October 5, 2011

Space saving chairs

Filed under: blog,entertaining,living room,space saving — DwellWell @ 10:52 am

We love entertaining but our NYC apartments are a bit shy on storage space, much less storage for extra chairs.  We’ve been on the hunt for space-saving versatile seating and this is what we’ve found.

Photo courtesy of fluxchairs.com



International Contemporary Furniture Fair last May.  It’s called the Flux Chair. The creators of Flux were thinking ‘ever-changing’, ‘flexible’ and ‘luxury’ when naming their products and that’s what these design-driven chairs promise.  When folded, 25 of these chairs stack up to about a foot.  That’s a lotta chair in a little space!

Photo courtesy of dripta.com



Magic Chair (above) is designer Dripta Roy’s nesting, rocking, eye-candy.  We’re major suckers for convertible furniture and Roy’s merges functional practicality with beauty and elegance.  We’re fans.

Photo courtesy of studiodror.com



Pick Chair, (above) by Dror Benshetrit. The Pick Chair is part art, part chair. In this case, form does follow function as Dror designs products to solve problems of our modern lifestyle – how apropos for space-crunched New Yorkers! With one-hand, wall art transforms to become a sturdy chair or side table. Looks good on the wall and on the floor.

December 19, 2010

Square up with us

Filed under: blog — DwellWell @ 11:10 pm

photo courtesy of Square, Inc.

DwellWell now accepts credit cards thanks to the ingenuity of Square, Inc. We received it in the mail yesterday . . . a 1″ white square that fits into the earphone jack on an iPhone.  Who is going to help us take it on its maiden voyage?  We’ll give 10% off the first person who purchases a holiday gift certificate using a credit card.  DwellWell gift certificates are available in any amount and are the perfect holiday gift for anyone who has “get organized” on their list of New Year’s resolutions . . .

Or anyone you think should have “get organized” on their list of New Year’s resolutions.

If you are looking for the perfect gift for just about anyone, give the gift that every New Yorker needs . . . The gift of time.  First person to use their credit card to purchase a package of personal assistant hours gets the same 10% discount off the following packages:

Buoy: 5 hours for $200
Anchor: 25 hours for $950
Lifesaver: 40 hours for $1500

September 10, 2010

School is in. Let the chaos begin. Or not!

Filed under: blog,kids — DwellWell @ 2:00 pm

Yesterday on Martha Stewart Living Radio I got to chat with the Morning Living host, Betsy  Karetnick as well as Interior Design Diva, Alexa Hampton.  The topic was Back-to-School organizing and since all parents can relate to backpack and school paper drama, let’s discuss.

Photo courtesy of Artisan Books

Just as adults need a “landing strip” for their keys, wallets and cell phones, kids need an assigned area for dropping their backpacks after school.  The idea is that if you put something in the same place every day, you’ll always know where to find it, right?  Cubbies are ideal, but not everyone is blessed with that kind of entryway space.  Pegs, hung at a kid-friendly level (about 40 inches from the floor) work just as well.  Just choose an assigned place for backpacks and keep reminding kids to unload them there until it becomes as habitual as dumping it on the kitchen table.  Kids should also have a go-to spot for unloading coats and shoes too.

Photo courtesy of Artisan Books

After school rituals should include unloading certain backpack items into designated spots: Train kids to empty their lunch boxes, leaving them in an appointed spot, and to put their folder of school papers in a designated “inbox” on the counter. As they get older, increase their responsibility, having them separate their artwork, homework and school papers and putting them in their respective places (artwork on a tray or in a bin, homework on their desk (or appointed homework spot) and school papers in mom’s inbox). If kids won’t cooperate, having a backpack landing strip will at least ensure that you’ll know where to go to dig the papers out yourself and you’ll also avoid the “mom-where’s-my-backpack” panic in the morning.

Another thing to remember is that kids should think of their backpacks as a transportation vehicle rather than a storage unit.  Backpacks are simply to cart things to and from school.  Nothing should have a permanent home inside a child’s backpack.  Make sure your kid isn’t hoarding items in there that should be stored elsewhere.

But what about other paper . . . School work?  Report cards?  Calendars and other current school info?

Each child can keep track of school work in a desk filing drawer with hanging files for each subject.  If your child’s room is lacking file space, improvise with an accordion folder as Betsy suggested today.  For long-term record keeping for mementos such as report cards, awards, etc., use a 3-ring binder for each child.  Use tabbed dividers to delineate school years and start another binder if one fills up.  Label the spine and keep these on a shelf or in a cabinet.  Current school information can be kept in another binder with tabbed dividers for schedules and calendars, parent contact lists, school memos, after-school activities, etc.  Sort and purge every semester.  Handle permission slips, order forms (and other paper requiring action) immediately so that they don’t vaporize into the ether as many have been reported to do.

Find more information on organizing kids in “What’s a Disorganized Person to Do?”

March 3, 2010

Organization as Art

Filed under: art,blog,nyc — DwellWell @ 9:25 pm

Opening night at the Armory Art Show in NYC. Hangers, paper clips, and requests to be removed from mailing lists. I’ve seen organization work its way into the related realms of architecture and interior design but after tonight at the Armory, I suspect that the desire for order has permeated our collective consciousness.

This hanger sculpture puts the Container Store to shame!
I’m seeing paperclips.
I wish I had this much space to store my handbags.
Down with junk mail!
I’m not suggesting anyone needs more than one stove-top espresso
maker, but who doesn’t dream of this kind of storage??




March 2, 2010

TIP DU JOUR: What to do with spare buttons?

Filed under: blog,closets — DwellWell @ 1:00 pm

What do you do with the spare buttons that come with new clothing?  Try this:

Designate a box for them and keep a fine-point indelible ink pen inside. When you buy a new item of clothing with a spare button, which usually comes in a small plastic or paper bag, write a brief description on the bag (to identify it when you need it) and put it in the box. When the box fills up, sort through it and throw out buttons for clothing you no longer own.


February 26, 2010

What’s a Disorganized Person to Do?

Filed under: blog,books — DwellWell @ 4:38 pm

I’m proud to announce that my first book, “What’s a Disorganized Person to Do?” is in stores now.  Within its 272 pages, you’ll find out how to get a human being on the phone when calling customer service, what papers you need to save for taxes (and for how long), what to do you with your kids’ (plentiful) artwork and all kinds of other juicy tidbits to help you declutter and streamline your life.

January 9, 2010

Where are my keys?

Filed under: blog,books — DwellWell @ 4:15 pm

I’ve been reading this book called “The Brain that Changes Itself” by Norman Doidge, PhD.  Neuroscientists previously believed that our mental abilities were fixed at a very young age, but now there is an understanding that the brain is instead plastic and has the ability to change and improve its functioning at any age.  There is a story of a woman who had no spatial reasoning.  She couldn’t make a mental map of things in space.  Out of sight literally meant out of mind for her.  It made me think of certain organizing clients who are always looking for their keys and who don’t like to put things away for fear of never finding them.  The woman in the story reversed her spatial reasoning deficiency and a host of other learning disabilities by a series of exercises that worked by carving new neural pathways in the brain.  I did a little research and found a website called Lumosity which offers a series of brain fitness programs designed by some of the leading experts in neuroscience and cognitive psychology.  There is one for improving spatial reasoning called Memory Matrix.  A pattern flashes on the screen which you have to repeat by clicking the correct tiles.  It starts with three and, assuming you get it right, goes up from there.

Its pretty easy at first and then at about level 8 or 9 is when I started really feeling my brain stretching.  Its like yoga for the brain and I’m totally hooked.  Turns out I can feed my addiction all day long since there’s a Memory Matrix application for the iPhone.

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