A cutting board resting on
top of filing cabinets makes an instant work space with lots of storage.
To upload a file, click the «File Upload» button at
the top of the File Cabinet home page.
If not, it could go on
top of a filing cabinet, an end table, or a movable file system.
But the rest can go: the Advil, CDs, business cards (the bane of my existence), masking tape, Christmas postcards I meant to send to the two people I know who haven't discovered email... There are a few other trouble spots I need to hit too, like
the top of the filing cabinet, and that box of cables taking up space I could use.
Not exact matches
If you're a volunteer, put the envelope in the
top drawer
of the black
filing cabinet in the folder marked «Pets with Perks.»
In other sculptures, such as Ikea / Zanussi (1986), Lavier stacks common objects, in this case an armoire on
top of a freezer; another, Knapp - Monarch / Solid Industries (1986), consists
of an electric heater atop a
file cabinet.
Her work is also painful — the broken chair on
top of a rickety stool could be taken for a self - portrait, the
filing cabinet and paint - rimed metal box jammed together on the wall a kind
of collision
of bodies, her dangling, mangled canvases fighting gravity, twisting in the wind, flopped hopelessly on the floor.
For example, two
of the
filing cabinets precariously lie on
top and over the edge
of their respective incubators — one threatening to fall heavily on the floor, the other to break the apparatus» fragile, transparent lid.
This visual cue makes for an easy organization system, not much unlike the colored tabs you'll see on
top of folders lined back into a
file cabinet.
Desk
tops, table
tops,
filing cabinet tops, and every other flat surface in your workspace should be kept completely clear — no stacks
of paper, no
files, nothing.
* Adequate hardware (including at least one good mouse or trackball) * High voltage surge protector *
Top tier residential Internet access at minimum * Big table or desk: at the bare minimum, a 72in utility table, the more space the better * Good chair * Good light: lamps, adequate space near a window * Ventilation and climate control: this probably means a window AC unit if you have a lot
of hardware * Printer, for a lot
of folks * Modicum
of supplies: notebooks, multipurpose paper, Post-Its, envelopes, folders, pens, pencils, spare cables (power, USB, Firewire, Ethernet), cleaning supplies (for keeping workspaces and displays free
of dust and other crud) * Storage space, closet or
cabinet: the space occupied by supplies, cables, crates, and
files starts to add up PDQ * Good WiFi router or repeater (i.e., not a Linksys WRT series) * Hardcopy address book (at bare minimum, sync your contacts on multiple devices)
I'm doing a simple version with a DR sideboard I found, using the two shallow drawers on
top for small frequent - need stuff like paperclips, pens, tape, stapler,... I picked up a couple
of wire mesh portable
file folder holders from Container Store and some bright green
file folders to hold frequent - use
files inside the
cabinet.
Desk:
Filing Cabinet Bases — World Market
Top — Two pieces
of plywood trimmed out — can't remember stain color Architectural Artwork — Bought at a store in SC years and years ago
, a wall - full
of white painted desks (maybe it's just three white
file cabinets,
topped with a long table
top?)
I also used an old door for a desk set on
top of old painted
file cabinets.
I used an old flat door with two half - height
filing cabinets to hold it up (a few bricks on
top of the
cabinets adjusted the height) for my desk until my son took the system to college with him.
Our
filing «
cabinet» is so small that when bills, statements, etc. come in the mail, we end up piling them on
top of it or on the desk rather than fighting to squish them into their appropriate folders in the
filing bin.
We put my two
file cabinets behind the love seat with a shelf across the
tops to make a sturdy platform for all
of my stuff.