Paul Whicheloe

Problem
Lynda Johnston, a 60-year-old with grown children who lives with
her husband in Portland, Oregon, loves collecting beautiful things
and loathes parting with anything. She describes her aesthetic as
"cluttered" and wouldn't have it any other way.
One thing she
could do without, however, is the mountain of shoes spilling out
of her bedroom closet. Lynda has collected more than 200 pairs,
and most are stowed in their original boxes on the floor and shelf
of her bedroom closet and in the closet of a spare room.
"Sometimes when I'm going somewhere special," she says, "I have to
look the night before to find the shoes I want." Finding the right
pair is like playing a game of Concentration: She must remember
which shoes are in which box in which closet. Lynda aims to weed
out shoes she no longer wears at least a couple of times a year
but usually doesn't get far. She works part-time managing the
accounts of a family contracting business and says, "I have to
push myself to tidy up in my spare time. I'd rather unwind."
Solution
1. Try them on for size. Imposing order on a shoe collection is
impossible until you know which ones you really need. Pull out a
few pairs at a time, try on each pair, and ask yourself: Do they
fit comfortably? Do I like them? Do I have clothes that match? If
the shoes are shabby, can they be repaired? If you answer no to
any of these questions, put the shoes in the donation box. You'll
probably never miss them.
2. Think seasonally. Sort what's left into three groups fall and
winter, spring and summer, and special occasions. Keep the
in-season shoes readily accessible on a rack in the bottom of
your closet, in a hanging canvas shoe bag, or on an over-the-door
or wall-mounted rack. Store out-of-season and special-occasion
shoes in clear plastic boxes or cubbies at the top of a closet or
in a spare room. When the seasons change, move the shoes at the
bottom of the closet up top and the ones on top, down.
3. Plan for expandability. When buying shoe racks or boxes, buy
more than you need. That way new purchases will end up tidily
stowed rather than heaped on the closet floor.
If you want to keep your shoe collection permanently pared down,
buy with versatility in mind. If you want just one pair of evening
shoes, buy metallic ones, which are more versatile than black.
Midheel pumps, delicate-soled flats, and knee-high, rather than
ankle, boots can work with pants and skirts.