Transform a Rental House in 6 Easy Steps

A rental house may not be a forever home, but that’s no reason to feel like an interloper in your own space. There are countless ways to personalize a rental home or apartment without losing your security deposit. Make a rental home your own in 6 easy steps.

How to Make a Rental Feel Like Home

  1.  mr junk truckOrganize. If you’re only staying for six months, it may seem silly to spend the time to organize the house. But living out of boxes gets old fast. Settle into your new rental with a dedicated “move in” weekend. Enlist the help of friends and family members, assign each a room, and get your stuff put away in no time flat.
  2. Garden. Do you hate those overgrown shrubs in the front yard? Ask your landlord about replacing them. Chances are the deed-holder will agree to anything that improves property value. Haul off old plants, then spend a few days installing fresh flower beds, hardscaping elements, and more tasteful shrubs.
  3. Paint. There’s nothing like a fresh coat of paint to make a house feel like home.
  4. Decorate. Not staying long enough to justify the paint/repaint process? Decorate the walls with artwork, temporary wallpaper, or creative DIYs.
  5. Redecorate. Hate that TV stand that came with your furnished apartment? Swap it out with the one you’re keeping in storage. Just don’t forget to replace the original before the end of your lease.
  6. Spring clean. Feel like you’re just spinning your wheels on the way to your dream home? Prepare for the big move! Sort through your stuff and get rid of the stuff junking up your space. Your rental will feel bigger and you’ll feel accomplished by working towards future goals.

Ready to get rid of junk that’s just taking up space? Call Mr. Junk for furniture, appliance, and yard debris removal.

Top Junk Removal Jobs

spring landscaping debris removalAt Mr. Junk, we’re no strangers to getting our hands dirty. Our team has years of practice hauling the strangest stuff, from giant safes and rotting hot tubs to clothes on the fence after a tenant was evicted. No job is too big, small, or difficult to handle for our professional Alpharetta junk haulers. Here are a few of our messiest jobs over the years.

Cleaning Up After Tenants: Not only did these renters leave behind clothes and furniture, they left a fridge full of food in the driveway! Instead of wasting a weekend hauling it away, the landlord called Mr. Junk and had the problem solved in a jiffy.

Whole Home Clean-Out: When we say, “no job too big,” we say it from experience. This week-long job last year meant cleaning out an entire house and yard. Luckily the Mr. Junk team was up to the task.

Tree Trimming and Yard Debris: Whether you’re dealing with debris after a storm or a tree service with no clean up, Mr. Junk excels at cleaning up yard debris. Give us a call to remove shrubs, tree branches, or old lawn furniture.

Garage Clean-Out: Sometimes a mess is more than a mess. When a concerned customer called, we jumped in the truck to take care of a rat infestation caused by piled up junk. No more debris, no more places to hide.

It’s a Dirty Job: Mr. Junk is the only junk removal service that pays attention to the smallest details. We don’t just haul unwanted items; we also stay to clean up afterwards. This job had cabinets full of roach dust from a resident who could no longer care for such a big house. We removed old furniture and appliances, then swept away the leftover messes from years of accumulated dirt.

Need a hand hauling old junk? We offer same-day junk removal for most projects. If you need help cleaning up the home, yard, or office, call Mr. Junk for fast, dependable, customer-oriented service.

Show Off that Front Curb!

Curb appeal does more than give homeowners pride in a job well done. Curb appeal helps homeowners make friends with the neighbors, sell their homes faster, and even boost property value by up to 10%.

At Mr. Junk, we’re happy to help homeowners haul their unwanted junk from the home and yard. We’ll haul away old basketball hoops, and even small debris from bigger junk items, like paperclips spilled from an old desk drawer. And unlike most junk removal companies, we even stay to sweep up afterwards! See for yourself how junk removal can transform your home.

junk in the yardPost Junk Haul

Messy Curb After the Haul

Have a big haul job, but don’t want to get your hands dirty? Call in the professionals! Mr. Junk offers same-day junk removal and no minimum pickup charge.

Clean the House in 10 Minutes a Day

With football season well underway and the kids busy at school, it’s a challenge to find time to organize. We have a few tips for busy parents, professionals, and students to clean out the house in 10 minutes a day.

Declutter the House in 10 Minutes a Day

  1. alarm clockA place to put it. Before beginning your home clean out, you want to make sure it doesn’t look messier after decluttering than it did before. Buy several large boxes or storage containers and label them organize, trash, and donate. Put them out of the way, but somewhere accessible. As you sift through your stuff, sort them into the correct bin for easier organization.
  2. Pick small projects. Many decluttering projects can be accomplished in 10 minutes or less. Each day, organize a junk drawer, magazine rack, the refrigerator, or under the bathroom sink. Try to tackle the easy projects one room at a time before moving on to another space.
  3. Stick with it. Too often we assign ourselves massive projects that never make it past the halfway point. But decluttering for 10 minutes each day and sticking to it for a week, two, or even a month, you’ll be amazed at how easy it is to organize your home from top to bottom.
  4. Follow up. Don’t just leave old junk to migrate back to decluttered closets. After sorting your stuff, call Mr. Junk to haul away the trash and donate items. We’ll get it off your hands and to the local donation center, recycling facility, or trash facility as needed.

Are you ready for a cleaner life? Organize your home in 10 minutes a day. For more organization tips, call Mr. Junk junk removal service.

Clock Image from FreeDigitalPhotos

Set the Stage for a Better Move

With the housing market steadily overcoming the recession dip, selling a home is easier than it used to be. But just because more people are looking doesn’t mean sellers can get lax about their end of the bargain. Home staging is an important element of home sales. And what’s the point of a fresh coat of paint when your house is littered with clutter?

Decluttering for Home Staging

  1. Start outside and work your way in. After all, the yard, porch, and entryways are the first things potential buyers see when they enter a house. They’re also the last impression they get of the house before they leave. Store bikes, sports equipment, and garden equipment in the garden or shed. Sweep the driveway, sidewalk, and front porch. Clean up the mudroom to eliminate coats, shoes, school stuff, and accumulated junk mail.
  2. Sort the wheat from the chaff. We all own hundreds of items we’ll never use. Take your house room by room, boxing up the items you haven’t used in over a month. If it’s a seasonal item, toss it if you haven’t touched in over a year. If an item has sentimental value, box it up. Give yourself a limit to how many boxes you’ll store in the attic, and stick to it. Trust us, it’ll be easier to stage your home for sale if you’re not tripping over stuff leftover from your college student’s childhood.
  3. messy home - hamperOut of sight, out of mind. Buyers want to see the potential of a home, not the actuality of living there. After you’ve hauled off home clutter, tuck away the rest of your home items. Box (and label!) infrequently used stuff like bundt pans, china, and guest linens. Tuck items you use daily under counters and in drawers to preserve that fresh, clean home aesthetic.

Whether you’re tossing boxes that haven’t seen the light of day in years or decluttering after selling your house, Mr. Junk is here to make your move easier. Call us to haul away furniture, appliances, and junk you no longer need.

Home Clutter Image Source

Closet Storage Life Hacks

jeans hanging in closetWith the recent dip in temperatures, it’s impossible to ignore that fall is truly on its way. Folks across Atlanta are digging under beds and through attic storage for their cool weather clothes. It’s easy to get overwhelmed with all the unnecessary stuff we accumulate in our closets. Keep your fall wardrobe clean, organized, and ready to wear with these closet organization life hacks.

Life Hacks for Organizing Your Closet

  1. No matter how many door-hanging organizers or shoe racks you buy, shoes always seem to wind up in a jumbled mess on the closet floor. Get ahead of this year’s tripping hazards with two shoe organization tricks. One: Hang crown molding on the wall of your closet and use the ledge to hang heels. Two: hang tall boots by the tops using pant hangers with built-in clips.
  2. Can’t ever find the right clutch? Use a lid-holder from the kitchen for easy purse organization.
  3. Organize your accessories. Let’s face it: a lot of accessories are out of sight, out of mind. Keep accessories accessible (without adding to the clutter) by hanging them from nails, drawer knobs, or wires on the wall.
  4. Keep your closet clothes-only. Instead of fighting with wrapping paper every time you reach for your coat, store holiday paper on the ceiling by suspending two sturdy wires several feet apart and using the makeshift shelf to store rolls of seasonal paper.

Ready to get rid of last year’s worn out outfits? Call Mr. Junk to haul away old clothes, shoes, and other seasonal junk.

Jeans Image from FreeDigitalPhotos

Reno Cleanup Made Easy

renovation junk in garageHome renovations can transform a living space, unveiling a brighter, cleaner, more useable home. But major home renovations can also go awry, and finding a good contractor is only the first step in success. Don’t let your new and improved house fade away under piles of construction debris. Reveal the masterpiece (and increased property values) with these renovation cleanup tips from Mr. Junk.

Renovation Clean Up Tips

  1. Designate a debris pile. The easiest way to expedite the cleanup process is to start before you begin. Pile broken drywall, extra boards, and scrap hardware in one place for easy removal. Make sure to keep your useable materials separate from the trash pile, or you’ll waste time and money trying to sort the scrap.
  2. Stay safe. Every reno project has broken boards, abandoned nails, and other dangerous construction debris. Designate a specific trash receptacle for hazardous junk from your home renovation. After each day’s work, tour the construction site and toss in any broken glass, loose wires, and other dangerous materials. Always store hand saws and power equipment when not in use.
  3. Take advantage of the mess. How long has it been since your last seasonal clean out? It’s time to take advantage of all that extra motivation. Redoing the deck is the perfect excuse to reorganize storage sheds and outdoor closets. Create a pile near your reno debris for unwanted outdoor decor, rusted garden equipment, and other outdoor junk. Donate items in good shape to friends and neighbors. Leave the rest for the scrap pile.
  4. Call a professional. At Mr. Junk, we’re used to cleaning up dirty jobs. We know how to stay safe, work efficiently, and leave a construction site looking clean and freshly renovated. Unlike most junk removal companies, we don’t simply grab the big stuff and go. Our team sticks around to sweep up nails and dust after we’re done, leaving your home looking as good as new.

Show off the finished product, not a work in progress. Call Mr. Junk to haul scrap materials and leftover junk from your renovation project.

How to Trick People into Seeing a Bigger Room

Do you stay in a claustrophobic bubble day in and day out? Whether you live alone in a tiny apartment, with a spouse in a one bedroom home, or sleep three kids to a room, a lack of living space can affect your productivity and your mood. Moving may not be in the cards, but that doesn’t mean you have to live in a shoebox. Make a smaller home feel larger with these tips from Mr. Junk.

How to Make a Small Home Look Larger

  1. open doorDeclutter. “Out with the old” is the first step in any home makeover. Before you begin painting, decorating, and replacing furniture, eliminate items you no longer need. Sort through stacks of magazines, toss boxes of “just in case” junk, and remove furniture that no longer serves its purpose (your flat screen doesn’t need a 3-foot deep TV stand, anyway). Store junk in the closet while you renovate the house, adding as you go. At the end of your project, call Mr. Junk to carry off the items that weighed down your home spaces.
  2. Paint. You don’t have to live in a world of beige to enjoy the benefits of a larger-looking space. Keep your color palette consistent and stay away from dark or heavy colors. To truly emphasize the extra space in your home, consider painting the trim to match the walls. It draws the eye upward, making ceilings look taller than they actually are.
  3. Furniture. Find yourself lacking storage space? Make your furniture pull double duty. Instead of using an end table just as a lamp stand, pick one with a shelf for built-in storage. Pick light, airy pieces instead of heavy, solid wood tables to open up the space.

Ready to let go of the messy past? Call Mr. Junk to haul away clutter that’s junking up your small spaces.

Image from FreeDigitalPhotos

 

Tips for Maintaining a Fall Landscape

Fall means college football, late season barbecues, and pumpkin spice lattes at local coffee houses. It also means a maintenance list a mile long. Get ahead of outdoor home maintenance this fall with these tips on fall gardening.

4 Ways to Maintain a Fall Garden

  1. yard clean upClean it up. Nothing ruins curb appeal faster than piles of leaves decaying in the yard. What’s worse? Leaves clogging the gutters. Before trees start dropping leaves, install a gutter guard to block debris. Trust us, you’ll have a much better September if you’re tailgating instead of climbing ladders and cleaning gutters.
  2. Store garden equipment. Not only does a garden hoe look terrible lying in the lawn, exposure to the elements makes even the sturdiest equipment rust. Save your wallet (and your property value) by cleaning garden tools after you use them and storing them in a covered shed.
  3. Maintain the mower. Many homeowners simply stick their lawn mowers in an empty shed at the end of autumn. Those same homeowners are often surprised to find their machinery malfunctioning come spring. Save yourself the hassle by properly maintaining your lawn mower. Clean away grass clippings after every individual use. Before storing it for the season, drain the gas, check spark plugs and exhaust vents, and make sure it’s not exposed to the elements in its new winter home.
  4. Let nature do its thing. Why pay to fertilize the lawn when nature does it for you? Grass clippings and fallen leaves provide all the benefits of fertilizer and mulch. They stifle weeds, release nutrients into the soil, and help the lawn retain moisture. Use leaves and grass as organic fertilizer early in the season, but don’t forget to clean them up before Thanksgiving. Encouraging plant growth late in the season leads to winter shock in most plants.

Mr Junk hauls organic debris, leaving your yard looking better than ever. Giving your garden a seasonal makeover is as simple as cleaning, calling, and hauling!

Are You a Back to School Slob?

School is back in session. For many metro Atlanta families, that means another year of tripping over backpacks, losing permission slips, and wondering if the dog really did eat your kid’s homework. Take control of your future (and your child’s) with these back to school organization tips from Mr. Junk.

Back to School Organization

  1. Make a long term plan. If backpacks, lunch boxes, and papers don’t have a home, you can say “sayonara” to an organized house. Plan a DIY weekend to redo the mudroom. Create a shelf for shoes, hooks for jackets, and labeled cubbies for each kid’s school stuff. Do a sweep at the end of the night to make sure the kids repack and store their backpacks after the evening’s homework.
  2. school suppliesKick the clutter. The last thing parents when searching for a teacher’s note is to find crayons ground into the bottom of their child’s backpack. Set aside ten minutes each week to replace, restore, and reorganize school supplies.
  3. Stick to a system. The last thing parents want is to rush to school because their child forgot a permission slip. Create a filing system in your home office, complete with next-day, next-week, and long term school forms. For added organization, set a reminder with each date on your phone calendar.
  4. Master time. It may seem like a silly trick, but setting the clock ahead 10 minutes helps kids (and parents!) stay on track. Stop stressing that you’ll get out the door two minutes too late.
  5. Organize the pantry. Tired of tossing bags of chips into your kids’ lunchboxes — or worse, realizing you’re out of snacks? Bid adieu to lunch box woes by designating a single shelf in the pantry for school food. Store snacks in clear containers so it’s easy to see when to restock.

Ready to toss last year’s clothes, shoes, and ratty backpacks? Call Mr. Junk to haul away boxes for donation.

Back to School Image Source