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The Home Edit Life: The Complete Guide to Organizing Absolutely Everything at Work, at Home and On the Go, A Netflix Original Series – Season 2 now showing on Netflix

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Clea Shearer and Joanna Teplin, authors of 'The Home Edit: A Guide to Organizing and Realizing Your House Goals, ' have taken a rainbow approach to organization inside the homes of celebs like Khloe Kardashian and Gwenyth Paltrow." -- Good Morning America As far as buying all those clear plastic bins - if you're Gwyneth Paltrow or some of the other people whose names are dropped liberally in this book, you can afford it. If not, use what you have already and slowly, section by section, get the plastic bins, first for the things that keep ending up all over the house like kids' toys, pens and pencils, or whatever you keep finding out of place in your house. You can have an organized house that looks like the one in the book if you're willing to do it slowly, over time. Congrats! Now that you’ve edited your items, categorized them, and contained them...you are free to never organize again for the rest of your life. And neither does your family! You now live in a museum where no one is allowed to touch things. You don’t greet guests by taking their coat – you tell them to please keep their belongings,

THE BOOKS – The Home Edit

Moving her family across the country (TO the country, she claims) has been a huge adjustment, but an incredible experience for her. In Nashville, the stars aligned and she met her business partner, Joanna! Together, they launched a home organization business called The Home Edit. Clea Shearer and Joanna Teplin, authors of 'The Home Edit: A Guide to Organizing and Realizing Your House Goals,' have taken a rainbow approach to organization inside the homes of celebs like Khloe Kardashian and Gwenyth Paltrow.” — Good Morning AmericaAs soon as I answered yes to four out of five of the ‘you know you are an obsessive organizer when’ statements, I knew these women spoke my language. And not only are they super duper organizers, they are pretty funny, not taking themselves too seriously and people who amuse are my people.

The Home Edit Life: The Complete Guide to Organizing

Do our homes ever get messy? Yes, of course they do! Every house gets messy, particularly when you add All that said, if you’re just trying to find more organization porn to sustain you until a second season comes out, this fits the bill nicely. It was very satisfying to see finished projects and hear the details on how they completed them. And the rainbow organizing? I’d heard of it before but never really thought it practical. But then I went thought and rearranged my kid’s books and it elevated the energy of the space by at least 200%. It’s so appeasing! And we actually have an easier time finding books than when it was just arranged by author. Although she once called LA home, she loves the food, energy and scenery of the city. Plus, the shopping at White's Mercantile is pretty great. Just in time for everyone's 'spring cleaning goals' comes the book everyone needs! Part inspirational pep talk, part organizational how-to and part eye candy . . . The Home Edit is the real deal." -- Pretty Pink TulipsJust in time for everyone's 'spring cleaning goals' comes the book everyone needs! Part inspirational pep talk, part organizational how-to and part eye candy . . . The Home Editis the real deal.” — PrettyPink Tulips The photos in here are gorgeous. Drool-worthy photos if you love pretty organization. Visual candy. Lovely layout & printing job too.

Home Edit STORY – The Home Edit

The Home Edit is a very beautiful book but is highly unrealistic and caters only to a specific audience (upper-middle-class to upper-class women with a large home budget and an oversized house). The book doesn't translate to someone like me that lives in a large city and two bedroom apartment. If I had seemingly unlimited space in my home like Gwyneth Paltrow (whose home was featured in this book), I think many of my storage problems would be non-existent and my space needs would be met. But I don't. Recommendations: while entertaining and very visually appealing, the book doesn’t go into much depth on how to actually execute their steps. More a celebration of their works and the logic behind their methods, this is more for entertainment than it is for self help / house improvement. If you’re like me and you just enjoy reading about organizing, this is stellar. If you’re hoping to learn how to develop organization skills, there are much more thorough books on the market. Clea and Joanna show you how to accomplish just about anything—including a meticulously arranged home. The key is starting with something achievable so that you succeed. Learn which space you should approach first so you stay motivated to finish the whole house (hint: it’s not a room); what storage items you need and how much to buy; and how you can get the whole family to pitch in—even the kids! AVAILABLE EVERYWHERE! Clea Shearer was born and raised in Los Angeles and just recently located to Nashville (what a move!) for her husband's job as an Entertainment and Music Photographer with Getty Images.

I always hear people complaining about when somebody puts out a second book that it’s just a rewrite of the first with a little new info.. At home or on the go, you don’t have to live like a minimalist to feel happy and calm. The Home Edit mentality is all about embracing your life–whether you’re a busy mom, a roommate living with three, or someone who’s always traveling for work. You just need to know how to set up a system that works for you. At home or on the go, you don't have to live like a minimalist to feel happy and calm. The Home Edit mentality is all about embracing your life—whether you’re a busy mom, a roommate living with three, or someone who’s always traveling for work. You just need to know how to set up a system that works for you. At home or on the go, you don't have to live like a minimalist to feel happy and calm. The Home Edit mentality is all about embracing your life--whether you're a busy mom, a roommate living with three, or someone who's always traveling for work. You just need to know how to set up a system that works for you.

Home Edit Life – The Home Edit THE Home Edit Life – The Home Edit

Reese Witherspoon hires Clea and Joanna to help display some of her memorable movie and TV looks. The team revives a pediatrician’s cluttered closet. Please do NOT waste food. Please do NOT buy things that you will not use (like this book). Please reduce your plastic consumption. Please reduce, reuse, and recycle. Make sustainable long term plans over temporary short term *pretty* plans. The mishmash of summer and winter clothes in the closet? Yep. Even the dreaded junk drawer? Consider it done. And the best news: it's not hard to do-in fact, it's a lot of fun. Believe this: every single space in your house has the potential to function efficiently and look great. The mishmash of summer and winter clothes in the closet? Yep. Even the dreaded junk drawer? Consider it done. And the best news: it’s not hard to do—in fact, it’s a lot of fun. Believe this: every single space in your house has the potential to function efficiently and look great. The mishmash of summer and winter clothes in the closet? Yep. Even the dreaded junk drawer? Consider it done. And the best news: it's not hard to do--in fact, it's a lot of fun.Born and raised in Los Angeles, Clea has always loved to organize and has a keen eye for design which led her to NYC where she studied at Parsons School of Design. Prior to meeting Joanna and starting The Home Edit, Clea worked in social media and PR with an emphasis on fashion and entertainment. Although she’s a California girl through and through, Clea currently lives in Nashville, Tennessee with her husband John, two kids and dog. In her free time, Clea enjoys reading, sipping champagne with friends and honing her newfound skills in the kitchen! including hands, arms, and legs, inside the vehicle at all times. In fact, you don’t even have guests over anymore! Because who wants to go to a museum that doesn’t have a proper gift shop? Like most books of this type, this one goes way overboard. However, there are a lot of useful ideas. Read through it, choose what works for you, and let the rest go. One thing I would highly recommend is The Edit. That's the chapter where they advise you to take out everything of a certain type of possession (all your clothes, for example, or all your kitchen utensils) and go through them one by one to determine 1) if you actually use/wear/need it; 2) if you don't need it now but will in the immediate future (for example, it's summer but you don't want to throw out your heavy winter coat); and 3) whether you're holding onto the item for sentimental reasons, or in the example of clothes, if you're holding onto it because one day you hope to fit into it again. There are pantries, refrigerators, and offices with what feels like not nearly enough items to go beyond one meal, or not enough office supplies. The spacing between items on a shelf or in a drawer, leads me to believe these houses must have hundreds of drawers and shelves or you'd never be able to "house" objects with so much space between. Then, if one does have that many drawers, closets, shelves - how do you remember which drawer you apple corer is in versus your potato peeler and your small whisk.

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