It's funny that the kit breakdown conversation has resurfaced. I tried it, but I ended up reassembling mine into kits again after a couple months because I got frustrated looking for something. And Pam is right that there is no one perfect way to do things. I've changed and evolved mine several times. The shelves of stand up file folders work best for me, because I can still see the colors and they're labeled... mostly.
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
I currently have the mother load of Disney scrap crap all over my extra table while I'm working on the WDW trip, with the goal of USING as much of it as I can. I broke down and bought several Scrapbook Generations sketchbooks and am loving them for this project. A lot of the papers with that are on the thinner side, but I'm not finding it the issue I felt it was before. and I'm also finding that a fair amount can/should be purged before I put things away.
Best thing I did for myself early this year, which thrilled a girlfriend of mine, was to give her a huge pile of cardstock. I still have three shoeboxes of CS POPs for matting and diecuts, and I'm finding myself using PP more as a base... and I wanted the space. I still have a stack of cardstock, but it's mostly CS kits or specialty like the TH distress stuff that can be sanded for a cool look.
I do like the idea of keeping PP scraps together to dig through and I'm swiping it for the next time I feel a purge coming on!