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Pack It Up! [FEMINA ]
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Do you find yourself
constantly forgetting to pack things or sitting on top of your suitcase to slam
it shut? Femina staffers give you tips on packing
right
Sathya Saran:
If
possible, keep a toilet bag with travel size essentials — a spare comb,
a toothbrush, toothpaste on the ready. Then all you have to do is dump it in.
Replace the used stuff on your return.
Pack your suitcase in the order you
will unpack it. Week long or shorter trips should give you a fair idea of
what’s on when, and you can actually layer the clothes in reverse order
— last day at the bottom, etc.
Carry a tote brolly.
An extra
handbag helps — you don’t need to carry your travel handbag
everywhere.
If I’m going to a meeting on the day I land at the
destination, that outfit comes with me as hand luggage.
The
editor is known to travel very light, sometimes to the extent that she forgets
that she is to travel that
day!
Madhavi Purohit:
Distribute monies/valuables in different bags — handbag,
purse, suitcase — to minimise damages in the event of baggage loss or
pickpocketing.
Do not break in new footwear on your trip. Can make for some
embarrassing disasters!
We believe that Madhavi was born to an era before
footwear.
Primrose
Monteiro-D’souza:
Fill little screwtop bottles with your
regular shampoo, conditioner and moisturiser. Liquid soap is a good bet over
bars.
I would go with one colour scheme -- white and black, or black and
grey, with colour in the accessories. Add accessories that will multitask with
different outfits.
Now lay out shoes -- one pair for the journey (it will
make sense to make this a casual\walking pair), one formal\dancing pair, and one
pair of slippers for the room.
Make a packet of photocopied documents that
you will put into your checked-in luggage. This must include passport pages,
ticket pages, hotel reservation receipts, and address details. This will help
both if you lose your documents but NOT your suitcase, and if your suitcase is
misplaced, and some good samaritan wants to return it to you.
Do not ever
carry anything that you cannot bear to lose.
Primrose lives up to her
reputation of being painfully over-organised.
Madhuri Kirtikar:
If you
absolutely must carry eatables, I suggest sealed foil boxes. They are compact
and don’t take up too much room.
If you are carrying electronic
items, put them right at the top, so if you are required to open your bag at
customs, you don’t have to take everything out.
I carry one pair of
clothes in my handbag just in case my suitcase decides not to follow me to my
destination.
Forget food in foil boxes; Madhuri carried five litres of
mineral water to Singapore. We rest our
case.
Ruchira Bose:
Put
all toiletries in a hard cased box so if anything leaks, it will leak into the
box and not all over your clothes. Especially if you are taking shampoo bottles
— they always, always leak due to the air pressure.
If you have loads
to carry, soft-sided suitcases work better than hard-sided.
Don’t put
your shoes right at the top, they tend to get squashed, the shoes might get
damaged. Roll them up and place them at the bottom.
The much-travelled Ms
Bose does not like talking about her packing
escapades.
Usha Mani:
I
never forget that chapter in ‘Three men in a boat’, called Packing
— Pack the toothbrush last. Else, you might have to unpack and rummage
through your neatly piled clothes in your bag to find that elusive
thing!
Lay out the clothes neatly and cushion them with the towels,
napkins, socks and handkerchiefs (that you would anyway need for your trip),
around them. They won’t budge from their place and will remain well
folded.
Avoid carrying food. We don’t want oil-stained or fruit
flavoured clothes.
Usha likes towels, and carries her own, so as not to be
seduced by hotel ones — towels, we
mean.
P S Bhavana:
Roll
and push all the non-crushable things on the sides, it saves space.
Layer
the clothes that bleed (leave colour) with tissue paper and always store all the
whites together.
Always try to use suitcases and bags with compartments.
Have your little first-aid kit handy and stock with the essential pain
relievers, balms and digestive tablets.
Bhavana’s fashion background
is well packed into her
suitcase.
Sejal Mehta:
Make a checklist of everything you will need. I know it sounds like
too much trouble, but take it from someone who knows just how much fun it is to
upturn the entire contents of your bag just to check if you packed your comb!
I never leave for a trip without a good book. (I carried the fifth Harry
Potter on my last trip. Threw the whole ‘travel light’ rule right
out the window!
Sejal, who suffers from listmania, and obviously hates
to pack, says this one will come in quite
handy.
Minal Khona:
Always carry sanitary napkins. You never know.
Carry extra T-shirts
to mix and match with your trousers.
Leave enough space in your bag to
bring back some serious shopping.
As you read this, Minal will have packed
her bags from Femina.
Jerry
Pinto:
Always carry more underwear than you think you will need.
Do not dip your hands into Jerry’s pockets – his suitcase is
not the only place he stashes his
undies!
GOT COMMENTS OR QUESTIONS?
E-MAIL US AT femina@timesgroup.com WITH do it right — packing right’
IN THE SUBJECT LINE
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Pond’s Femina Miss India
2006
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