — will be held to benefit the Griffin & Jake Prince Memorial Fund.

Griffin & Jake are the brothers who perished in a boating accident on Lake Lanier in June, 2012.
The 70-mile motorcycle ride is scheduled for Saturday, August 11th, with a rain-date of Saturday, September 1st.

http://lakelanier.com/content/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/prince-bike-ride-2.jpgEscorts from the Dawson County, Lumpkin County, Forsyth County and Hall County Sheriff’s offices will lead the motorcyclists and stop cross-traffic at stoplights and major intersections.

There are few things motorcyclists enjoy more than waving to smiling law enforcement officers while we legally ride our bikes through red lights with hundreds of other bikers.

A classic car show will be held in Dawsonville, GA, where the ride ends.

All proceeds of this memorial ride will go to the Griffin & Jake Prince Memorial Fund.  We will see you there!

What

  • 70-mile police-escorted motorcycle ride to benefit the Griffin & Jake Prince Memorial Fund
  • Classic Car Show at Dawsonville City Hall from 1-4 PM

When

  • Saturday, August 11, 2012
  • Rain Date: Saturday, September 1st
  • Bike registration 9 AM – 11 AM
  • Pre-ride meeting at 11 AM
  • Kickstands up at 11:15 AM

Where

  • Motorcycle ride begins in Dahlonega at the Lumpkin County Courthouse
  • Courthouse address: 325 Riley Road, Dahlonega, GA  30533
  • Ride travels through four counties to Gainesville, Buford Dam, Cumming and ends in Dawsonville

Cost

  • $40 per bike — no extra charge for passengers
  • $20 per Classic Car at the Cruise-In
  • $10 Burger plates at the world-famous Dawsonville Pool Room with 50% of proceeds going to the Memorial fund

Stuff

  • To keep costs low and give the most to the Memorial fund, no T-shirts will be provided.
  • Music will be provided in Dawsonville by the Brian Jarrett Band
For more information on the charity ride please visit Lake Lanier.

Friday, July 6, 2012

Beat the Heat!

This summer has been a particularly hot one.  Here are some tips for staying cool and frosty!  And if you have some refreshing ideas, share them with us!

1.  Take a dip in our pool!
2.  Keep your curtains and blinds closed. 
3.  Keep windows and doors shut while the AC is on. 
4.  Spritz yourself with a water bottle and let the evaporation cool you. 
5.  Use appliances sparingly to keep them from generating heat, especially the computer! 

Read more cool tips here:  http://www.realsimple.com/work-life/23-ways-to-beat-heat-10000001630362/page7.html
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