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Clutter Control
Sunset Magazine

1-8-09 stumasa sunset.jpgWe've got to give more love to Sunset, which has a great feature this month on controlling clutter in a small space. And if some of the furniture looks a little familiar, it's with good reason...

 
 

1-8-09 stumasa sunset 2.jpgMost of the pieces come from San Francisco's Stumasa (one of our favorite local stops), with owner and designer Maybelle Imasa-Stukuls featured, too. We enjoyed her advice on how to live clutter-free - wisdom she's culled from sharing a one closet, 740 square foot home with her husband and their dog.

See the article here.

Images: Jen Siska, Jess Chamberlain

Tags

organizing, inspiration, organizing, clutter-free, Sunset magazine, Stumasa

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Comments (16)

This is somewhat offtopic, but I really don't understand and actually quite dislike the "random huge letter on the table/shelves" trend.
It's so irrelevant and ugly. What's the deal?

posted by Lyesmith on January 8th 2009 at 9:05pm
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I actually really like the letter trend. It's graphic, and often shows a love and appreciation of typography.

posted by inkstainedwriter on January 8th 2009 at 9:09pm
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Oohhh! Is that it? Honestly the thought never even entered my head, and I enjoy typography and am often nutty for logos.
Probably because instead of a nice poster-sized image of at least an alphabet or something, they're Big. Gray. Chunky. Sparkly. Single. Letters.

posted by Lyesmith on January 8th 2009 at 9:22pm
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Lyesmith, I've always wanted to get enough big huge letters to spell out "GREENS" in my kitchen. And then paint them brilliant tangerine to mess with people's heads, also, you know, because it would look really cool against the bright teal walls. But I couldn't ever find a big fat type that I liked and could afford.

posted by Tiamat_the_Red on January 8th 2009 at 9:54pm
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Still looks cluttery

posted by m on January 8th 2009 at 11:11pm
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Lyesmith I am with you quit tired of seeing the random letter and tired of chalkboards too. Both ok in a young children's rooms and depending if the child is still learning the alphabet and wants a place to draw besides on the other walls in the house.


I don't like stuff that collects dust these pictures look like they will attract lots of dust. I am always looking for ways to organize my home office this just does not do it just too cluttered.

posted by LoriSF on January 8th 2009 at 11:24pm
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I actually have this issue of Sunset and read through this article a few weeks back. I liked the arrangement of objects and the materials used, though the storage solutions wouldn't work for me personally.

One thing: according to the article, the wire baskets used in the 2nd photo come with a price tag of $30 each. That's $150 for the set of 5 pictured. yikes! The various wood crates used in the first photo also cost a pretty penny at $60-$80 each, which puts that arrangement in the $400 range...

I would have to use the images as inspiration and go on a little scavenger hunt to 'get the look for less'.

posted by ratita on January 8th 2009 at 11:55pm
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I don't think the jumbled up pile of crates looks that nice, but I do like the expandable collator. Those seem more expensive than necessary usually, where an ordinary ugly sorter would be cheaper, but just not the same thing.

Also, I don't like letters. I don't think it's about typography. Maybe for some people, and that's its own weirdness; typography lust seems oddly trendy, but you can't attribute everything to it. It was in a magazine a long time ago, and the sort of doodad someone would pick up at a flea market, to be original, quirky, a letter off a building of a store that was torn down or went out of business, maaaaaybe remodeled. Saving a little piece of architecture with a more literal explanation than maybe a cornice, more portable than a portico, about as useful as a banister railing with no stairs, and not as cool as a gargoyle, I will tell you right now.

You can buy new letters, letters made out of something, manufactured to supply you with an odd letter, your initials probably, or a way to spell out a word, even. DREAM. BELIEVE. EAT. THE BRADFORDS'. No, I'm sorry, this was over, and it's way beyond blame to typography geeks. We blame them for driving the trend behind graphical self-help affirmation posters now.

posted by K T G on January 9th 2009 at 7:17am
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This picture seems staged like the IKEA catalogs. Do people really live that way?

Have you every noticed those California Closet ads have very few clothes in the pictures?

posted by michel on January 9th 2009 at 8:58am
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i like the small box/storage idea.

HTTP://WWW.DUSKIN-NY.BLOGSPOT.COM

posted by alotlikeotherpeople on January 9th 2009 at 9:03am
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I love these images - can you tell me the paint that is used in the top image? Thanks!

posted by corij on January 9th 2009 at 9:04am
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I agree it seems staged... and people think it's cluttered? Come to my place, I'll show you clutter...

I also agree that typography is not as cool as gargoyles ;)

posted by whytephoenix on January 9th 2009 at 10:11am
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I've been a collector of the "odd chunky letter" for years now. Nice to see the stylists finally catching on. :)

I have a basket of E's, since they are one of the easiest to find and stand on their own.

I also collect photogrpahy that features signage or typography.

I think these articles are geared to "stuff people" to begin with, so no surprise there are still those (minimalists) here who find it "cluttery."

posted by patrick (the other one) on January 9th 2009 at 11:33am
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Clutter control articles are mainly how to unify storage, not how to look like you have less or manage to decrease the amount of "just things" you keep. To an extent that having stuff 'n' things is something some people prefer, even when they get rid of whole barrels of things (who knows how we managed to navigate so much more stuff?) and still have plenty of stuff, arranging it for view, access, and function is still never going to appeal to people who prefer very few items with no practical use. Of course.

If you have the means for such an attractive (custom-built? uh...) cabinet such as above, it will look a lot better than a pile of crates. I think that recklessly rustic heap still looks willfully messy, not charming, and fails to meet the criteria of organizing clutter, at least visually. Somewhere in between - this is where people tend to rely on IKEA.

posted by K T G on January 9th 2009 at 11:52am
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K T G: I'm with you all the way.

Oh, and chalkboards look great in virtual house tours, but seriously: all that chalk dust? Feh!

posted by Miriam on January 9th 2009 at 1:45pm
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I am with corij. Anyone know the paint brand/color in the top image?

posted by eliza68 on January 10th 2009 at 9:26pm
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