These are the celeb-inspired decluttering tips we all need to know about
Self-confessed organiser and mum of three, Lucy Mansey says sheâs always been fascinated by how organisation can impact your life.
A teacher for many years, she says it wasnât until she moved to Sydney and worked in interiors and design that she realised home organising was a thing. âThatâs when I fell in love with it,â she recalls.
âAnd more recently, with hit shows like The Home Edit, which base everything around home organisation â they do the Kardashians and all sorts of celebs â I actually realised you can make it into a profession,â she explains.
Manseyâs roll call of celeb clients includes Laura Whitmore, Jamie Laing and Millie Mackintosh: âShe [Mackintosh] was moving house, so I helped her edit before moving and then organised her wardrobe, kitchen and other areas of the house, to enable her to settle in quickly.â
She continues: âItâs a great way to ease the stress of moving, especially with young children, by having everything set up and ready to go.â
Mansey has also organised the homes of Tamzin Outhwaite (âI organised her fabulous wardrobeâ) and Angela Scanlon, to name but a few. âI organised her wardrobe initially, and then went on to do her kitchen and playroom. Sheâs a busy working mum, like many of my clients, so itâs nice to be able to alleviate some stress in peopleâs lives. Keeping on top of the house is a job in itself!â
Mansey says itâs about maintaining a system that works for each individual client, but there are some golden rules she followsâŠ
âThe main things Iâm looking for are how can we best make use of the space? Itâs often the case when you go into a kitchen or closet, you shove stuff into cupboards and hope for the best.â Which, she adds, doesnât necessarily translate into a sustainable system. âSo, my first thought is, how are we going to utilise absolutely every single space in this area?â
Secondly, she asks the client how they can reduce the clutter. âWe go through certain items and look at re-housing it, donating it, giving certain items you no longer want or need to a loved one.â
Mansey goes on to say part of the process is always taking absolutely everything out of the space sheâs doing, going through every single piece and rearranging it so the system makes sense, and is intuitive for the person whoâs living there and using it.
âItâs encouraging them to think, âAre you using it?â âDo you love it?â âDoes it serve a purpose?â And teasing that out of them to make up their own mind.â
As Mansey points out, with so many of us working from home, our working and home environments have merged to become âa jack of all tradesâ.
To help encourage people to minimise the clutter â and therefore become more productive in their working environment â sheâs teamed up with Samsung Electronics, whose latest research reveals almost half (45%) of Gen MZs (1981-2005) say working from home has cluttered their space, impacting their mood, creativity and productivity.
As well as using the Samsung M8 Smart Monitor to work, watch TV and exercise, she recommends utilising your vertical space with a peg board for paperwork, cleverly built-in shelves around a doorframe, and having a caddy which neatly holds things and can be tucked away at the end of the day â products which are multifunctional and space saving.
Having everything in a really clear system is key, she advises. âDrawer files, so everythingâs stored away nice and neatly â and then when you want to be creative, itâs all at your fingertips,â she suggests. Itâs about cutting out that frustration prior to becoming productive.â
Mansey says the kitchen is something she always gets asked about.
She believes you need to have a way of maintaining your cupboards. âSo every few months, youâre checking sell-by dates, getting everything out and having a really good edit of what you are and arenât using.â
She says the thing she often finds when she goes to clientsâ houses is they buy food, and then in the back of the cupboard, they have duplicates. âIn order to stop that from happening, to reduce food waste and save money, make sure you can see the food that you buy,â stresses Mansey.
âDonât overstuff cupboards. Donât have products on top of products, because thatâs when it all starts to go downhill â and you canât keep on top of what you have and havenât bought.â
She says itâs about going back to the idea of buying only what you need.
âIâm not talking about bulk. If you bulk buy, thatâs absolutely fine. For example, I might bulk buy dishwasher tabs. I have a container where I keep it topped up, and thatâs what Iâm using there and then. And then I have the excess in a cupboard in my utility. What Iâm talking about is what you have in your kitchen, what youâre using daily and keeping that streamlined â and working in a way that works for you and the family.â
Her top tip in the kitchen is to store all like items together. So, all pastas, rice and carbs together. Or treats â crisps, for example â categorise those together and then contain them.
âI then use containers, either clear containers â definitely something I would recommend, just from the point of view of being able to see the food â or some people prefer wooden options,â notes Mansey. âYou can get lovely wooden boxes on the market now.
âAnd I do bang on about it,â she laughs. âBut it really is out of sight, out of mind. And if you canât see something, youâre not using it in the same way.â
When it comes to our wardrobes, Mansey admits itâs tricky: âI think you have to be ruthless, because it can become overwhelming, very, very quickly, especially if you like to shop.
âFirst of all, try and create a seasonal wardrobe, if you have the space to store clothes. Box-up, vacuum pack or store clothes youâre not wearing at that point in time â and do a changeover.â
She says this also helps to streamline and furthers the enjoyment of your clothes. âYou donât wear it all year long, but when you get something out again, un-boxing, itâs a bit more exciting â so creating a winter/summer system.â
Secondly, she says to become a âbouncerâ â and adopt a one-in, one-out policy.
âOr two-in, one-out, to really think about what you wear. [Ask yourself] âWhat do I love?â âWhat do I feel good in?'â
And you can always do a âmaybeâ pile. âPut it somewhere for a couple of months, and if you donât feel like youâre going to miss it or regret it, thatâs when you get rid.â
She recommends clients use containers to put items in, if they have lots of shelving in their wardrobe, and not a lot of hanging space.
âDonât have clothes out on shelves â contain them. Have baskets of loungewear, or jeans, for example, because often what happens is the shelves just get inundated with clothes â and by containing, youâre actually limiting the ability to do that.â





