Linen Closet: Sustain 躾
Keep it going without willpower.
Build the maintenance habits that keep your linen closet working over time.
Sustain tasks for the Linen Closet
- Annual towel audit: anything pilling, threadbare, or permanently stained leaves
- When buying new bedding, remove an old set
What is the Sustain phase?
Sustain (躾, Shitsuke) is the hardest phase and the reason most organisation attempts fail. It means building the habits, schedules, and accountability that keep the previous four phases working over time. The goal is a home that maintains itself — not through constant effort, but through well-designed routines that become invisible.
Common questions about the Linen Closet
How do I organise a linen closet?
Label a shelf per bed: "Double — main bedroom", "Single — Emma's room". Store each complete bedding set inside one of its own pillowcases — the whole set is one self-contained bundle. Towels folded in thirds lengthwise, then thirds again, standing upright so every colour is visible. Fresh linen always goes to the back.
How many sets of bed linen do I need?
Two per bed: one on the bed, one in the closet. When you wash the bed linen, it goes straight back on. The spare is there for when the wash doesn't dry in time or for illness. More than two sets per bed is accumulation, not preparedness.
How do I fold a fitted sheet?
Tuck one corner into the other to form a rough rectangle, fold in thirds lengthwise, fold into a square. Store the complete set (flat sheet, fitted sheet, pillowcase) inside the pillowcase — everything stays together and the whole bundle can be pulled out in one move.
Common Linen Closet mistakes
✗ Mistake
Saving worn-out towels "for cleaning"
✓ Fix
You don't need twelve cleaning rags. Keep three good ones, toss the rest.
✗ Mistake
Bedding sets stored as loose items
✓ Fix
The pillowcase bundle method means each set is one item to pull out — not a pile to search through