Template 2 - week 2The Embedded style rules I have used: body {margin: 40px 100px 40px 100px;} td {border: 2px solid red; padding: 9px;} ul {list-style-image: url(tulipdot.gif)} li {text-indent: 250px;} ol li {text-indent: 10px; text-transform: lowercase; list-style-type: upper-roman; color: blue;} img {margin: 40px; border: 2px red;} |
Life requires a lot of stuff. And each stuff needs its own home. When stuff becomes free-range, your home becomes cluttered.
Today's home has many uses including:
Used efficiently baskets can be decorative as well as functional. Baskets can be expensive, but do not have to be. Warehouse clubs, crafts stores, discount stores and closeout stores offer great looking baskets at reasonable prices.
| Kitchen | Baskets placed atop cabinets can hold gift bows, sewing notions, backup diskettes, supplies from warehouse clubs (six rolls of tape, a dozen boxes of pens, whatever). Be sure to place loose items in plastic bags to keep the dust out. And do not store food this way unless it is in sealed metal containers (squeak, squeak). Leave a few empty baskets up there for serving chips or bread. Most baskets can be sprayed with the kitchen sink sprayer. |
| Bedroom | Old-fashioned bureaus with their spindly legs are just calling for baskets to be stowed below them. Baskets can keep your bulky sweaters from taking up precious drawer space. And don't forget the underbed. Let an attactive basket holding your linens peek out from the bedskirt. |
| Bathroom | In the bathroom, vanity top baskets hold hair accessories, rolls of toilet paper, fresh towels and more. |
| Entryway | My
downstairs hallway sports a three-tiered basket holding hats, mittens
and gloves. A hanging closed lid basket on the coat closet door
doorknob holds empty plastic bags (to be taken along on the dog's
walk). |
As you shop for baskets, think of the odd-shaped empty spots where you can use them to keep frequently used items at hand and seldom used items stowed prettily away.
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