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Homes & Gardens
Homes & Gardens
Chiana Dickson

'It completely defeats the purpose' – experts urge you to ditch this performative organizing task so you can more easily tidy your home

Living room, blue painted walls, pale grey rugs, pair of armchairs, sofa and built in bookshelves.

Organizing your space can be a tricky thing to get right, and with an influx of ‘inspiration’ across social media and TV, it is easy to pick up purely performative tasks that do nothing to make your home more organized.

The worst among them? Labeling everything. While it can help in some cases, professional organizers warn that slapping a label on a bin or drawer doesn’t do anything to create a lasting organizing system.

Here, they delve into why you should ditch this performative organizing task, and what to do instead to create a home organizing system that sticks.

The performative task you need to ditch for an organized home

The idea that labels are ‘performative’ might come as a bit of a shock, considering that they crop up so often as a tool that professional organizers can’t do their job without.

However, there is a fine line between using a label maker, like the Dymo Letretag, from Walmart, efficiently and using it as a sticking plaster.

Labels can make sense in some areas of the home, but be redundant in others. (Image credit: deVOL Kitchens)

Michelle Urban, professional home organizer and founder of The Organized House, explains, ‘One initiative that always stands out is labeling everything before a system is even in place. People go straight for the label maker, labeling bins, drawers, and shelves, without first figuring out what belongs where or how the space is used.

‘Those labels quickly become irrelevant, and because of the work involved, people feel locked into the setup just because it’s labeled. Yes, it looks organized, but it doesn’t actually work.’

It is fast becoming an organizing ick that professional home organizers hate and use them too liberally, and you end up over-organizing your home, Michelle warns.

‘Labeling the obvious’ is performative, she warns, adding no one needs to stick a label on a clear jar of cotton balls. ‘That’s when labeling turns into a part-time job, which completely defeats the purpose.’

What to do instead

Declutter and organize first, then assess whether or not you need labels. (Image credit: Future / SIMON BROWN PHOTOGRAPHY)

Michelle shares, ‘In my experience, performative organizing doesn’t last. Real systems should make your home easier to live in, not just prettier to look at.’

To avoid this common organizing mistake, you should use some decluttering methods to clear out stuff you are not using and organize your containers and storage units logically. Realistically, you should be storing items where you use them most, or where it makes logical sense to look for them, using the co-worker/cousin method to keep like with like.

Labels, then, become subtle reminders or a method to help others navigate your home, rather than a map to your stuff. They should be used sparingly, such as on opaque containers like the Sterilite Heavy Duty Storage Bins from Walmart, or when working on storage-specific spaces, such as organizing a big attic or organizing a garage with too much stuff.

Labels can be helpful in large storage areas where items stay largely the same, such as attics or basements. (Image credit: Audra George)

Alternatively, you can ditch labels altogether to give yourself more breathing room and allow for future changes to your organizing system.

David Hurless, director of operations at Stor-It, suggests, ‘My advice here would be to ditch the labels, and instead keep your items in clear storage containers [such as the Premier Clear Modular Totes from The Container Store]. This allows you to see directly into your storage tubs, without needing to make labels.

‘I like this so much better, because you can also sometimes find whatever it is you are looking for without having to open up and completely reverse the storage contents.’

What to shop

Meet the experts

Over labeling everything is not the only storage mistake that makes your home harder to navigate. Decanting everything in a pantry or using bins just to hide clutter are common organizing trends that don’t work, too.

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