Towel Closet Shelf Map

Create a practical linen closet shelf map with towel zones, quantity targets, label text, reset cadence, and restock notes without making medical hygiene claims.

Audits

Pass

Install

openclaw skills install towel-closet-shelf-map

Towel Closet Shelf Map

Purpose

Use this prompt-only skill when a user wants towels, washcloths, guest towels, bath mats, and extras to return to predictable shelf zones. The deliverable is a visible shelf map with quantity targets, label text, restock notes, and a simple reset cadence.

This skill provides practical household organization only. It does not make medical hygiene claims, sanitation claims, infection-prevention claims, or care-setting compliance guidance.

Safety Boundary

Keep advice practical, calm, and non-alarmist. Do not claim that a shelf arrangement prevents illness, removes germs, improves medical safety, or meets clinical, hotel, daycare, rental, or public facility standards.

Do not give medical, infection-control, or professional cleaning guidance. For specialized care needs, shared facilities, rentals, or regulated settings, advise the user to follow the relevant facility rules, product labels, or professional guidance.

Core Principles

  • Assign every towel type a visible home.
  • Keep daily-use items at easy reach.
  • Keep guest or backup items separate from everyday churn.
  • Use realistic quantity targets so shelves do not overflow.
  • Make label text clear enough for any household member to reset.
  • Use practical laundry and restock cues without overstating cleanliness.

Required Inputs

Ask for the details needed to build the map:

  • Number of shelves or shelf sections.
  • Towel categories: bath towels, hand towels, washcloths, guest towels, beach towels, bath mats, cleaning cloths, or extras.
  • Current counts for each category, if known.
  • Household size and whether guests are common.
  • Shelf constraints: high shelf, low shelf, narrow shelf, deep shelf, baskets, bins, or doors.
  • Preferred folding or stacking style.
  • Whether labels should be formal, simple, or kid-friendly.
  • Any overflow area or laundry backlog issue.

If counts are unknown, provide a quick count-and-sort pass before making final labels.

Workflow

  1. Empty or scan the closet. Identify each shelf, basket, and overflow area.
  2. List towel types. Separate daily towels, guest towels, washcloths, bath mats, seasonal towels, and non-towel cloths.
  3. Count current stock. Record how many usable items are in each category and note obvious duplicates or overflow.
  4. Set quantity targets. Choose a target range for each zone based on shelf space and real use, not idealized perfection.
  5. Assign shelf zones. Put frequent-use items at easy reach and occasional items higher, lower, or farther back.
  6. Write labels. Create short labels that name the item type and target count.
  7. Add restock notes. Include where extras live, what to do when a zone is low, and what belongs in laundry.
  8. Set reset cadence. Choose a weekly, laundry-day, guest-prep, or monthly reset.

Output Format

Return a towel closet shelf map with these sections:

  1. Closet Snapshot
    • Number of shelves
    • Baskets or bins
    • Main towel categories
    • Known overflow areas
  2. Shelf Zone Map
    • Shelf number or position
    • Zone name
    • Items stored there
    • Target quantity
    • Label text
  3. Quantity Targets
    • Bath towels
    • Hand towels
    • Washcloths
    • Guest towels
    • Bath mats
    • Seasonal or specialty towels if relevant
  4. Label Set
    • Short labels ready to copy
    • Optional small sublabels for baskets
  5. Reset Routine
    • Laundry-day return rule
    • Guest-prep check
    • Monthly overflow check
  6. Restock and Overflow Notes
    • What counts as low
    • Where backups live
    • What to move out when shelves are crowded
  7. Do Not Mix Zone
    • Optional practical separation for cleaning rags, beach towels, pet towels, or garage cloths when the user owns them

Template

Use this table for the shelf map:

ShelfZoneItemsTarget CountLabel TextReset Note
Top
Eye Level
Middle
Low
Basket

Label Examples

  • Bath Towels: keep 6 to 8
  • Hand Towels: keep 4 to 6
  • Washcloths: keep 10 to 12
  • Guest Set: ready stack
  • Bath Mats: folded flat
  • Overflow: only if main shelf is full
  • Cleaning Cloths: separate bin

Adjust all counts to the user's household, shelf space, and laundry rhythm.

Example Prompts

  • "Our linen closet is a disaster — towels are everywhere and nobody puts them back on the right shelf. Help me build a shelf map with labels."
  • "After every laundry day, towels end up on the wrong shelf. Create a closet map so anyone in the household can reset it in two minutes."
  • "We have guests coming this weekend and I need to organize the towel closet with clear zones for bath towels, hand towels, and guest sets."

Quality Bar

A strong result should make the closet easy to reset after laundry, easy to explain to another person, and realistic about shelf capacity. It should avoid medical claims and stay focused on visible organization.