How to sort your loft
Don’t stack
paper or books
Paper is stupidly
heavy - don’t
overload your loft with
piles higher than say
40cm, and keep it to
the edges. Lofts are
not designed for
heavy storage.
The cheap pop-up type of
plastic box from Tesco and
Makro are cheap at
around £3 but will break if
stacked more than 2 high
and are really not very
sturdy.
A good source for large
boxes like this between
£4 - £10 is Family Best
Buy Supplied with a lid,
they’ve got a high
capacity and are
cheap, but the plastic is
thin and breaks easily if
bashed about or
loaded with heavy
items.
One of the best all
round most versatile
type are the translucent
Contico boxes from
Makro and Costco with
a permanently
attached two flap lid.
The lid flaps fold in for a
closed box that can be
stacked, and fold out to
stack empty boxes.
3
If life is like a box of chocolates, your loft is like a box of
Lego.
You know about Economies of Scale - where the more items
a company produces the cheaper they are to produce. Lofts
have Diseconomies of Scale - the more stuff you have the
more
difficult it is to find what you’re looking for, so you end up
buying another one - which is why you have four picnic baskets and three foot
pumps amongst other things....
Faced with the rather daunting prospect of sorting out your loft, where do you
start? The easiest method is to use our logical Legobox Sort Method that works
for anything - garages, drawers, kitchens, lofts.
Think about sorting out a mixed box of Lego: it’s obvious how you’d sort that
out - you’d throw out the bits of fluff, torn cardboard and half eaten sweets,
separate out the things that shouldn’t be there like Playmobil and Matchbox
cars, and then sort the lego into different coloured blocks and useful bits like
wheels and windows.
The same applies to your loft only on a bigger scale:
There are three types of Loft Stuff:
Cat 3: No value to anybody: this is rubbish and can be thrown away with no
regrets.
Cat 2: Has value, but not to you - sell it or give it away
Cat 1: Has value to you and you’d like to keep it (But really? You may want to
put it into category 2 or 3 after a bit of thought.)
Category 3 sort:
Remove and throw away all rubbish that really has no value - empty boxes
from things that have long gone, broken things, cassette
tapes, used
carpets, 10 year old computers, non-flatscreen TVs &
monitors, bits of wood, anything made by Apple last year
etc.
Questions to ask :
•
How long has it been in the loft?
•
Are you really going to use/read or
look at it ever again?
•
Have you long since replaced it with
a better one?
Category 2 sort:
Remove & sell /recycle things that have value but you no longer want: recycle
at Oxfam or put on Freegle (eg: https://www.ilovefreegle.org ) or sell on Ebay -
toys are best to sell around November for Christmas. Generally if you can find it
on Ebay it probably will have some value, although be careful with the “buy it
now” prices as these are not necessarily what an item will go for and is usually
somebody trying their luck.
Category 1 sort:
Group like things together: all the suitcases together, all Christmas decorations
together, all books together. Beware of the “Time Kept / Added Value” illusion,
where you’ve kept it for 20 years and so it’s somehow worth more: you haven’t
looked at it or used it for 20 years so why are you keeping it?
Box up similar like stuff in same size boxes to make stacking and arranging
easier: make sure boxes will fit through loft opening and are stackable.
Label what's in the box - list contents on a spreadsheet if you're feeling
efficient.
Do you really need to store it?
Firstly, is it really something you want to keep? Remember some things will just
never come back into fashion, so its daft to store:
•
Hi-fi
•
Computers PCs/Monitors/printers - in fact anything technology -based!
•
TVs - especially analogue & non-flatscreen
•
Carpets - except for an emergency 1m
2
for NEW carpets
•
Kitchen cupboard doors (!)
•
Baby clothes & equipment (children rarely get smaller as they get older)
•
Toys
•
old toys
•
Accounts paperwork older than 7 years - if it’s before 2016, bin it!
•
ANYTHING broken - you won’t fix it, it’s not worth it, bin it.
•
COAT HANGERS - these are absolutely forbidden: the world will NEVER run
out of coat-hangers!
If you want to keep toys that you played with for your kids, bear in mind that
technology moves on. You can flog on ebay that terrible 1965 Tri-ang Hornby
engine that you never liked much and never worked very well anyway, and
get a recent EuroStar (also on ebay) that goes like the clappers for not much
more. A 2025 representation of a 1960 steam engine will always work so much
better than a 1972 representation of the same locomotive. If you want to wean
them off Fortnite, the toys you hand on had better work properly.
Empty boxes
It’s ok to keep original boxes if the item is worth more on ebay with the box eg.
Sylvanian families, Hornby railways etc. BUT keep all boxes together and bin
them as soon as you bin the item they came in.
Don’t stack paper
Paper and books are stupidly heavy - don’t overload your loft with piles higher
than say 40cm, and keep it to the edges. If you’re storing books you really
have to consider WHY - are you really ever going to read them again? It’s
important to remember that the loft beams are not as strong as floor beams, so
don’t overdo it.
Storage bags - don’t use bin bags
Don’t use black bin bags for storage: they rip far too easily, they tend to get
chucked out by mistake (see Toy Story 2) and you can’t tell what’s in them.
Get the clear storage tie bags from Waitrose - they’re cheap, fairly strong and
you can see what’s in them. Do not get the similar clear recycling bags from
Tescos, they’re not strong enough. Put a big A4 label in them like “James’
summer clothes 2019” - so you’ll know when to chuck them out. (The clothes)
Cardboard storage boxes - sources
Banana boxes from Tescos and other supermarkets are very strong but not too
deep - ideal for stacking. Costco usually have loads of boxes by their checkout
areas - stock up with lots the same size for a neat arrangement.
Storage boxes - plastic
For what you get these can get a bit expensive if you need 10 or 20, but
sometimes you can get good offers at Ikea, Costco or The Range. Bigger boxes
are better value per litre, but make sure you can get them through the loft
opening with a ladder fitted. The optimum size is 45L. Larger boxes - say 60 litres
- can get too heavy for the thin plastic that they are made of, so bear this in
mind when packing and lifting. A 60 L box full of books or paper will break on
lifting - better to use the Really Useful Box type. Recommended best all round
box is Ikea 45L SAMLA with lid at around £7. Not too expensive, stacks nicely,
stronger thicker plastic than home bargains and can be got into most lofts.
When to start
•
Best months are September October November, and March April May
when it’s not too hot and not too cold in the loft.
•
Start after breakfast around 9.30am till 12.30 when you’re at peak energy.
•
Set small achievable targets , eg Today I’m spending a maximum of two
hours collecting and throwing away cat 3 rubbish.
•
Wear old clothes or overalls, Screwfix disposable paper overalls start from
£3, yellow gripper gloves from Wickes work well.
•
Get the strongest black bags you can for rubbish, Wickes black rubble
bags are very strong and not too big.
Initially a bit daunting but a systematic approach can tackle it!
Just like your loft only different scale. You know what
to do..
No plastic spiders were harmed in the sorting of this Lego.
Your goal…
Trigger Warning: this page contains graphic images of unsorted Lego, which some viewers may find distressing.
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