Write From Home

Home  Busy Freelancer  Bookstore  Classifieds

2003, 2004 & 2005: Named one of the 101 best Web sites for writers by Writers Digest Magazine.

Selected by Bella Life Books as one of the top ten lists for writers in the "10 Top 10 Lists for Writers."

 

(This site best viewed using Internet Explorer at 1024 x 768 resolution.)

Interaction
Chat Room
Chat with other moms & dads writing from home.
Coming Soon
Weekly chats with authors, writers, agents and editors. Scheduled chats will be listed here.


E-mail Discussion List
Stay connected with others in the writing business. This is a friendly list sharing tips, markets and the ups and downs of writing from home.
Subscribe

Busy Freelancer
Monthly E-zine featuring
articles, markets,  guidelines, tips and more.

Subscribe

Publishers...
If you are a paying market send your needs and/or guidelines and they'll be printed in the Busy Freelancer e-zine. This is a free service.

Make Write From Home your Homepage.

Advertise

About Write From Home

Contributing Writers & Columnists

Submissions & Guidelines

Reprint Policy

Privacy Policy

Write From Home
Kim Wilson
P.O. Box 4145
Hamilton, NJ 08610
Tel: (609) 888-1683
E-mail: kim@writefromhome.com

 


A Writer's Dream: The Home Office
by Linda S. Dupie


Lately, I find myself sitting at my computer daydreaming about the office I wish I had. You know, the one with the giant oak desk, big comfortable chair, and bookshelves that never end. All my files are neatly arranged, stowed away in their proper place and don't forget the home office necessity, soundproof walls.

That's right, if you haven't guessed, my office is tucked away in the corner of my basement, which also happens to be where my children love to play. Never mind that they have their own bedrooms. They feel the need to be near me. Sometimes I think they do it as pay back for my mother, and all the times I wouldn't let her work.

Actually, my makeshift office could be worse. My corner is overflowing and that's okay for me because I know where everything is, however no one outside of the writing world would be able to make heads or tails of my set up. I have all of the writer's necessities; laptop to save space, two filing cabinets, three bookcases, and a desk. When my parents remodeled their kitchen, I asked if I could have some of the cabinets. I now have space to put all the printer paper and other miscellaneous items.

I know what you are thinking, "Boy, that sure is cramped." Don't I know it; I have to work in it.

During a conversation with a few writer friends, I found I was not alone in the dream of the perfect office. Many just wanted a space to call their own and others wanted the moon. As for me, I only want the soundproof walls.

Katie, a freelance writer residing in Sweden has this dream, "My dream office has two large windows. One of them looks out over the ocean, and the other out into the mountains. It contains a large desk with lots of drawers and cubby holes to put pens, pencils, and notebooks in (and candy bars of course), and on top will be a state of the art computer with free Internet access, and a good lamp for when my muse strikes in the middle of the night."

Some writer's dream in extreme detail, after all, we're writers and detail is a part of our job.

Shelley of Wisconsin says, "My dream office would be in a room large enough to house a desk, several book shelves, and a couch and chair. Sunshine would stream in through the French doors, which open up onto a private patio and an English garden." Shelley doesn't stop there though. "The furniture would be an eclectic mix of floral patterns and carved woods. The overall atmosphere would be one of comfort and romance."

While most of us don't have the office of our dreams, we can make the best of the space and furniture we do have with a little planning. In my space, I use a U-shape design for furniture placement. I place my desk close to a window, if possible, and then place my filing cabinets on one side and bookcases on the other. I also have any other tables or desks within reach for whatever I need, so I don't have to walk to the other side of the room.

To maximize space, I use the bottom of the U as workspace. I place the computer, fax, telephone, and any current projects here. The sides of the U have all my other filing cabinets and bookcases with the least used items farthest away from the bottom of the U. With the U configuration, I can roll my chair to anything I need; though I prefer to stand and get the items I need. This way I feel I have accomplished some kind of exercise during my day.

I use a laptop for all my writing. What about the Internet you ask? Well, I don't currently have access on my laptop, but I do have a desktop on the left far side of the U configuration.

We write where we do because it's all we have. Most writers have a few ideas of the perfect office in common; we want large windows for light and space for everything that makes us productive. Will the dream office make us more productive? For some the answer might be yes, but for me the answer is no, as long as I have the tools I need to perform my craft. If I actually had my dream office, my family would never see or hear from me again; after all, I'd have soundproof walls.

Seven Space-Saving Tips
1.
Use a lateral filing cabinet as opposed to a standard vertical cabinet. Lateral cabinets hold more files.

2. Store older files and research away from your office space. Box, label, and store the files in another room or closet.

3. Only keep current projects on your desk. Use stackable file trays for easy access and to save space.

4. Use a dry erase board to track assignments, i.e. what's due and what's finished. Customize it to fit your needs.

5. If possible store only the supplies needed in your office space. Store extra supplies in an accessible closet or under your bed.

6. Use a telephone/answering machine combination. Better, if your telephone company provides a voice mail service invest in it and do away with the machine all together.

7. Set aside one morning or afternoon each month to make a clean sweep through your office. File finished projects or remove them totally if you won't need it in the near future.


Linda S. Dupie is a freelance writer. She writes on a variety of subjects including Travel, and Kids and Family issues. Linda also publishes the award-winning Web site Rainy Day Corner for the Writing Family.


 

 

 

 


Great Magazines For Writers


magazine cover



 

 

Subscribe to
Writer's Digest magazine!
 

magazine cover
Subscribe to The Writer magazine  


What You'll Find in Busy Freelancer:

Ask the Freelance Pro
by Kathryn Lay

Jump-Start Your Fiction Writing
by Shirley Jump

From the Copyeditor's Desk
by Jessie Raymond & Karen J. Gordon

Plus: markets, jobs, contests, calls for submissions and more!
Subscribe now

Read the 
Busy Freelancer Archives

 

New to freelance writing?

Read this informative article.

Read Glossary of Writing Terms

Monthly Columns

Dabbling for Dollars
by Alyice Edrich

Off the Page
by Tama Westman

Life of a Writer Mom
by Carla Charter

Article Library

Off the Page

Life of a Writer Mom

Interviews with Authors & Writers

Copywriting, Marketing, PR & General Business

The Writing Trade

Writing With Children

Taxes & Freelancers              
           

Authors Area

Agents & Publishers

Book Marketing

Publications

(Electronic & Print)

 

Resources

Associations & Organizations

Job Boards & Guideline Databases

Research & Reference

Classes, Workshops & Seminars

Links

Author &

Writer Web Sites

Writing Sites

 



Copyright © 2001-2010 Kim Wilson/Kim Wilson Creative Services.