Anonymous wrote:I take older clothes and discard, or newer clothes and donate. In either event, I'm coming home with less than I arrived with ... so room for souvenirs.
Anonymous wrote:+1. I have one packing cube per person. Makes it so much easier when one person is looking for a specific item to not have to search through four people’s clothes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We spent ten days in England last year with two carry on suitcases for three people, using packing cubes (and we had backpacks). We ended up buying a duffel for purchased items, though we could get away with this since we had a third person (our kid) who didn't have a carry on outbound. I will say, we took the train a bit in England and there is not much space for the roll-aboard kind of carry on suitcases we use here in overhead bins on planes...they are too large for the overhead space on the trains. There's a small "luggage area" in the car that fills quickly and if your stuff is at the bottom, people just pile on. If we were doing a lot of train travel I'd do all duffels because they can get shoved overhead.
That's surprising - the overhead spaces on long distances trains in Italy, Switzerland and France have been big enough for our carry-on size suitcases.
Anonymous wrote:We spent ten days in England last year with two carry on suitcases for three people, using packing cubes (and we had backpacks). We ended up buying a duffel for purchased items, though we could get away with this since we had a third person (our kid) who didn't have a carry on outbound. I will say, we took the train a bit in England and there is not much space for the roll-aboard kind of carry on suitcases we use here in overhead bins on planes...they are too large for the overhead space on the trains. There's a small "luggage area" in the car that fills quickly and if your stuff is at the bottom, people just pile on. If we were doing a lot of train travel I'd do all duffels because they can get shoved overhead.
Anonymous wrote:I take older clothes and discard, or newer clothes and donate. In either event, I'm coming home with less than I arrived with ... so room for souvenirs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not do a carry-on and a backpack?
+1 we did this to Europe a few months ago. We were there for a week.
Packing cubes
rolled up socks, panties into extra pair of shoes
smaller toiletry bottles - I used contact lense cases
layer on the plane with a sweater and coat or whatever outwear you have
OP, here. I will have a backpack as my personal item. I've done all of the above, except packing cubes. How do they help? I have a couple of packing cubes, but I'm not sure how to utilize them in the best way. Thank you, everyone, for your responses!
Packing cubes - with clothes rolled inside the cubes - helps me keep things organized. It doesn't always make more space - sometimes if I'm really struggling to fit things - everything rolled and not in a packing cube I can fit things in weird spaces. However, as I learned recently on a trip - when security wanted to look in my bag - I had to take each and every piece of clothing out and re-pack it. With the cubes - I keep my shirts together, my underwear in another. Then wherever I am its easy to just grab a cube to get dressed.
DP, but this is my issue with packing cubes... You end up having to take out every single cube out, open them all and then repack everything just to get dressed. Otherwise I'd just open my suitcase, select a shirt/pant/socks/underwear and.. its fine.
I normally take all of my packing cubes out - organized by type - in whatever space I have available. THey are different colors if they are the same size so I can easily determine shirts from something else. Its really so much easier than rifling thru all the clothes looking for that one pair of pants that is at the bottom of the suitcase.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Carry-on all the way. Packing cubes are not necessary (and add unnecessary weight to a bag you may need to lift). The trick is to wear your heaviest shoes and pack only one other pair of small light weight shoes, and only if necessary.
packing cubes are super light, at least mine are.
Anonymous wrote:Carry-on all the way. Packing cubes are not necessary (and add unnecessary weight to a bag you may need to lift). The trick is to wear your heaviest shoes and pack only one other pair of small light weight shoes, and only if necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not do a carry-on and a backpack?
+1 we did this to Europe a few months ago. We were there for a week.
Packing cubes
rolled up socks, panties into extra pair of shoes
smaller toiletry bottles - I used contact lense cases
layer on the plane with a sweater and coat or whatever outwear you have
OP, here. I will have a backpack as my personal item. I've done all of the above, except packing cubes. How do they help? I have a couple of packing cubes, but I'm not sure how to utilize them in the best way. Thank you, everyone, for your responses!