Project Minima:

Thursday, September 3, 2020

Ever Onward

...in the midst of everything, 

I've been tidying and/or escaping by reading novels.  

 


~ rare needlework instruction book, Dublin 1833 with samples of sewing, embroidery, knitting and miniature clothing ~

 

But I did finish going through all my clothes (which included tops, skirts, pants, dresses, jackets, coats, scarves, hats, gloves, socks, undies, pjs, shoes, boots and bags).  Oh my.

 

 

~ Guerra de la Paz ~

 

Let me give you the stats.  

I got rid of 32 big garbage bags (to Goodwill). It me took about 3 weeks to go through all the clothes, and then reorganize what I kept and put it in place.

 

I'll break it down by category: 

 

4 bags of tops to go, 4 big piles to stay, took 2 days  

3 bags of dresses/skirts to go, 3 big piles to stay, took 2 days 

6 bags of pants to go, 3 big piles to stay, took 1 days

3 bags of jackets/coats, 4 big piles to stay, took 2 days 

0 bags of hats/gloves/scarves to go, all stayed, took 1 day 

4 bags of socks/undies/pjs to go, 3 piles to stay, took 2 days 

8 bags of shoes/boots, ? to stay (just enough to fit in my available  space!), took 6 days 

4 bags of purses/totes, ? to stay (I stopped counting the keepers), took 2 days                                               

 

 

Then I went on to books...

                                            ...but that's another story.

    


14 comments:

  1. I have a sewing friend who was trained in Ireland. She brought her book to a meeting. Not as elaborate as the book you show but still exquisite. The stitches were so small as to be almost invisible. Aaaaaah!
    I admire your ability to persevere with the Kondoing. I think of the lucky people of Chicago who will inherit your creations.

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    1. Hi Vancouver Barbara, lovely to hear from you again. That would be wonderful to see a book like that in the flesh, so to speak.

      Well, I've certainly slowed down on Kondo-ing since the clothes, actually after the books. There's no joy in sorting papers. Oh, I do hope my clothes find happy homes.

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    2. They will. All the love and energy you put into them will attract the right people. Lucky them!

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    3. ohhh, you are so kind to say so, Vancouver Barbara.

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  2. Wow, just, wow! It must feel so good to get everything cleaned out. Of course, I'm looking forward to seeing your new creations.

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    1. Hi Kim, Yes, wow. And you know, I haven't bought or thrifted any clothes for the last 9 years. Except, eventually, shoes and socks. Everything else was handmade and/or refashioned from whatever I already had. So...I still had a ton of stuff made or had kept to refashion. Not any more. Well, I still have more than enough clothes, but I did let a lot of them go too.

      And I haven't sewn a thing since I started the Kondo-ing.

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  3. Wow, I am very impressed! That is a LOT of clothing you passed on. I think we both wear the same size of shoes so I would have loved to have seen what you got rid of.

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    1. Believe me, I still have so much left. Including 3 racks of clothes on the enclosed back porch that I want to smallify since I've lost weight in the past year. Regarding the shoes, I wear a size 8 and I think you mentioned you're a size 9. So no loss there!

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  4. my new dream ~ chicago goodwill in search of moltings of rare exotic bird

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    1. hehe. Toward that end, start at the Goodwill in Roger's Park.

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    2. oops, I just realized it's actually the Salvation Army on Devon! For anyone that's really interested. Who knows if stuff stays there or gets re-distributed throughout the city? I know, too much information.

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    3. If it were a different time, you probably could have made a show out of all those clothes.

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  5. wow- new phase! what could it be?

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