Fodor’s How to Pack from
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Rock & Roll
Rolling is an easy way to pack clothing, both light
and heavy. It works best for duffels and travel packs, but if your
trip is casual, you can roll garments for standard suitcases as
well.
Let's demonstrate with a T-shirt: Lay the shirt
facedown on a flat surface. Fold in the sleeves. Then, with the
shirt still facedown, begin to roll it up from the bottom hem.
Smooth it as you go, so that no wrinkles are folded in. The collar
should wind up on the outside of the roll.
Jeans are a natural for this process. So are dress
slacks: Hold them upside down, by the cuffs, and lay them out. Then
roll from the cuffs up. This technique even works for sports
jackets: Fold the jacket in half lengthwise, tucking the arms
inside. Then begin at the top and roll down.
Delicate garments should be placed on top of T-shirts
or tissue paper before being rolled. I've had great luck rolling a
piqué sundress by filling the dress with a plastic dry-cleaning bag,
backing and fronting it with two more bags, then rolling it from the
hem up.
Skirts can be done this way as well. Put a plastic
dry-cleaning bag inside the skirt to pad it, then either roll it or
fold it in half lengthwise over another garment to pad the crease,
and then roll. Soon, you'll be able to roll
anything.
The Interlock
The theory behind the interlock, which works best with
standard suitcases and travel packs, is that each piece of clothing
folds over or is cushioned by another piece. It's really quite
simple:
• Lay a pair of slacks or a skirt across an open
suitcase from north to south, allowing some surplus to drape over
each side.
• Place a sweater from east to west, allowing arms to
drape both east and west and tail to drape to the south.
• Now flip the northern part of the slacks over the
top of the sweater, fold the sweater arms in over this, then fold
the bottom of the sweater and the southern part of the slacks or
skirt over everything. You've created a neat stack of clothing that
provides cushioning everywhere a wrinkle wants to be.
You can add as many garments to this construction as
you wish. When you've finished, fill in the corners and crevices
with underwear, socks, scarves, and so on. Place shoes heel down
along the hinges of your suitcase.
A quick aside about packing your shoes: they should
never be empty. They should always be stuffed with underwear, socks,
and a purse-size travel umbrella.
We all harbor fears that a customs official will fling
open our suitcase, revealing our Victoria's Secret teddy or
heart-dappled boxer shorts to the airport community at large. Stuff
them in a shoe and he'll never notice. Depending on how fancy you
want to get, you can buy cloth drawstring shoe bags, or you can
simply place each shoe in its own plastic shopping bag. But do pack
shoes separately rather than as a pair -- the positioning
possibilities are greater that way.
Twin Towers and a Chronological
Approach
This is the way that most people put clothing into
their luggage. Fold your clothes and place them in the case in two
neat stacks. If you know your trip schedule, pile them
chronologically -- the first day's outfit on top, the second day's
clothes below that, and so forth. This will eliminate the need to
paw through everything to unearth that purple polo shirt you meant
to wear in the opening-day golf tournament. Fill in around the edges
and in the center with underwear and socks, bathing suits, etc. Try
to pack snugly so that things will not move around in the suitcase.
If it has interior straps that you can use to secure clothing, use
them.
Alternatively, you can roll your clothes and then
stack them neatly like cigarettes in a box. Again, if you lay
them in so that the things you plan to wear first are on top, you'll
have an easier time getting to your gear.
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