Two Good Reasons to Organize & Save Greeting Cards (or Not)
Every December friends and family send you greeting cards.
Perhaps coworkers send you greeting cards too and maybe even
vendors like your insurance agent and your newspaper carrier.
Maybe you also get greeting cards from business partners and
customers. While everyone loves being thought of AT the
holidays, you have to decide AFTER the holidays what to do with
these greeting cards.
There are two good reasons to save greeting cards sent to you.
If these two reasons aren't applicable to you and you save all
of your greeting cards, then you're saving clutter. So if your
goal this new year is to get organized at home, start here and
start now with these greeting card organization tips.
First, save greeting cards with sentimental value to you. That
means you do NOT have to save greeting cards from all of those
other nice people who sent you holiday greetings. Really, you
don't. That includes the greeting cards and holiday post cards
with real family photos that are so popular. You don't have to
keep portraits of other people's families and pets that have no
sentimental meaning to you.
The keywords are "sentimental value". By all means do put
holiday postcard photos of your grandchildren in frames or in
your photo album. Just cut the photo out of the card or
postcard. But you don't have to keep the ones of your coworker's
toddler or the holiday postcard portrait of your newspaper
delivery person's family. Tip: If you have to ask "who are these
people" or "what's his/her name" more than once in a year, it's
probably not sentimental to you. It may be a cute photo card,
but it's still not of sentimental value. It's simply clutter
after the new year starts. Discard it.
The second reason to save greeting cards is if you plan to use
the greeting cards in craft projects. This reason may have
nothing to do with sentimental keepsakes discussed above. For
instance, the card may have a great photograph or drawing of
Santa. Make it into an ornament. Clip the Santa portrait with
scissors (trash the rest of the card); use a single hole puncher
to put one hole at the top of Santa's picture; string yarn,
thread or a hook through the hole; hang your new Santa cardboard
ornament on your Christmas tree or on a "clothesline" of yarn
along with other holiday cutouts. That's just one simple
ornament idea. You can probably think of lots more ideas.
For instance, you can give the cards to your children to cut
into paper dolls, paintings for their doll house walls or to put
into collages. It's fun amusement for them. When they're
finished, trash anything they don't want to keep playing with.
But whatever you do, don't keep all of those holiday greeting
cards because you MIGHT do something crafty with them one day.
If you don't have a specific idea now with a timeframe for doing
the project, don't save the greeting cards. If you need more
ideas for using or organizing greeting cards that you'd like to
keep, see the list of greeting card organizer tips at
http://www.easyhomeorganizing.com/greeting-card-organizer.htm