Spaces should be thoughtful.

 

Glasses go above the dishwasher. Batteries in the TV stand. Plastic bowls for the kids sit next to the cereal in the pantry. Charging cords are placed where they won’t fall behind the bed. Recycling bins, pens, and bulletin boards are located where you sort the mail and clean out backpacks. Drying hooks await wet bath towels outside the shower doors and adequate baskets collect the laundry.

Neatness is designed. It’s a constant assessment of how we live and how our spaces help us or work against us. The objects that accompany us every day deserve their own designation in the places that we spend our every day. Grandma’s Christmas dishes and the giant plastic cake carrier can give up their prime space to make room for lunch boxes and water bottles. Heirloom prom dresses and Halloween costumes can make way for the shirts and jeans and jackets of every day. As families evolve, as activities change and needs change, so must our spaces.

When our spaces anticipate our needs, when they work with us to keep things neat, we feel better, we work better, we live better.

Get in touch with us today to get started.
Email: sara@NEATLY.SPACE