1.
Collecting
“bumpf” at a trade show? Assembling
material for a project or report? Are
you a writer who needs to sort materials by magazine article? Headed for multiple cities, states,
countries? Put each set in a separate
gallon-size bag and label it! Bags weigh
less than stacks of file folders.
Zipping prevents loss of business cards, notes, or paper scraps, as
often happens with file folders.
2.
Taking
a sweater, shawl, pashmina, or something special you want to keep clean,
snag-free, and separate? Bag it, squeeze
it, pack it.
3.
Swimsuit
or undies still damp when it’s time to depart?
Bag, squeeze, zip. Take it out to
complete drying upon arrival.
4. Substitute these for the smaller sizes of travel space bags. Saves a lot of money. They're probably right in the kitchen drawer - no special trip to the store. They're reusable, recyclable, disposable. Partially zip, roll, squeeze, and seal up. No, they don't squeeze out as much air as the "real thing." But they're quick, handy, cheap, and work. Nice for silk or other dress shirts and blouses - roll them up in the bag and pack rolls.
5. Maps in the car! There's never enough space in glove compartment or map pocket. Organize a series of maps, say New York to Florida, state by state southward, and put the used one at the back of the stack as you head southward. Organize by region, divide east and west of the Mississippi, whatever system works best for you. Those AAA maps fit perfectly in a gallon-size bag, stack about eight or so per bag, fold over and zip.
5. Maps in the car! There's never enough space in glove compartment or map pocket. Organize a series of maps, say New York to Florida, state by state southward, and put the used one at the back of the stack as you head southward. Organize by region, divide east and west of the Mississippi, whatever system works best for you. Those AAA maps fit perfectly in a gallon-size bag, stack about eight or so per bag, fold over and zip.
Take
spares for each size of your zip-bags! Take them out of the box, roll
them up, and tuck into your suitcase along the side or rear. I keep finding more and more uses for them as I go. You probably will, too. And don't forget to share your findings with everyone here!
May
your road rise to meet you!
Ann
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