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Guys-and-gals hang-ups: A good shelving system can help couples combining their wardrobes avoid turf wars. This nickel his-and-her walk-in closet configuration retails for around $900.
Guys-and-gals hang-ups: A good shelving system can help couples combining their wardrobes avoid turf wars. This nickel his-and-her walk-in closet configuration retails for around $900.
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Getting your player ready...

There’s always a trigger, experts say. When someone finally checks into rehab or jumps off a bridge or breaks down and organizes his closet, some event sets it off.

For me, it was moving to a house with smaller closets.

While I considered pitching myself off a bridge, I settled on getting smarter about closet organizing.

In my new place, closet space isn’t just smaller overall, but the master closet area is divided into three closets: his, hers, and I don’t even want to go there.

I purged when I packed to move, so all the clothes I brought to my new digs were staying. Gone were outdated styles like blazers with shoulder pads. (Fashion designers will never again put pads the size of bread loaves in clothes to make women look like linebackers in drag. At least, they’d better not!) What stayed were those garments that fit well and look good.

As I set about organizing my new closets, I knew they would have to meet minimum standards: no belt snake pit, no sweater stack that comes with an avalanche warning, no underwear drawers that look like chickens live in them, and no tangled hangers.

More than that, what I really wanted was a closet so organized that I could pull together an outfit without taking a step.

That would take some thought, which always hurts like tight shoes.

I started by sorting. I grouped clothing by color, then by season. I divided clothes into fat days and skinny days, by short and long, by categories (pants and blouses), and by function (work, casual and dressy).

This got so complicated, I started having thoughts about jumping off that bridge. So I called a professional to talk me down.

Lisa Engel, vice president of marketing for ClosetMaid, knew my pain. “Moving is a major closet-makeover trigger,” she said, sympathizing.

Other ones are getting married or having a baby. The recession is having an impact, too.

“Before, when people got married or had a baby, they often got a bigger place,” Engel said. “Now people are stuck, so they’re making the closet space they have work harder.”

Syndicated columnist and speaker Marni Jameson is the author of “House of Havoc” and “The House Always Wins” (Da Capo Press). Contact her through .


Storage wars

To help me get the most out of my closets, ClosetMaid’s Lisa Engel shared some inside-the-closet scoop. Here, she said, is what most consumers don’t know:

How much space a standard closet wastes. The typical 8-foot-wide wall closet with a pole and a shelf holds 8 feet of hanging clothes and 8 feet of stacked folded clothes on the shelf. That same closet with a system can hold 9 feet of hanging space, 17 feet of shelves for folded items, plus drawers and racks for belts and shoes.

Spending more on a closet system does not add function. After a point, additional cost buys strictly looks. For a relatively minimal investment, you can have a wire closet system that does everything a pricey cherry wood system does: organize and add useful, differentiated space.

It’s best to make your closet fit your clothes, not vice versa. DIYers often install systems without first measuring their stuff, then try to make their stuff fit. Instead, first size up your contents. (And, yes, pare them down. We’ve been over that.) Measure how many feet of long-hanging items you have. Start your plan there, then add upper and lower hanging racks for short hanging items. Next add a shelf tower, bins, and racks for ties, scarves and belts.

The difference good hangers make. The best hangers curve like shoulders to keep garments in their ideal shape, but contoured hangers can hog space. Next best are flat, thick ( 1/2-inch) wood or plastic hangers, which take less room. In a perfect closet, all hangers would match. At the very least, wire hangers need to go. Give them back to the cleaners.

The best way to organize clothes is by season. The primary rule of closet organizing is put what you wear most within easy reach, said Engel. And that changes with the season. For now, archive items you won’t wear until the weather cools. Consider under-the-bed storage boxes. After that, the way you arrange your clothes is personal. Engel said men like to organize by color; women by sleeve length and category.

Don’t hang what you should fold. Also don’t hide what you should see. Fold and stack T-shirts, sweaters and exercise wear. Don’t store shoes or jewelry in boxes in closets as they waste space and make you forget what you have hidden.

It doesn’t have to be permanent. Homeowners often panic about what happens when their storage needs change. Buy systems you can adjust. This way you won’t worry if you make a planning mistake. Plus, you can take flexible systems with you when you move, which you may not have to do if you get the closets right.

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