Moving Packing Tips
Nine tips to make sure your valuables come out of their boxes in good shape.
Annie SchlechterUse the right size boxes.
Put heavy items, like books, in small boxes; light items, like linens and pillows, in bigger ones. (Large boxes packed with
heavy items are a common complaint of professional movers. They not only make the job harder but also have a better chance
of breaking.)
Put heavier items on the bottoms of boxes, lighter items on top.
And if you’re loading the truck yourself, pack heavier boxes first, toward the front of the truck, for balance.
Don’t leave empty spaces in the boxes.
Fill in gaps with clothing, towels, or packing paper. Movers often won’t move boxes that feel loosely packed or unbalanced.
Avoid mixing items from different rooms in the same box.
It will make your packing quicker and your unpacking a lot easier, too.
Label each box with the room it’s destined for and a description of its contents.
This will help you and your movers know where every box belongs in your new place. Numbering each box and keeping an inventory
list in a small notebook is a good way to keep track of what you’ve packed―and to make sure you still have everything when
you unpack.
Tape boxes well.
Use a couple of pieces of tape to close the bottom and top seams, then use one of the movers’ techniques―making a couple of
wraps all the way around the box’s top and bottom edges, where stress is concentrated.
If you’re moving expensive art, ask your mover about special crating.
Never wrap oil paintings in regular paper; it will stick. For pictures framed behind glass, make an X with masking tape across
the glass to strengthen it and to hold it together if it shatters. Then wrap the pictures in paper or bubble wrap and put
them in a frame box, with a piece of cardboard between each framed piece for protection.
Bundle breakables.
As you pack your dishes, put packing paper around each one, then wrap bundles of five or six together with more paper. Pack
dishes on their sides, never flat. And use plenty of bunched-up paper as padding above and below. Cups and bowls can be placed
inside one another, with paper in between, and wrapped three or four in a bundle. Pack them all in dish-barrel boxes.
Consider other items that will need special treatment.
Vansant says his movers treat TVs like any other piece of furniture, wrapping them in quilted furniture pads. He points out,
however, that plasma TVs require special wooden crates for shipping if you don’t have the original box and can be ruined if
you lay them flat. If you’re packing yourself, double-box your TV, setting the box containing the TV into another box that
you’ve padded with packing paper.


