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Tidying queen Marie Kondo launches first product line

NEW YORK 鈥 People often ask Japanese tidying queen Marie Kondo what containers they need to achieve her brand of organizational success. They expect her to 鈥渞eveal some hitherto secret storage weapon,鈥 she explains in her popular book.

NEW YORK 鈥 People often ask Japanese tidying queen Marie Kondo what containers they need to achieve her brand of organizational success. They expect her to 鈥渞eveal some hitherto secret storage weapon,鈥 she explains in her popular book.

Instead, she advised when The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up was first published in Japanese in 2011, 鈥淵ou can solve your storage problems with things you already have in the house.鈥

But Kondo鈥檚 thinking has evolved as she鈥檚 leveraged her massive, global fan base to expand her empire. She鈥檚 now got an upcoming Netflix show, a fledgling corps of consultants working around the world to help her fans declutter their homes, and, on Tuesday, she launched her first product line: six-piece sets of beautiful, sturdy paper boxes for $89 a pop.

In a recent appearance in Manhattan to announce the show and merchandise line, Kondo said she thinks lovely storage options will spark the life-changing joy she wrote about in her book, which has sold more than 10 million copies in 40-plus countries. She also hopes the boxes will motivate more people to complete all the steps in her laborious KonMari Method of sorting, tossing and putting things away in their right and righteous locations.

The new storage sets are the shape and size of shoe boxes. (Her book had recommended using real shoe boxes for organizing.) Smaller boxes in the set are akin to iPhone boxes (another reuse hack she recommends). All are intended to be of service on shelves or in drawers (the sets are called Hikidashi, which means 鈥渄rawer鈥 in Japanese) to hold such things as sunglasses, handbags, papers, socks, undergarments and T-shirts, the latter three lovingly folded in the flat, KonMari-sanctioned way so they stand upright.

鈥淚鈥檓 probably the only person in the world who makes such an official occasion to introduce empty boxes,鈥 the soft-spoken mother of two recently told a small gathering of journalists through a translator as she unveiled the containers. 鈥淭hese are meant to enhance your experience of the KonMari Method.鈥

The boxes will also enhance her bottom line. Since Kondo unleashed the bestselling Life-Changing Magic, including an English translation in 2014, she鈥檚 published three other books, earned a spot on Time magazine鈥檚 2015 list of 100 most influential people and given birth to two girls, now 3 and nearly 2.

She has given birth to a new business as well: consultants certified by her and sent forth into homes in 23 countries, from Europe and the Americas to Australia and the Middle East. As for her new show, Netflix ordered an initial eight episodes of her series of home consultations but will say little else on the record.

For now, it鈥檚 all about the boxes, in pale pink, soft grey, taupe and purple watercolour designs. The sets are dubbed Wonder, Harmony, Clarity and Balance. Customers ordering the containers, for delivery in mid-September from her website, konmari.com, will receive a series of emails and other help online to guide them through the tidying process.

Perhaps more importantly, she hopes to connect devotees to one another online via her take on social networking.

鈥淚 often hear that it is very difficult to sustain your motivation to tidy when you鈥檙e doing it all by yourself, so I very much feel that having this community is very important,鈥 Kondo said.

She has adorned just the interiors of the boxes. One set has a purple tree branch with white buds inside. Others are done in abstract swirls. The idea, Kondo said, is to 鈥渕ake the things that you store inside happy,鈥 rather than merely hide belongings away. Their plain exterior design also makes the boxes easier to blend with just about any decor.

Two additional sets of boxes in smaller sizes and different colour schemes are planned for the holiday season this year.

Kondo, who is based in Tokyo, told the Associated Press in an interview that she鈥檚 not done writing books quite yet. Her next one will focus on workplace organizing.

She is travelling less now and no longer does regular home consultations, a business she began building as a 19-year-old college student studying sociology. Working one-on-one again in homes for Netflix was a highlight of Kondo鈥檚 year.

鈥淚t was a very exciting, very enjoyable experience for me,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檝e been engaged so much in giving lectures, doing media appearances and so on.鈥

She has also been engaged in motherhood, not a small thing when your passion since age five has been tidying. The unflappable Kondo still lives a tidy life, of course, but young kids have been a challenge.

鈥淚 try to teach them how to fold clothes. Children are very close observers so I try to make it so they can watch me folding clothes,鈥 Kondo said. 鈥淔rom time to time I do feel anxious. It鈥檚 not 100 per cent. It鈥檚 not perfect.鈥