Paper Doll’s Campus Tour: Organize Your College Life

Posted on: August 12th, 2014 by Julie Bestry | 6 Comments

Paper Doll is old enough to remember the excitement that the August back-to-school issue of Seventeen Magazine would bring. I especially loved the articles about preparing for college.

SeventeenMag

Long before I was ready to go to college, I couldn’t wait to get organized to go to college. And by the summer between graduation and going off to school, it seemed like Paper Mommy and I comparison-shopped every possible dorm room item, as if we were setting up a color-coordinated magazine spread for Dorm Room Beautiful!

Over the years, I’ve offered a lot of advice about preparing for college. Elsewhere on my site, I’ve written articles like Organizing Your College Search and Application Process and Organize Your Dorm Room. A search of the Paper Doll blog for the tag “Notes and Notebooks” examines options for the right note-taking solutions and resources, and the blog covered Textbook Rentals: How to Avoid College Textbook Clutter as early as 2009, and then in again in 2010, and looked at 11 Tips for Beating the High Cost of Textbooks in 2012.

Today’s entry offers up some of Paper Doll‘s favorite items and venues for organizing college life.

QUIRKY

Pivot Power — this flexible power strip and surge protector from Quirky comes in a few versions: junior, with three outlets, as well as six-outlet versions in traditional black, white with blue, and various colors in the POP line. This full-sized pink POP Pivot (say that three times fast!) runs about $20.
QuirkyPinkPivotBend the Pivot to accommodate hairpin dorm room turns, large chargers and inconveniently-placed furniture.

SMEAD CAMPUS.ORG

We’ve already talked about the Vertical Step Index Expanding File and the

SmeadCampusStepIndexOrg

Organized Up™ Vertical Stadium File when we looked at NAPO2014: Our Friends at Smead Are on the Up and Up!, and we’ve covered the Organized Up™ folders, which have dual tabs for easy storage in backbacks and when traditionally filed. But be sure to check out other backpack-friendly vertical school supplies in that same line. I’m particularly fond of poly folders, as they won’t rip or get wrinkled with overuse, and seem like a step up from the paper subject folders prevalent in middle and high school.

For example, there’s the Poly Backpack Folder.

SmeadCampusPolyBackpackThese upright folders are designed to hold one subject at a time, and the fold-over flap keeps your syllabus and handouts secure. The flap is straight-cut, so it can be tucked or untucked (like college shirts after the Freshman Fifteen take hold) and each Poly Backpack folder will hold up to 100 sheets and run about $1.29 at Amazon and elsewhere.

Smead’s Campus.org line also includes the similar Poly Backpack Organizer. Each of the three pockets will hold up to 50 sheets. (For those who are still fond of paper over poly, both products are available in 11-point textured paper stock, as well as poly.) You can find the organizers for about $5 each.

PolyBackpackOrganizer

CAMPUS CANDY

Paper Doll perennial faves Office Candy have a whole line for fashionable college students to get their organizational groove on. Collegiate-themed Campus Candy has the same philosophy as its older sibling — if your organizing resources are appealing, you’ll be more likely to use them to keep yourself orderly.

From Kate Spade storage boxes ($52 for a set of three sturdy, patterned boxes with gold foil accents and gold foil ID labels)

KateSpadeStorageBoxes

to a plethora of Lily Pulitzer agendas, spiral notebooks, water bottles, desk sets and more, Campus Candy offers decorative sweets.

2015-lilly-pulitzer-large-agenda-lilly-lovers

BATTLE OF THE BACKPACKS

I’ll admit, in my day, when dinosaurs roamed the campus, backpacks were pretty basic. One large interior pocket, one smaller, zipped exterior pocket, and if you were lucky, padded straps. As far as I can recall, bottle water (let alone mesh pockets for water bottles) wasn’t even a thing yet. Now, students have an embarrassment of stuff-schlepping riches from which to choose.

Cocoon Innovations, makers of the Grid-It! (in all of its various incarnations), has always been a Paper Doll all-star. I think college-bound students should be considering a variety of Grid-It! resources, from the standard Grid-It! Organizers (Medium shown here, 10 1/2″ x 7 1/2″, $18, available in red, blue and black)216_xlarge

to the Grid-It! Wraps for tablets (in black, grey and red) for $30.

GridItWrapOpenBut the backpacks have taken the game up a notch — and while the Central Park Professional Backpack (designed to hold a 17″ laptop) is definitely practical and stylish, the Cocoon Slim Backpack (able to hold up to a 15″ MacBook Pro) has everything a college student might need to make it from breakfast to bedtime without a moment’s clutter kerfuffle.

CocoonSlim

The slim has a padded compartment for a laptop as well as a separate iPad compartment, and a built-in 16″” x 10 1/2″” GRID-IT! front pocket. There’s an interior document section, and an exterior zippered compartment for more storage. The whole interior is lined in faux suede to buffer the high-tech gadgets, and the exterior features water-resistant ballistic nylon, waterproof zippers, and gun-metal hardware. Ridiculously organized and durable, but also sleek, when fully packed, it’s still only 3 1/2″ deep:

CocoonSlimExt

And it’s only $79! I’d always thought that if I were going back to college, I couldn’t find anything more perfect for me than my Züca bag combined with a Grid-It for all my chargers and gadgets, but the Slim is mighty tempting.

Of course, if you (or your college-bound student) want a similarly lean alternative but with a little more minimalist cachet, the Evernote-branded, French-designed Côte & Ciel Flat Backpack may fit the bill. The high performance, dark grey EcoYarn exterior is tough but attractiveEvernoteFlatin that oh-so-Old-World, “Oh, this old thing?” manner, and the three interior pouches will accommodate a 13″ or 15″ laptop, a tablet and stacks of papers, all in under 4″ of depth. The price, however, is a not-so-slender $180!

RISE UP FOR SWEET DREAMS AND LATE NIGHT STUDYING

Most college students can adequately outfit themselves for campus survival without ever leaving their nearest Big Box store plaza. For example, Power Bed Risers, like these from Bed, Bath and Beyond, serve two purposes: superior storage and increased available outlets.

Bedrisers

A set for four, for $30, raises a dorm room bed 7″ from the floor, allowing for more ample storage of lidded tubs (for extra supplies and off-season clothing) without cluttering the room. Additionally, one riser in each set includes twin 110-volt, 15-amp grounded power outlets and twin USB 5-volt DC outlets with a charging light, so you can make sure everything from phones to Fitbits, iPads to (probably still contraband) toaster ovens will be ready when the need arises.

BACK TO BASICS

Finally, there’s something to be said for the basics. College students have put milk crates to use as bookshelves, open armoires for clothing, fridge-top food storage, filing boxes, chairs, dining tables and more for about half a century.

milkcratepink

Nowadays, they’re designed primarily for files, not wholesome dairy products, and have hanging file rails running along the interior in both directions to corral letter- or legal-sized files.

For between $4 and $6 each at Walmart, Target or Staples, you can grab two or three plastic milk crates in mix-and-match colors, pack and stack them with minimal fuss and cost, and maximize the organization in your postage stamp-sized castle. It’s academic.

And by the way, Seventeen Magazine is still offering advice on what to bring to college.

6 Responses

  1. Once again, you’ve written a product roundup that makes me want to rush out and go shopping. What a great resource!

  2. Laura B says:

    Once again, we are frighteningly alike. I actually still have a few of my favorite Back-to-School Seventeen issues (carefully organized in binders, of course!) I would read those over and over and plan my fall wardrobe, school supplies, and practice talking to boys in the hall….oops, did I say that out loud? And Evernote has a backpack now???

  3. Julie Bestry says:

    Thanks, Janet and Laura. And Laura, although Paper Mommy requested I drastically reduce my Seventeen “collection” in her basement in my childhood home, I’m certain I saved all August issues. 🙂

  4. I pinkie-promise that Paper Doll isn’t the only one loves the Zuca backpack and who rushed to newsstands to buy the back to school edition of Seventeen Magazine!

    Fast-forward ‘a few’ years – – > these days, I cant resist buying the September issue of Vogue.

  5. Julie Bestry says:

    I should note (and probably have, in a long-ago blog post) that I learned of the Züca backpack from Geralin at a NAPO conference, stopped her in the expo hall, and made her give me a grand tour of each and every feature.

  6. One of my few disappointments attending this year’s conference was that I didn’t get to meet Geralin.

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