Michele Gastl

Even if your finances are spotless, your spice rack
alphabetized, and your shoes stacked in easily identifiable
boxes, your lingerie drawer is probably like most women's a
tangled mass of straps and hooks and unmatched fabrics, with the
bra you're looking for invariably somewhere in the middle. You
deserve better. "For God's sake, it's the closest thing to your
body," says lingerie designer Josie Natori, who keeps her bras
and panties in drawers of their own, lined up like little
soldiers. If the rest of your life isn't marching in tight
formation, straightening out one unruly corner can give you a
marvelously empowering sense of control (today the lingerie
drawer, tomorrow the world); and besides, opening up a
beautifully arranged drawerful of pretty panties all in a row
each morning can be one of life's small pleasures. Here's how to
do it.
Step 1: Out With the Old
Your first job is to take all your underwear and dump it out on
the bed. Why? Because before you can organize, you need to do
some deaccessioning. But editing underwear is easy because you
only have to deal with two piles: Things to keep and things to
throw away. No maybes. No maybe-it'll-come-back-in-fashions. No
giveaways. Please. (The Salvation Army will thank you.)
First cull: Anything you really wouldn't want to be hit by a
truck while wearing. Gray things that used to be white; anything
ratty, ripped, stained, or spotted with holes. "Are you not good
enough to wear good panties?" asks New York lingerie designer
Leigh Bantivoglio.
With that same I'm-worth-it mentality, take a hard look at what's
left and pitch it if:
You haven't worn it in a year (there must be a reason).The color has faded.The seams are beginning to come undone.The elastic is going or gone.The underwires have lost their original shape or are poking
through the fabric, which happens when a bra has been thrown into
the washing machine sans lingerie bag too many times.It doesn't fit properly anymore. "Weight fluctuates,
especially when you are pregnant," says Nanette DiFalco,
director of the One-On-One personal shopping service at Saks
Fifth Avenue in New York. "People say, 'I'll lose the weight;
I'll wear it again,' especially if it is an expensive bra. But
when I had a baby, even though I went back to my size, gravity
changed a lot."It didn't fit properly to begin with.It's uncomfortable divest yourself of bras that ride up and
thongs that dig in. (Thong tip: Cotton mesh is less likely to
gouge than nylon. Try Cosabella, On Gossamer, Hanky Panky, or
Calvin Klein.)