Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who is going to give their family a lesson about putting away the cereal according to color?
My kids are five and they know what a rainbow looks like, so it's not hard. They also often mix cereals, so they're taking out more than one box at a time. But again, not hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain to me why food needs to be deboxed? Like why can’t cheerios stay in their cardboard box? Why do I need a plastic cereal container for the pantry (which btw eventually becomes just one more thing that needs to be cleaned) instead of finishing the box, and recycling it.
I ask this as someone who is pretty exceptionally organized, and childless on her own, so it’s not a hate statement and more just a 1. Why expand the extra effort on deboxing and cleaning and 2. Why spend the extra money on things that then create extra effort?
(I do otherwise like the show and Joanna and Clea, and have spent the morning on a binge, but had no idea who these people were a week ago).
I had an organizer do my pantry and for the most part I love it, but I ditched some of the deboxing because you can lose track of expiration dates for things like oatmeal packets, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain to me why food needs to be deboxed? Like why can’t cheerios stay in their cardboard box? Why do I need a plastic cereal container for the pantry (which btw eventually becomes just one more thing that needs to be cleaned) instead of finishing the box, and recycling it.
I ask this as someone who is pretty exceptionally organized, and childless on her own, so it’s not a hate statement and more just a 1. Why expand the extra effort on deboxing and cleaning and 2. Why spend the extra money on things that then create extra effort?
(I do otherwise like the show and Joanna and Clea, and have spent the morning on a binge, but had no idea who these people were a week ago).
I had an organizer do my pantry and for the most part I love it, but I ditched some of the deboxing because you can lose track of expiration dates for things like oatmeal packets, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain to me why food needs to be deboxed? Like why can’t cheerios stay in their cardboard box? Why do I need a plastic cereal container for the pantry (which btw eventually becomes just one more thing that needs to be cleaned) instead of finishing the box, and recycling it.
I ask this as someone who is pretty exceptionally organized, and childless on her own, so it’s not a hate statement and more just a 1. Why expand the extra effort on deboxing and cleaning and 2. Why spend the extra money on things that then create extra effort?
(I do otherwise like the show and Joanna and Clea, and have spent the morning on a binge, but had no idea who these people were a week ago).
Anonymous wrote:I spent three hours sorting my kids' lego by color after watching this show. It looks nice, but it won't last and I'm not doing it again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spent three hours sorting my kids' lego by color after watching this show. It looks nice, but it won't last and I'm not doing it again.
Next time make your kids do it! Seriously - the rainbow system is easy for kids to understand. If your kids are old enough for Legos, they are old enough to sort them in color order.
I am genuinely confused. Why would anyone do this (or make/suggest kids do it?). It's not like the shape of Legos are dictated by their color. How would it help anyone in any way, other than being visually appealing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spent three hours sorting my kids' lego by color after watching this show. It looks nice, but it won't last and I'm not doing it again.
Next time make your kids do it! Seriously - the rainbow system is easy for kids to understand. If your kids are old enough for Legos, they are old enough to sort them in color order.
Anonymous wrote:I just started watching this show and I've only seen two episodes, but I've enjoyed watching it so far. I like their personalities and the way they respect people's stuff and genuinely try to make workable solutions for them. I think they are a little OOT with the rainbow/color coding but dividing things into zones makes sense to me so I've incorporated some of their ideas into my house. Is it just me or is the container store really expensive? $20 for a container to hold your cereal seems like a lot to me although I love so many of the things in that store.
I follow them on Insta too but didn't pay much attention to them because I was turned off by all of the packaging and waste. I try to reduce waste, limited paper towels, buy in bulk and that's why it makes sense to me to store bulk items in more useable day to day containers so I get turned off when they line up about 50 bags of pirate's booty, just for asthetic purposes. I wish they were a little more environmentally conscious with some of their choices. I guess they are only arranging other people's stuff, but I feel like it encourages other people to buy individually wrapped stuff just because it "looks good."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain to me why food needs to be deboxed? Like why can’t cheerios stay in their cardboard box? Why do I need a plastic cereal container for the pantry (which btw eventually becomes just one more thing that needs to be cleaned) instead of finishing the box, and recycling it.
I ask this as someone who is pretty exceptionally organized, and childless on her own, so it’s not a hate statement and more just a 1. Why expand the extra effort on deboxing and cleaning and 2. Why spend the extra money on things that then create extra effort?
(I do otherwise like the show and Joanna and Clea, and have spent the morning on a binge, but had no idea who these people were a week ago).
My kids destroy cereal boxes and the bags they come in and they never close them up properly. Putting the cereal in an airtight container helps it keep for longer. That said, I don't use them, but I can appreciate why people do since I seem to come across a lot of stale cereal...
Anonymous wrote:I spent three hours sorting my kids' lego by color after watching this show. It looks nice, but it won't last and I'm not doing it again.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain to me why food needs to be deboxed? Like why can’t cheerios stay in their cardboard box? Why do I need a plastic cereal container for the pantry (which btw eventually becomes just one more thing that needs to be cleaned) instead of finishing the box, and recycling it.
I ask this as someone who is pretty exceptionally organized, and childless on her own, so it’s not a hate statement and more just a 1. Why expand the extra effort on deboxing and cleaning and 2. Why spend the extra money on things that then create extra effort?
(I do otherwise like the show and Joanna and Clea, and have spent the morning on a binge, but had no idea who these people were a week ago).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It makes my eyes itch to see avocados in a refrigerator. The unopened jarred items, tortillas (and I think I see crackers) are weird too.
All of that. A full jar of unopened Rao's? The unopened dressing on the right fridge door, the glass jars of....flour? on the top shelf. The cracker and snacky looking carbs in the door shelf? Why? Why would you keep any of that in the fridge? The herbs just randomly shoved on a shelf instead of in a crisper drawer irks me as well.
Anonymous wrote:Who is going to give their family a lesson about putting away the cereal according to color?