How to Organize a Chaotic Space

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Adam Savage’s Tested

Adam Savage’s Tested

Күн бұрын

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@tested
@tested Жыл бұрын
What are YOUR organizing-a-messy-space tips? Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks, like asking Adam questions: kzbin.info/door/iDJtJKMICpb9B1qf7qjEOAjoin Tested and Adam Savage Ts, stickers, (de) merit badges and more: tested-store.com
@paulvamos7319
@paulvamos7319 Жыл бұрын
A Maker Space is a living thing that's always changing to fit a specific need! 😂 I love that because it's what my grandpa's shop was both a machine/mechanic and a wood shop! Always changing. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year everyone at Tested! 🤟✌️🤘🖖❤️🌲🎄🧑‍🎄🎉🎊🎁🎆🎇😎
@hogan3372
@hogan3372 Жыл бұрын
Try not to stack things more than 3 on top of each other. Things like boxes or containers that don't open on the side or that aren't in a shelf are incredibly annoying to get in and out.
@Peter57808
@Peter57808 Жыл бұрын
The 6x3 mobile table works great, to make it simple just use a mobile tool chest of drawers with a timber top.
@joekelly-oneil9015
@joekelly-oneil9015 Жыл бұрын
Rule: You can't steer a boat that's not moving 🚣‍♂️
@joekelly-oneil9015
@joekelly-oneil9015 Жыл бұрын
okay Adam,, I've got a great analogy for you from my old man. He was high level efficiency expert guy back when aerospace used to be in socal. As an adhd kid, sometimes Id get really overwhelmed and stuck. His analogy has helped me ever since. 8 man rowing shells are 100 ft long and have a rudder the size of credit card. U might ask, how can that little credit card steer a boat that's 100 ft long?! and you'd be right. it can't steer the boat......unless its moving:)
@c97f
@c97f Жыл бұрын
Tip from an ex-Industrial Engineer: create a spot for stuff you don't know what to do with (no home for it, maybe throw away but haven't decided, don't like it's current home, etc). We called this a "red tag area" because we put a red tag on it. Anyway... Organize everything and then when you're done, deal with the red tag stuff. Use a red tag spot in daily shop life as you work and just deal with it periodically instead of constantly struggling item by item.
@hunt4r214
@hunt4r214 Жыл бұрын
I’ve got some industrial bins I use on a shelf for this purpose, I fill them with the things I need to get to and when I find myself looking for something to do I grab a bin or something off of the shelf.
@m16ty
@m16ty Жыл бұрын
I think we all have that "red tag area", the problem is mine is overflowing. Admittedly, I hold on to stuff too long that should either be thrown away or otherwise gotten rid of. We all know the law of throwing stuff away though, even though you haven't used a item in 20 years, after you throw it away you'll need it within the next week.
@MrBurtonPE
@MrBurtonPE Жыл бұрын
@@m16ty preach! Wait until you have to move and all of a sudden that clutter becomes a nightmare of random containers and anxiety
@NozomiShinobuCrest
@NozomiShinobuCrest Жыл бұрын
This is a really excellent idea, thank you
@handle_your_set
@handle_your_set Жыл бұрын
I needed this. I have a move coming up and I’ve gotten stuck in a loop which gets exasperated by the anxiety caused by falling behind for the move etc. I’m gonna red tag the crap out of my space immediately!
@maximusgriffiths4507
@maximusgriffiths4507 Жыл бұрын
Years ago you mentioned something that has stuck with me. "When you look for something, the first place you look is where you should keep it once you find it."
@query1527
@query1527 Жыл бұрын
I'd add - spend time in your workshop when you're not working on something. Have a coffee in there, make a call, write your Christmas plans etc. I can go in without a plan or intention to do something and end up tidying or making a home for something (even if it's just a hook on the wall) just because i became motivated or i notice some organizational low hanging fruit. It also helps clarify what the bigger organizing challenges are.
@macgyver03ga
@macgyver03ga Жыл бұрын
Great idea. Sometimes I’ll take my laptop down to my shop and work there as an office instead of working in my actual office upstairs. I’ll go down there in the evening after the kids are asleep and just brainstorm about future plans, layout, etc.
@JimmyNewCakes
@JimmyNewCakes 11 ай бұрын
Yup! It's a subconscious thing I've done a few times. I'll go out there when I've got a stalled project to be near the project and just trying and think about new ways to approach it. If I get an idea on the project-fantastic! I move forward with it. If I don't get a project idea, I'll usually start fidgeting with some of my tools or materials and just start thinking "I should go put this away. I'll also take these things with me. ...wait, why do I even keep these items over here? I should move those now while no other work is being done." It's usually a pretty good way to get an entire workstation completely cleared up and a bit of start of getting the other workstations/storage areas cleared up due to them having more of their stuff back in the right area.
@billb.2673
@billb.2673 Жыл бұрын
I've been a facility manager for over 30 years, running a very large shop with tons of tools, bins, and parts. My experience is that my ultra creative and exceptionally talented employees tend to have the most (seemingly) disorganized work areas. It used to drive me out of my mind. We'd go through a huge shop deep clean and re-org and 2 days later their spaces looked like Sanford & Son. Over time I've come to accept this, if not embrace it, with the mindset that I value the talent over cleanliness.
@ewerner-m8c
@ewerner-m8c Жыл бұрын
Did it seem like these folks benefited from the occasional "reset"?
@m16ty
@m16ty Жыл бұрын
Going by that logic, I must be a genius, lol. I tend to agree though. I've got an accountant that I consider one of the best in his field. When you go into his office it's a disaster, boxes and papers just scattered everywhere. It takes him time just to move enough stuff for you to sit down. I don't know how he does it, but he can always riffle though a few boxes and find my file surprisingly fast.
@handle_your_set
@handle_your_set 11 ай бұрын
Where y'all see mess, there is actually a very intricate system there. I am the same way. My work areas are painfully cluttered... BUT I can almos t always find that one 3/4" sheet metal screw that I saw in that spot just last week. @@m16ty
@fixedit8689
@fixedit8689 11 ай бұрын
I’m a millwright in a food facility. We are constantly growing and improving the equipment and experimenting with concepts. I have the messiest area. It dirty but multiple projects going on at the same time and all the concepts and what ifs or can we comes to me
@billb.2673
@billb.2673 11 ай бұрын
@@ewerner-m8c I think so….but it was short lived
@timberrecycling
@timberrecycling Жыл бұрын
"where would i look for it?" is genius for solving new storage. I've been using it since I first heard it here and it has saved me hours of frustration, both in and out of the shop.
@pRoFlT
@pRoFlT Жыл бұрын
Problem is, it's always the last place you look for something that you find it. if only you could put it where you would look first. Other problem. significant other sees it somewhere and then decides, "that doesn't go there". and now no one can find it ;)
@scootb7400
@scootb7400 11 ай бұрын
“Motion brings clarity” is what a mentor of mine used to say. I didn’t realize until I was an adult that I had paralyzing ADHD (when I recognized it in my son), and only then did I realize the wisdom of this advice. It’s not always about having the perfect plan. It’s about experiencing, learning & adapting.
@jennnava2769
@jennnava2769 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for your post. It really resonates with me. “Motion brings clarity “ great advice.😊
@mikesinistar8834
@mikesinistar8834 11 ай бұрын
"Where would i look for it if i needed in right now?" That is so obvious and genius, its incredible
@chriswei2k
@chriswei2k Жыл бұрын
Adding to the fear of not “getting it right” is having limited time to “be creative” and having to decide between spending that limited time on a space re-org or “being creative”. Of course, reorganizing your space can make your creative time more effective! But it’s still one of those decisions that tie up our brains.
@RowanHawkins
@RowanHawkins Жыл бұрын
I try to tell myself there is no right...only right now. Its good enough for now. Otherwise I might go down a rabbit hole and end at good enough for the heat death of the universe.
@poggo45
@poggo45 Жыл бұрын
With 2 little ones I often don't get time to work on projects and make my hand-made knives. I made a goal that I would get my shop put back together before it got cold, I made a lot of progress to the point where everything got repainted and organized both. Now I can go out to the shop when the kids go down for the night and freely work on my projects for 10 minutes or 2 hours and not have to worry about how much I have to get done. I have one day left of work for the year and I'm elated that I get to spend some quality time with my boy in the shop now instead of worrying about finding a home for everything. I'm a very visual person so all of the tools/items I use often are on the walls where I can see them. Horizontal space isn't something I have so everything had to go vertical.
@flynbenny
@flynbenny Жыл бұрын
This is something I struggle with. But I also understand that having my tools and supplies organized properly increases the time I spend making, decreases time repairing/maintaining vehicles and the house, and most importantly, makes the spaces I share with my family more pleasant. If everything has its own place, then everyone can use an item and return it so everyone else can find it again and it isn't underfoot.
@Suboptimalconditions
@Suboptimalconditions Жыл бұрын
This is also what I struggle with so so very much.
@sobeit1927
@sobeit1927 Жыл бұрын
Reorganising is a creative process . The way to go about it it to just start , anywhere , and it will self dictate .
@VINTAGEBACKYARDRC
@VINTAGEBACKYARDRC Жыл бұрын
"Where would I put this if I needed it now" has been how I have rolled for 20+ years. Probably the best advice for a crammed shop ever!
@pagiel242
@pagiel242 Жыл бұрын
This video solely serves as a confirmation for why I admire you so much, Adam. This level of sincerity, a bit of vulnerability, but mostly just plain honesty of the state of things and exposure to your mindset about it, is really damn cool. It's nice to see someone who has a level of complexity *significantly* higher than mine struggle with many of the same things I do, and to see your process for dealing with those things, serially (fuck parallel), and just go one foot in front of the other. Thanks for bringing us along on your journey. Cheers!
@alexhickey8869
@alexhickey8869 Жыл бұрын
Organization is always a challenge. In the body shop I work at, organization is key to making money and getting stuff done. All of my trainees, I’ve taught them order of first retrieval. Few have stuck with it, because they’re young and sometimes have a hard time grasping the idea. They’ll buy a tool cart, fill it by how they think they want it, and then spend a few minutes trying to find the tool they need. And sometimes the shop itself has it’s own organizational chaos. Where do we need to put old/new parts, shop equipment where we can easily find and utilize it, etc. we’re constantly changing our approach to the issue of organization and Adam pretty much nailed it, when he says “one thing at a time.”
@handle_your_set
@handle_your_set Жыл бұрын
When you went on about spending an hour (sometimes an afternoon) building a place for the thing… you spoke directly to me. I start organizing but I always wind up making a thing. If I could stop that I’d be fine I think…maybe.
@doorofnight87
@doorofnight87 Жыл бұрын
I like that way of thinking about where to put something you aren't sure where its home is. Another good one I've heard recently is that if an item doesn't have a set or obvious home, to put it with eithers its 'neighbors, cousins, or co-workers', so either things where they are shaped similarly, have a similar function, or work together. It is a helpful way to thinking about it.
@2011Kestrel
@2011Kestrel Жыл бұрын
And buy a label maker. Having every drawer and box clearly labeled with what’s in them is SO good. Especially if you move everything around and then forget what is where.
@christianpetersen1782
@christianpetersen1782 Жыл бұрын
Me too. Then you can put many things away in drawers and always know to look for the labels.
@MrConstruction36
@MrConstruction36 11 ай бұрын
I love label makers... been using them for years
@rockymntain
@rockymntain 11 ай бұрын
Or a permanent marker to mark boxes/items, so you don't have to open them to see what's in them on the shelf.
@RobCCTV
@RobCCTV Жыл бұрын
I have found that when there is a backlog of new stuff to be organised/stored for the first time, rather than the 'one piece at a time' approach, I have found that you take a big open table and start to put stuff in piles IN CATEGORIES, which helps you quantify how much storage space is needed to be allocated for it, and whether or not to create new storage space.
@handle_your_set
@handle_your_set Жыл бұрын
This is similar to an approach I take with data. I amass it way quicker than I can organize it into the file tree. What I do is, as I’m downloading or however I am acquiring, it gets put into a top level folder from there it disseminates in to the organic file tree. It has a structure, but every now and then something comes along that creates a new branch. Trick is not going to many layers deep. I should try this in conjunction with the red tag idea. Guess I just convinced myself to get to work.😂
@RobCCTV
@RobCCTV Жыл бұрын
@@handle_your_set As an ex-programmer myself, I can tell that you are a good one. Clear thinking. The world needs more of it.
@BrianUrlacherPoliSci
@BrianUrlacherPoliSci 9 ай бұрын
I spent the last two years building up hardware stockpiles from estate sales and sorting everything into piles on my table is the most zen I've ever experienced. I don't know what I have or where it is going, but bolt by bolt and weird pin by strange screw, something organized emerges from the chaos, even if it is a far small bucket of "stuff that doesn't go anywhere."
@ewerner-m8c
@ewerner-m8c Жыл бұрын
One thing that helps me a great deal is the concept of the "Return Bin", especially when it comes to putting away scraps, bolts, and the little odd tools that don't always have an obvious home. Everything gets dumped in the Return Bin, and then from time to time I will address the single task of emptying the one bin. It's kind of a self-imposed mind game, but turning a nebulous task like "clean the shop" into a defined task like "empty the bin" seems to help me quite a bit. It also seems to keep the creeping mess confined to one location as opposed to just setting things down wherever I happen to be standing.
@kathrynhorn8095
@kathrynhorn8095 Жыл бұрын
Your functioning chaos has me hooked, this channel is helping me embrace my chaotic way instead of forcing myself to conform to a neat way that does not work for me.
@stuartansell9461
@stuartansell9461 Жыл бұрын
I could not have said it better... amazing channel! life advise, wrapped up in shop talk! I'm not the only 'special one' 😂
@pRoFlT
@pRoFlT Жыл бұрын
@@mathurm100 lol, where do i post my pics ;)
@cartier13
@cartier13 Жыл бұрын
His chaos is still fairly organized, it's amazing.
@RedTail72
@RedTail72 Жыл бұрын
I always enjoy showing my chaotic "workspace" to others who think they have a messy shop. I'm not embarrassed and helps them feel better about their mess.
@Lapidatum
@Lapidatum Жыл бұрын
Don't let perfection be the enemy of good enough!
@permeus2nd
@permeus2nd Жыл бұрын
One thing I have to say about tidying is you have to accept that before it gets tidy it WILL get worse before you finally get it better.
@mikakettunen7939
@mikakettunen7939 Жыл бұрын
True words
@juliettaylorswift
@juliettaylorswift Жыл бұрын
but yet parents and relatives could never understand that...altho they mostly use the "shove it all in the closet/cabinet/drawer" method
@misterscottintheway
@misterscottintheway Жыл бұрын
"If you want to make an omelette you have to break a few eggs" When someone walks into my mid-process chaos and asks what I'm doing I always say "breaking eggs"
@David-hm9ic
@David-hm9ic 11 ай бұрын
Yeah! I just moved my round column mill out of the shop to replace it with a Wells-Index mill. The whole area is temporarily trashed but as I get the new-to-me mill closer to operational the better the whole shop looks.
@grahamparsons1070
@grahamparsons1070 11 ай бұрын
The horror, the horror 🤣
@ChlorophyllCrusher
@ChlorophyllCrusher 10 ай бұрын
I love this, and all the comments that help me understand there is a support group here for all of us who struggle with our chaos!
@AndrewBakerEngineer
@AndrewBakerEngineer 11 ай бұрын
I have an RC airplane factory and an electronics/drone workshop. They key for me is to keep them separately. I have a room devoted to the house for the electronics/drones. The RC airplane area is one bay of my garage. When I build projects, I keep the work area clean. Everything else is kept in bins which are meticulously labeled. I like using the clear plastic bins. In the airplane factory I mostly stand while I work. I make sure all tools and materials are within an arms distance from my build table. When I use something, I put it back right away. Do not let the worktable become home to items that you already found a home for. Once it is organized I never relocate the workshop. Only if I were to move into a new home, which I did two years ago. I swore I would never do that again, as the airplane factory alone took me 3 days by itself. Truthfully, as an Engineering and Maker, I loved every minute of it ;)
@29theduke
@29theduke Жыл бұрын
As someone with ADHD the first step towards cleaning the house is just picking up one sock, or only washing one coffee cup. Normally that's enough to kick start some cleaning
@wayneswonderarium
@wayneswonderarium Жыл бұрын
And here comes the hyperfocus freight train 😅
@ryokomusouka
@ryokomusouka Жыл бұрын
Loud music helps me with getting that one coffee cup started. A few songs later, I've loaded the dishwasher. Whatever it takes. :)
@petergamache5368
@petergamache5368 Жыл бұрын
As someone else with ADHD, this works for me until I find that mystery sock, or other item that I cannot identify. Then I'm on the phone, texting folks, "Hey, did you leave a purple 10mm sock(et) at my place?", and then I'm watching KZbin ...
@29theduke
@29theduke Жыл бұрын
@@petergamache5368 I have a "pile of perplexities" for things just like that which get saved until I need a side project to avoid my main project
@chadhowell1328
@chadhowell1328 Жыл бұрын
@@29thedukemissing solemates bin for socks without a mate at our house. It’s rough keeping organized with ADHD for sure because damn there’s a much more fun project to do now instead of the one I was working on.
@zackshrigley
@zackshrigley Жыл бұрын
I started listening to this while looking around my chaotic blacksmith shop and listening got me moving. Now I'm on a roll and it's the 3rd time around I've heard this in an hour. I'd pay for an indepth shop organizing podcast just to keep me inspired. Thank you for making this Adam, I'd love to send you some of my work one day I you could find a spot for a hand Forged knife.
@TheBeeFactory
@TheBeeFactory Жыл бұрын
This video popped up as im in the middle of a massive basement shop organization effort. Such good timing. I love that everyone else is feeling the same way this time of year. Always glad to have Adam and all the fellow makers to commiserate. Thanks for the tips. Good luck with the chaos everyone!
@tomhorsley6566
@tomhorsley6566 Жыл бұрын
I remember my first job as a bottle washer at a lab which hadn't had one for a year. There was a counter next to the sink which appeared to be a mile long and stacked 6 feet high with dirty glassware. I stopped looking at the pile and just picked up one at a time and cleaned it. One day I reached for the next piece, and there wasn't one!
@charlestabscott5365
@charlestabscott5365 11 ай бұрын
Excellent, excellent advice. Reminds me of advice I got from my mentor in my first job, “Do something even if it is wrong.” That is better than doing nothing. Thank you for reminding me that it certainly applies to reorganizing the shop.
@ThatguyTrevor
@ThatguyTrevor Жыл бұрын
I use the 5S method: Sort, Set in order, Shine, Standardize, Sustain I determine a small amount of space that I will start on Sort: I first determine what belongs in that area and everything else must go Set in order: What ever I decided should stay in that area must get home WITH a label Shine: Now that everything is where it belongs, I actually clean and polish each item and surface. Make it look nice Standardize: This where I look for opportunities to make my shop standard, like using the same kinds of bins everywhere, or the same kinds of labels, or color coding Sustain: Take photos of what it looked like when you are done and possibly even print and post it in the work area to keep in mind what it should look like when you clean up at the end of the day.
@DS-ic5ps
@DS-ic5ps Жыл бұрын
To avoid being overwhelmed by "too much," I try to identify one small section of space and clear that first. It helps reduce my anxiety, and gives me a sense of " finished, " even if just for that one small area. It also creates momentum for the next section of space.
@tomt9543
@tomt9543 Жыл бұрын
Oh wow! I could ramble on all night on this subject! I’m 63, a retired welder, and just love making! My garage has mig/TIG/stick welders, a 9x20 metal lathe, miter bandsaw, drill press, bender and an iron worker. The basement is home to the table saw, miter saw, planer, jointer, bandsaw, drill press, wood lathe, scroll saw etc, and an area for model making and Kumiko. Did I mention that the modeling area has 2 mini lathes and a mini mill? I try to focus on one project at a time, and making a mess only in the appropriate area, but “try” doesn’t often go far! I have a reprint of publication that Delta power tools put out monthly back in the ‘50’s featuring woodshop projects, including some shop tours, and they occasionally mention the “wonderfully cluttered” workspaces, touting those as a sign of greatness! Those editors would be as happy as a 2 peckered Billy goat in my work spaces! My biggest driving element is knowing when to get rid of things. Wooden jigs, metal jigs, that oddly shaped scrap of walnut, how many boxes of bits and bobs do I really need? Making is evidently a silent partner with hoarding! Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to attempt to locate my Noga deburring tool! At least one of the three I own, but can never find! Merry Christmas! Subbed!
@jakemeyer8188
@jakemeyer8188 11 ай бұрын
This segment needs to be my daily mantra. I've had fairly decent levels of anxiety over the last year or two because I can't nail down organization...and the biggest problem I have is the one you talk about. I don't know how it should look when it's done. For example, I don't want to invest in a bin or container system just to find out it's not going to work. I TOTALLY understand what you mean by your new law, and I think it's time to just...move in a direction!
@lynnstone6998
@lynnstone6998 Жыл бұрын
I’m here for the technology, the ideas, the makers, the tools, the organization, and the philosophy. This is my happy place. Thank you.
@carlsmoot2939
@carlsmoot2939 Жыл бұрын
I was watching this video and you mentioned the germ of an idea early on, but then moved on to other thoughts on shop re-org. I could tell you were struggling to come up with the right answer to the question. Re-organization is not normally a one and done thing. You finally came back to this right at the end, and I said to myself, "Yes he got it". I have a hobby workbench for model building and I am constantly thinking of ways to improve it for my purposes. I recognize that a few key points when I do this. First, I need to get started, even if it is simply just to clean the area. Second, and you mentioned this, oftentimes starting one approach will lead to a better idea for doing that same thing. But trying to come up with the best idea before starting, will almost always result in nothing really getting done (during that session) - because we too often start overthinking the problem or the solution. Third, accept that you will have to keep working at this until you get it right (and even then, you will probably have to revisit that "right" solution after using it for awhile. Think out of the box and be prepared to look at ideas from unrelated fields. A good example of this which also also has elements of #2 & #3 above is my need for paint storage for model paints. Several times, I have fallen into the trap of making a paint storage rack that ended up either too small, too complicated, too expensive, and didn't take into account other items affected by the placement of this rack (i.e. "Where do I put these tools I always use that are being displaced by this new paint rack?"). The solution for me, inexpensive acrylic nail polish racks. These are cheap, easily purchased and assembled, and quickly bring some organization to my paint storage. However, I also recognize that I still want that more extensive paint storage solution at some point. But I now am a step closer and haven't spent a ton of money or time on a solution that isn't good enough. I learn what is missing from my cheap alternative and it helps to solidify my eventual long term solution. IN other words, I am prepared to revisit this and improve on it again. Sorry, this was rather wordy, but having stuff easily accessible is a priority to me in my hobby so that I don't get bogged down in the overhead of setting up and tearing down my workspace every time.
@KrisAdamsTV
@KrisAdamsTV 2 ай бұрын
I love how he thought about the words then made a rule for himself on the spot. I kinda have that attitude too. Adam Savage is a lot more conscious and aware as a human being than I knew. Loved him before obvs, but this really elevated him in my mind :) Smart, genuine guy.
@9521jan
@9521jan Жыл бұрын
I think this has been one of my top favorite videos!! Ive always wondered the thought process of your chaotic space and always admired how smooth your workflow gets when you get zoned in. Can not express my gratitude enough for this information. I do tiny scale models at home and also have more hobbies around miniatures and the mess i create gets super overwhelming, hearing others with similar issues and how to resolve them is amazing. Thank u so so much.
@2011Kestrel
@2011Kestrel Жыл бұрын
My office/study got so cluttered that i couldn’t do anything in there, let alone organize it. So I bought a dozen bankers boxes and swept everything into them. I stacked the boxes in the living room and finished cleaning and organizing the space. Then every day I opened ONE box, sorted through the contents, and dealt with whatever I had found. It took a few weeks (and an annoyed wife), but my office is now clean and organized, I know where everything is, and I wasn’t overwhelmed by how massive an undertaking it turned out to be.
@bigwave_dave8468
@bigwave_dave8468 Жыл бұрын
You opened the boxes? .. I didn't know you were supposed to *open* the boxes ;-)
@Squirrelking4395
@Squirrelking4395 11 ай бұрын
You too?
@2011Kestrel
@2011Kestrel 11 ай бұрын
@@bigwave_dave8468 There was a LOT of stuff I needed to retrieve. I couldn’t find anything under all those piles.
@jamiecook4909
@jamiecook4909 10 ай бұрын
WOW just wow that's impressive
@PhilMakesThings
@PhilMakesThings Жыл бұрын
That deep intake of breath at the three minute mark… we’ve all been there. 😅 That realisation that it’s either rethink everything from the ground up or somehow compromise 😂 Some advice that was given to me many years ago: starting things is hard, but once you get going stopping is even harder.
@AimzOff
@AimzOff Жыл бұрын
3:54 I'm so glad you touched on the messy room! I clicked this video specifically because my room is a disaster, and I didn't know where to start
@vincentlichtveld5693
@vincentlichtveld5693 Жыл бұрын
Adam, This is the best life advise that I have heard in a long time. Just replace "the shop" with "Your Life" and it speaks volumes. One thing I do to get me going when my maker-space becomes too much of a chaotic mess, is to ask help from someone. The job at itself is not the issue, it is the stepping up of the initiative that is hard. Having someone who is not as attached, and who can "give the first nudge", can make all the difference. And heck, that applies to life too 🙂 Keep the content going and stay well. Vincent
@MrCabimero
@MrCabimero Жыл бұрын
I believe that the psychology folks call this " decision fatigue". We get overwhelmed by all that is in front of us, and it is mentally painful so we avoid doing anything. One thing I have tried is to make it into a game... I set a timer for 10 or 15 minutes and work as fast as I can. I don't go at it for hours on end. Hope this helps someone out there. Thanks Adam.
@colinstu
@colinstu Жыл бұрын
3:19 "First place: Best place" ...always put stuff away in the FIRST place you'd think to look. The first idea you have that jumps out is probably the right place. Even if time goes by and it's no longer the first place to check, it may end up being the 2nd or 3rd place to check and at least you'll still find it. Vs putting it in some special / weird place right away... in which case it's basically gone forever at that point.
@jasonrackawack9369
@jasonrackawack9369 Жыл бұрын
I love the diversity of shop spaces all mentioned in the comments, electronics repair,, blacksmiths, lab work, auto body shops, model makers, wood workers, and on and on....neat to see so many walks of life leaning on Adam for inspiration😉👍 btw Im a messy desk model maker, cluttered garage classic car fixer upper and whete did that part I have go antique toy train restorer for anyone else keeping track😂
@cornsiausem
@cornsiausem Жыл бұрын
this was a video i needed at the most critical of times. i'm in the midst of completely reorganising the family kitchen now that i have become the master of the culinary domain, and having someone put the philosophy down into words instead of just having the abstract floating around in my head is really helping me figure things out!
@Mixxie67
@Mixxie67 Жыл бұрын
You hit the nail on the head with the fear of not getting it right. I have this issue with my kitchen as well. Perfect becomes the enemy of good.
@margaretwood152
@margaretwood152 11 ай бұрын
🔄🔃ORGANIZATION▶🔀 of Thought, Deed & Action is the key to sustained *_Success._*
@RowanHawkins
@RowanHawkins Жыл бұрын
I second the picking something up and putting it someplace. I tend to get distracted reading papers that I have saved because of articles that I wanted to have available later from stuff that is pre-internet. I find a really good thing is to have a friend over while I'm cleaning. I don't need them to help me clean but I need somebody to hand something to so that I don't get bogged down trying to read it. And then I'll tell them about it in general and then where they can put it.
@3X3NTR1K
@3X3NTR1K Жыл бұрын
With my ADHD organization is difficult and chaos is the default, no matter what kind of space I am using. A general trick that I find helps a bit is to limit the scope in some way. Everything being everywhere is too overwhelming, especially when the right places to put things aren't available or even established. Some examples: - Pile of random things? Don't worry about all of them at once. instead go through it while filtering out one or two common groups of things that will go togther, while putting everything else into a smaller (and less random) pile. - No space to work? Quickly compile your scattered messes into one single mess that leaves another space open. Also good for clearing the places to actually put things away properly. - Would you rather be doing Literally Anything Else, and can only muster up the will not to for a short time? Make them near impossible, except by cleaning! Put the big pile in front of the door, on your bed, or covering your computer. Technically you could move the stuff quickly and putz about anyway, but the impulse to do it will be weaker. Hope these help someone. Note: These probably won't make things *easy* for you, only less difficult. But that can often be enough.
@Brickzie
@Brickzie Жыл бұрын
I would like to delve further into the mindset of putting things where you'd look for them the next time you need them. While putting them where you'll think where you'll be looking for the next time can work for a solo workshop, it's going to be a nightmare if you're sharing the space. My dad does that all the time and when I needed something I couldn't find it and he couldn't recall where it was. A better way for us was to just adopt a "put it back where it came from" mindset for two reasons. First is that it's easier to recall where you got it. Second reason is over time you will find a place for it and by putting it back where it came from you will eventually know where it will always be, and so will everyone else.
@GrahamFielder
@GrahamFielder 11 ай бұрын
“And since every tool is a hammer, these are particularly hammers” … pure gold
@pashaveres4629
@pashaveres4629 Жыл бұрын
Super struggling with the first organization of the shop which I'm putting together. Have acquired a bunch of tools over some time and now they are bundled in the shop with no room to move. Have recently learned about "just one thing" and it has helped. Hate to admit it, but turning off the radio and being alone and quiet in the space helps let ideas come to mind. Tend to look first for things that can go in the bin. Made a comfortable place to sit and think. Forcing myself to tough out the quiet and not-knowing seems to be the main thing now. I keep notes so I don't run off to the internet for a quick (hah!) bit of research. Always tempting because it looks like action. It's a REAL struggle. Thank you for sharing your own. Appreciate especially your philosophical input. Aloha
@JimmyNewCakes
@JimmyNewCakes 11 ай бұрын
In this and in the Q&A video about starting a new shop, you touch on a few items that really resonated with me in terms of having the right mindset to get a shop off the ground. It took me about 3 years to from "this is a non-functional garage just storing stuff" to "ok, we're going to turn this into a workshop." That was the point where I completely gutted out all the old wiring that was inadequate, roughed in new wiring for drastically more lights and 110 receptacles everywhere, roughed in a couple of centralized 220 receptacles, did the math and added some reinforcements in order to setup a storage space in the attic for all of those "I rarely will ever need this thing, but it's irreplaceable" items, then added insulation and drywall, and light finishing across the whole space. With it now capable of so much more, I spent money on very general purpose storage systems and on a few specialized ones I already knew I needed. Mostly this was just getting shelving setup, but I had some oddball stuff like a wall-mounted tire rack, a garden tool storage and charging area, and a heavy duty shelf for some very bulky and very heavy electronics projects I work on. In the year since the great reset, I've completely changed where I work and how I store things twice. Still lots of the same fundamental items, but the placement changed around, a flexible wall-mount system was setup, and I replaced my homebuilt workbench with one that was discarded from a commercial facility (made to work for my needs with a few small modifications). As my space is still primarily a garage for automotive work, I don't have too many established workstations for machine tools, woodworking, and the like. All my workspaces have to remain flexible in order to work for me. Because of that, the biggest help for me was just thinking about how I store items and tools, by starting out thinking about how I actually use my workshop. I thought about how trying to separate out a lot of my tools by "automotive stuff, carpentry stuff, electrical stuff, etc" didn't always work out so well, as there were so many tools that overlapped in task area. I had experimented with a few other ideas that didn't really work out so well, and at some point it finally clicked for me to just totally separate my tools from my materials. My absolutely most basic tools are all right at my only workbench, either on the wall, on the shelf under the bench, or in the adjacent toolbox. There's space for a couple of portable toolboxes under the workbench that are setup for electrical work and general handyman work-any time I need to crossover tools, all my tools are right in the same area to freely plunder, fill that portable toolbox with the extra things I need, then go off and do the work that is needed. When I return, I get to empty out those tools I took, as well as replenish anything I used up (or throw away scrap I collected) to those portable cases. For all the other tools, I moved one large storage shelf to be by the workbench and went through the effort of getting every toolset into a case and every case labeled. Lots of my automotive tools already came in cases, so that part was easy. Everything else either found its way into cardboard boxes or small tool bags/boxes that could hold all the tool's needed accessories. Then, all of those tools made their way onto the shelving unit. There's a small shelf dedicated just to holding batteries and their chargers to keep that from scattering across the garage, and the shelves are loosely organized by purpose and by operating method (one shelf is just for air tools). This change made it incredibly easier to get tools put back away in the correct spot, and it's made it incredibly easy to find them again when I need them. It's considerate of my need to maintain a flexible workspace, while also permissive of the collection of specialty tools I have. I'm already seeing ways I can improve it, but for the first time in my adult life, it's a system that finally works for me!
@c1ph3rpunk
@c1ph3rpunk Жыл бұрын
My shop and lab have been a state of organized fluid chaos for 3 decades, it’s ever evolving, usually as skills change and progress. My key: French cleats, everything goes on DIY cleats all over the walls so the space can change with me. I make all my own fixtures for them designed for the set of tools at hand. I learned a long time ago about first order retrieval and have used it ever since. You waste more time, and kill workflow, more by not being able to find a tool than the time spent to find a home for it.
@jasonlanglois7906
@jasonlanglois7906 Жыл бұрын
This is one of the best explanations I’ve ever heard. As a shop owner (automotive/single employee), I completely feel this. Very eloquently explained.
@nancyreid8729
@nancyreid8729 Жыл бұрын
Thank you; my studio is a wreck and too many things are lost; my library is the same. Buoyed by my rediscovery of a few things today whose whereabouts had been unknown for too long (and driving me nuts), the next project is a major cleanup of both. I am motivated by today’s finds, and with Christmas presents off the loom and the knitting needles, the re-org is next! Also thank you for “where would I look for this?”
@tomtillman
@tomtillman Жыл бұрын
If it is really scattered, like from not putting things away through several projects, what i do is assemble like kind things in separate piles. Then I organize the piles into drawers, or other containers. all my drawers and racks have labels. I also have a list of categories, which has to be added to occasionally. once you have a place for everything, It's just a matter of the great fun of putting things away. cheers.
@angelipie2592
@angelipie2592 Жыл бұрын
in the middle of a re-org of my home (broader spectrum, but also adhd). Started the planning weeks ago with many, many iterations, and landed on a 'simulated move-out'. Pack all my stuff into boxes by kind as if I'm moving out (great de-cluttering opportunity), while packing make a category list. Then group the list by room, then by place (and for my making space supplies: by project) and draft out the drawer organization and list out priorities/dependencies. Eg: I need clothes, so that's getting done first, the tools are second, because i'll need them for the rest of the re-org, maybe an area is waiting on something in the mail, put it for later in the list or maybe a closet needs better shelving or lighting, so its' contents need to wait on that. Black Friday trip to ikea (car load full of bins and drawer organizers), lots of labelling and move stuff back in one area at a time. I found having written down list to step through one line item at a time helps me stay somewhat on-task and crossing items off the list helps me feel like I'm getting stuff done without getting too overwhelmed by the rest of the list
@pRoFlT
@pRoFlT Жыл бұрын
So how did it work out in the end? I just moved. tried to make sure each box had a room and what kind of things are in it. so i could just put the boxes into the new home. i cant find anything now ;) My computer is the largest piece of furniture i have so i couldn't lose that. but everything else? no idea. One day i'll find what im looking for.
@motorv8N
@motorv8N Жыл бұрын
Great idea. At least one a year I transport most of what’s in the garage/shop out onto the driveway as if I was moving so I can get my head around the space that would be available with no clutter in it. Then try (oh I try…) to purge, reorg and repack.
@jeffallen3598
@jeffallen3598 Жыл бұрын
For me, cleanup/reorg usually ends up with “more efficient storage”.. I had some work benches that i replaced with a couple of those US General tool chests on wheels. One chest was the same size and one of the benches but now had more drawers and a lot less wasted space in that footprint. I was able to put 10x as much tools and stuff in there and more things could be in the same location than before… So a lot less hunting around for things. Replaced my build table with one that now integrated my table saw, router, air compressor, dust vac (4x8 top and on wheels).. so no more having to set those things up when i needed them as they are always ready to go… just when i need the table saw, i have to put the fence back on and raise up the blade. My compound mitre saw, i took it off its mobile fold out cart and built it its own cabinet on wheels.. Below it, i was able to store all my paints and solvents which i added doors so i wouldn’t have to look at it. Behind the saw is shelving which holds things like my battery chargers shop stereo. So, another tool always ready to go, not setting up, is multi purpose storage on a 3x4 footprint. On a free wall, i setup a peg board, bought those peg board hooks where all my squares, levels, hand saws, extra saw blades (table/mitre, etc). Originally, my shop was just some regular work benches and several of those wire racks you get at home-depot. But its way more efficient storage and after i was done, i had regained A LOT of square footage. The other part of cleanup is adding some sort of cover on your exposed items. Look at Adams wood storage behind him. Its all organized and sorted.. But you can see it all. That makes something clean look messy or chaotic. Putting doors on them would instantly make it look cleaner/less chaotic. Half the “mess” we see is not necessarily a mess.. Its just the fact that practically everything you own is completely exposed. Also with doors, it helps keep the dust from collecting on things.
@AngieWilliamsDesigns
@AngieWilliamsDesigns 11 ай бұрын
This is where I am right now. I am a woodworker. I also have a small laser business. And a cnc (which isn’t being used). And… I refurb furniture. To me… they all blend together. LOL. To add to that… there was a time when I was a single mom of four kids and could not afford to buy material. I came somewhat of a wood hoarder during this time. Same with furniture flipping. During covid I ran out of furniture and couldn’t get pieces. So now when I come across good buys I buy it whether I have space or not. I have stopped acquiring any more material or furniture. But now I have to find places for the stuff I already have. This video hit home because this is my life right now. LOL. Things you said is exactly how my brain is going. For the last two days I stopped trying to “plan” things and just started moving. And I started by 1)cleaning out a certain corner that was cluttered full of things that don’t belong in my Woodshop area. Once that happened I started with 2) taking a specific cart and cleaning it off. Deciding what is going to live on it and taking everything else off. Makes me happy to look at it. And then 3) I started cleaning and organizing my laser area. I knew it was going to be a larger project. I needed to finish the cabinet that I built for my laser. I never added the drawers. So I started the drawers tonight. It makes me feel better just getting small areas. Things don’t have a home. So as i start to clean… I don’t have a place to put things. Or… they go… anywhere… and not with like items so when I need them I don’t know where to look.
@CodeFoodPixels
@CodeFoodPixels Жыл бұрын
I relate so hard to the "spend an hour making a thing for the soldering paste" bit. It happens all the time with me. I call it side-questing. Not sure if it's an ADHD thing or not, feels like it is.
@editboy23
@editboy23 11 ай бұрын
I like calling it side questing. I feel like most of my time around my shop (and house) is spent side questing
@maggiechampion655
@maggiechampion655 10 ай бұрын
'Side questing' 😊 I like it! 👍
@CavedogDesigns
@CavedogDesigns Жыл бұрын
I started a woodworking business this year and thought I would have more time to get organized once I figured out what I was good at, what worked, what sold, etc, but it picked up so much faster than I was prepared for. The past few months have been absolute chaos, coming home from my day job to work all night on my own business leaves almost no time. I've decided after Christmas I will take a few weeks off and focus entirely on completing shop upgrades/projects I have pushed off. Perhaps it makes sense to keep a list of organizational ideas as you come across them, then set aside dedicated time to work through that list.
@beentheredonethat6219
@beentheredonethat6219 11 ай бұрын
Adam I so enjoy watching your videos! I’ve lived in northern CA since 88, I sold my house of 1,600 sq ft and shop of 441 sq ft and moved into a 335 sq ft toy hauler rv! I have a small shop in it, and use your ideas on maximizing my space! Sometimes I have to try something, but have to redo it to better fit my work flow! Keep up the awesome work!!
@KBLIZZ333
@KBLIZZ333 Жыл бұрын
I needed to hear this, thank you so much 🙏🏼 And thanks to whoever asked Adam that question!!
@Kami8705
@Kami8705 Жыл бұрын
Adam, you build a lot of cases for things(i.e. the watchmakers lathe recently). Do you try to make any sort of standard size/form factor so they can be stored more easily? For instance, pick the smallest option as a 12x12 cube and everything else is a multiple of that, or even division of that and they can be stacked. Or just go with whatever makes sense for the tool/object and deal with the inefficiency of storage later?
@GRBeaf
@GRBeaf Жыл бұрын
As a long-time fan, I have never agreed and said « YESS!! » out loud MORE than while watching this video. We seem to have brains that work similarly. Thank you for the constant insight and perspective.
@Kami8705
@Kami8705 Жыл бұрын
Ive moved twice in the last year and had to do this constantly. I find the only way that works is essentially triage. Start with the easiest items that already have a spot. If it doesnt have a spot yet, put it in the general area of similar items. Then move onto the next layer. Once you get all of them roughly sorted, start with whichever area is easiest or interests you at the moment and organize that. At some point, you get to the point you can really start doing projects, and the process of using the tools helps me organize where they need to go.
@TheOneWhoMightBe
@TheOneWhoMightBe Жыл бұрын
I used a triage system when I moved house a few years ago. Everything initially went into one of three 'piles': Definately keep, definately dispose, and 'maybe'. Once the first two had been dealt with I went back through the 'maybe' pile several times until it was all gone.
@naterocks96
@naterocks96 Жыл бұрын
I love your vocabulary. As someone in my mid twenties, using "big words" usually just makes others think you're trying to seem smarter, or insecure about your intelligence. I would love to be as linguistic as you, but there's no way I could, w/o just being made fun of. Also, I'm glad I'm not the only one who uses these guidelines and techniques to organize. I almost feel like I have OCD to an extent, because of how long I can spend on just organizing/tidying up. ESPECIALLY in video games with vast inventory/storage systems.
@David-hm9ic
@David-hm9ic 11 ай бұрын
There are tons of us out here with similar afflictions. If you or it is only visible when in motion then you/it must be a photon. Best tips: Make a mobile stand for everything that's realistically moveable and built lots of drawers into each stand. Shallow drawers are often far more useful than deep ones. I have one bench that's average height, six feet wide and has 21 drawers of varying depths on ball bearing slides. It's awesome for lathe tooling, taps and dies, chucks, all of the little things used on a lathe, tailstock accessories and so on. Something else that strike me with this video is how many of us aren't really machinists but use machine shop equipment like lathes and mills on a daily or near daily basis. Using large machinery and all of the tooling adds lots of additional issues. As a former PBS television production stills photographer I'm not star struck because of your television exposure; I see you as one of us. That's a compliment. I thoroughly enjoy your KZbin content.
@MrVisde
@MrVisde 9 ай бұрын
“Getting it right is less important than trying different things” 🤯 that’s deep, love that philosophy
@JasonPMcElroy
@JasonPMcElroy 11 ай бұрын
I've built out a few shops at this point and have come to some approaches that work *for me*. Masterminding (big design) in advance is time consuming, subject to less-than-optimal outcomes, and brings stress to some personality types (particularly obsessives). Alternative: do the work and projects you do for a month, leave the tools and materials you used in the area where you did the work. You can wipe down and organize but DON'T tuck everything away in different areas. After a number of projects you'll likely see the concept of "stations" evolve with each having the relevant tools needed to do that type of work. THEN you can build some organization for each station . . . tool holders, containers, a shelf, etc. To get around perfection paralysis, understand you can do this over and over again until you no longer notice a need for change. Refinement and proofing over time and use. Mental peace. Efficiency. Yada yada.
@7thkansascav468
@7thkansascav468 11 ай бұрын
I spent nearly a year planning my workshop reorg and I've been working on the actual execution the past 6 months. Almost every detail I had originally mapped out has been completely abandoned or altered multiple times. I was what I felt was about 90% done and then decided a month ago it just wasn't working out so I redid about half of what I'd spent the previous 5 months doing BUT it now flows much better and it "feels" right. Still a fair bit left to do but now I can pick away at it a little at a time. I think it will always be in a state of flux but at least it won't be in the state of confusion it had been for so long.
@northeastoutrider2124
@northeastoutrider2124 Жыл бұрын
2023 will be the year in which I got organized. I spend the better part of six weeks completely moving my shop to another space and then back again. Earlier in the year, I started in the mission by slowly investing in a modular storage system with loads of boxes and drawers and other elements that would give a place for everything I own. I sat down and drew up a plan for the location of every element and refined the plan over several months to maximize my tool location via my usual workflow. I researched how to properly epoxy a concrete floor and new finishes for everything. Then at the end of the summer, I took a break, moved everything I own to an adjacent rented space and began the referb of the physical space. Cleaned down to the last spec of dust, I slowly went thorough everything on element at a time until it was all in its proper place, cleaned and like new. Since that move, my productivity has gone thorough the roof and I'm no longer frustrated with the need to stop to find a "thing" in order to get a job done. Don't wait. Do it...
@billryan-t4y
@billryan-t4y 10 ай бұрын
Thank you, I’m glad to know I’m not alone in this struggle. I’ve been trying to organize my garage over the past month (an hour or two here and there) and freezing. Not just because of the cold (it’s February and I’m in the Northeast) but because I don’t know where to put anything… I’ve been trying to implement LEAN concepts so I’ve been scrapping or selling off things I know I’ll never use and grouping together stuff I plan to keep. To Adam’s point at the end of the video, you’re always reviewing and improving your process. But you have to try it to know if it works or not.
@KyleSForrest
@KyleSForrest Жыл бұрын
i recently added a 30 slot wood rack system out of 27gallon black totes to my shop space. It's the “home for things without a home” Now all my wood working tools are across a couple of totes. Now if I'm heading somewhere to help with trim or framing I can just slide those totes out of the rack and into my truck. There is a brake box for when I do anything automotive braking once or twice a year vs those tools eating up a drawer in a one of my tool boxes.
@kennetj.6170
@kennetj.6170 5 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. I finally understand myself and I'm not alone😅 I have my workbench in my basement with a big room filled with all my electronics, arcade stuff, music instruments and tools, and you describe exactly how it is for me. Thanks Adam🙌🏻
@Serostern
@Serostern Жыл бұрын
The best part of my shop is not a big rolling table. It's a recessed scissor lift table. 1.2x2.2meters. lifts 2 tonnes. When it is not in use it goes into the floor. And since it is in the middle of the shop, any tools left on it will by definition be on the floor, so absolutely nothing CAN or will be stored on it except for during projects.
@ironchimpo
@ironchimpo 25 күн бұрын
I’m glad I watched this right before tackling my garage cleaning. It feels nice to know how common an issue this is.
@deanaoxo
@deanaoxo Жыл бұрын
I don't know where or whom I learned it from, but put things where the first place you looked for them. That really works. I've had the pleasure to have both very large, down to my current fairly small shops. I also am doing this dance this winter. I dread it and can't wait all at the same time. If you can, tools on wheels are the best. Thanks Adam, happy hollidazes~!~
@ElEnanoAr
@ElEnanoAr 11 ай бұрын
I've been usiing your "where I would look for it when I need it?" method for a few years and I can say that is very useful and reliable.
@Raygun249
@Raygun249 Ай бұрын
I don’t even have a work shop but this advice really calmed me and gave me gleanings of wisdom. I’m tackling organizing my home office space this week and your video popped up in my search field. Thank you so much!
@Xoannon1
@Xoannon1 Жыл бұрын
As a person who has a near phobia-like aversion to stagnation, my entire life could be summed up by the sentiment of "most things are only discernable when they're moving." Maybe I'll get that as my next tattoo. Also, as an ADHDer, disorganization is a constant struggle for me. One strategy I've learned is to stop trying to fight the mess by telling it where it needs to go, and start working with the mess by listening to where it wants to be. If I have a pile of clothes that keep accumulating in a certain space because it's easier for me to just dump them there than take them to the laundry, then obviously, that's where a nice, aesthetically pleasing laundry hamper needs to live. Become a junk whisperer. Let it tell you where it wants to be, then make a tidy space for it there.
@curtkeisler7623
@curtkeisler7623 Жыл бұрын
I keep all of my Amazon boxes. I fold the tops and sides back into the box to stiffen them up. They're usually way too large for what was shipped and make great containers and stack very easily because most of them are the same size boxes. I then have some tape that I will put on the outside and scribble what's in the box on the box. This allows me to stack them up and move them around and take them out and put projects and all the things that I'm working on for that project in that box. I don't have to spend any money and I have everything where I need it and I can move things around very quickly. So it's an organized chaos which is perfect for me. And it takes a little time and cost no money
@HickLif3
@HickLif3 Жыл бұрын
2 words- Tackle boxes. I have a lot of hobbies and a lot of those hobbies have their own specific tools and such. So I went out and bought like 8 of them that are the right size, they're uniform and I put tape and labeled them all and they all sit side by side on a shelf. So if I want to do leather work, I pull down that box, do the thing, put it back in and up on the shelf it goes. If I need to clean a gun down comes that box. Sewing? soldering? dremel? all have tackle boxes specific to them
@ryanbonnett3532
@ryanbonnett3532 Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@brickbuildinbrothers
@brickbuildinbrothers Жыл бұрын
Thank you so very much for taking the time to put this video together! ❤
@andy-in-indy
@andy-in-indy Жыл бұрын
I use a version of your rule: "People only see the Deltas" i.e. we don't see things by absolute value, we see the difference of everything with respect to something else. It seems to be wired into our neurons that we can see the contrast in light and dark, we see the color that is left over when you subtract the colors spectrum that is not shared when you mix paints, and we hear the change in frequency of the sounds so much more clearly than the sound itself. This is why teachers spend time helping us verbalize the differences and look for the similarities when we "compare and contrast" in grade school.
@bugbasher
@bugbasher 10 ай бұрын
The "where would I look for it id I needed it right now" when storing stuff has a great companion when you're looking for something: "where would I store this if I would store it right now." It's my #1 approach when looking for something and I dont immediately know where to look.
@ryancappo
@ryancappo Жыл бұрын
I just started this last week and made some progress. I found that I had to remove what I could to my driveway temporarily first to clear out the space in order to figure out how to put it back in the best place.
@richc9890
@richc9890 Жыл бұрын
I have tape measures all over my house and garages, one in each of my two vehicles. Having muliple needed tools is subjective to the individual as to where they may feel they need them to save time. I have no issues with it personally. 😃
@BrianUrlacherPoliSci
@BrianUrlacherPoliSci 9 ай бұрын
My workshop and general project flow was such a disaster until I discovered bucket organizers (paired with square kitty litter buckets as the base). I created a bucket for each type of "work" I do and tossed in the specialized tools and materials. Each bucket also gets a set of the "standards". I loaded up on screwdrivers, tape measures, hammers, flashlights, sharpies, utility knives, crescent wrenches, etc. and distributed them across the buckets $150 on facebook marketplace and estate sales got me all the standards I'll ever need. I didn't expect the bucket system to affect shop organization, but it did! I was no longer destroying my systems every time I had a project somewhere else in the house or yard or garage. My shop organization worked. In continued to work, and so I invested more effort into making it work. Also the buckets tuck nicely under the power tool station and are overflow for random things. Extra wire? Throw it in the electrical bucket. Some weird scraper? Throw it in the tiling bucket. Too many sharpies for the stained glass work station? The construction bucket always needs more. So the clutter is more...containable. When I have to do a plumbing project I literally dump the "stuff" from the bucket center before I start to figure out what I can use and what I need to go buy from the hardware store. No hunting for that bin that has old bits of pipe or the pvc glue, if it isn't there, I don't have it. Of course, you can reach a point where one bucket can't hold the detritus. But that is fine, the masonry and tile tools should have been separate any way. Construction could mean roofing or drywall---it could be one bucket or two. Buckets proliferate but can always tuck neatly under the workbench, and it is usually less than $50 to spawn a new bucket. I'm rambling but this system changed my life. I went from someone who couldn't organize anything, to someone who was hyper efficient and organized.
@ScottFive
@ScottFive Жыл бұрын
OMG, that's HUGE! "Where would I look for it if I needed it now?" I always seem to know the answer to that question, but NEVER know the answer to "where does this go?" Thank you for that. lol
@SevenBates
@SevenBates Жыл бұрын
Oooh, a shop reorganization video series is coming!!? Awesome
@BryanGurney
@BryanGurney 2 ай бұрын
"Most things are only discernible when they are moving." As a biker on the road, I agree. Cars only see you when you are moving. What a great statement.
@Shadoweclipse1386
@Shadoweclipse1386 Жыл бұрын
Adam, I think you hit the nail dead on the head here. I find with my own shop, I have wasted so much time worrying about getting it right, that I never make any progress. The times that I've just gone ahead and done something that I want to integrate into my shop/work-flow usually comes out ok, but I also don't get to where I need to be (i.e. mk. 2.0) for an idea, until I've made it, integrated it, and used it for a little time. Basically, I could never imagine the end result that comes from experience until I've made the first iteration and learned from it. Also, because we are such fickle creatures, I find that a bit of pre-planning and forethought goes a very long way. For my own shop, being able to change positions on a piece of storage that I've made is paramount, so my point of forethought was French cleats. I feel less burdened with "did/will I get it right" when I can rearrange quickly and easily, whereas committing to a hard location (screwed into a wall, mounted to a specific place, etc.) gives me more pause. Basically, the core system I chose helps with my motivation and worry about getting it right in the first iteration, and allows me to work with less anxiety.
@dhughesgames
@dhughesgames 11 ай бұрын
It helps! I’m always envious of your shop organization and this might be my favourite of all your videos. Thanks!
@michaelrubbo7467
@michaelrubbo7467 Жыл бұрын
Don't underestimate the power of "5s" developed by the quality/continuous improvement movement in manufacturing (in my words): sort/simplify, straighten/set in order, shine/clean, standardize/repeatable controlled work processes (recipes for how tools, materials and methods are used in the making process). This leaves a clean workstation that does not limit creativity but enhances it - creating an 'open canvas' if you will. The sort/simplify stage makes you strategically focus on what you should keep and what you should throw out (or outsource, or rent, or make room for - such as that new solder paste you want to try). Finally there is a 6th 's': safety. If you can incorporate clean work areas and start thinking about repeatable, controllable work processes, your safety should increase and your work will be of higher quality.
@C.D.Percussion
@C.D.Percussion Жыл бұрын
As a drummer/percussionist with a lot of gear and a small space that still has to work for practice and rehearsals, I love this kind of organisation videos. I definitely conciser it a "maker space" and since I tend to work with all kinds of projects (jazz, progressive rock, indie, pop) I consistently have to move things a round and change up the current work space/drumset-sets. Trying to get a good flow is an forever ongoing progress but I try to use "the golden rules" of Adam. No drawers (where things goes to die), first order retrieve-ability, and using the height of the space to it's full potential. Still working on doing a 30m clean up from time to time, but most of the time I just need to get going because of time restraints and that I physically need to play in order to keep my "adhd-mind" in check.
@pocketPliers
@pocketPliers Жыл бұрын
My mother as a young lady, learned from an old lady that "Everything has a home" and that's how I've lived my life as far as organization. As a flat rate automotive technician, I have a tool cart with things I touch at least once a week, and everything else goes in my big box.
@GTRFREAK17
@GTRFREAK17 Жыл бұрын
Best method I've come across to help with things that cause procrastination like organizing stuff is that it's ok to fine tune it along the way later, just get a basic idea down first then gradually tweak while getting a feel for the space. Just moved into a new home a few weeks ago and I'm still fine tuning my bedroom / study to create the best space and no doubt the layout will change in the future as the summer changes into winter and the windows can be open most of the time instead of closed most of the time.
@StudioHannah
@StudioHannah 5 ай бұрын
I was happy to hear you use same question Dana K White uses for her organizing! “Where would I look for this if I needed it” has been a life changing question for me and my organization.
@heatherreading2369
@heatherreading2369 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Adam and everyone else who had a hand in making this vid possible. My main maker make is jewelry. I am in a very small studio apartment so org ideas, tips, etc are very helpful. I have a lot of things and not a lot of space. Among other challenges I have adhd and I get overwhelmed easily. Mobility is a big issue and I have been struggling with depression lately. I would love to see projects related to accessibility and adaptations for disabilities. Oh and I love the vids related to working with, through, and around adhd. Thank you very much. Heather
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