Closet Belt Hanger Map

Create a printable closet belt hanger map with hook assignments, labels, weight-limit notes, and snag or entanglement cautions for a small belt storage area.

Audits

Pass

Install

openclaw skills install closet-belt-hanger-map

Closet Belt Hanger Map

Purpose

Create a simple closet belt hanger map with hook assignments, belt categories, weight checks, and reset notes. The goal is a visible physical system that makes belts easy to grab and return without overloading hooks or creating snags.

Use When

  • Belts are tangled, buried, sliding off hangers, or hard to match with outfits.
  • The user wants to organize one closet belt area, hanger, rail, hook strip, or small accessory zone.
  • The user needs a printable map for hook labels, belt categories, weight limits, and reset checks.
  • The user wants a fast closet accessory setup rather than a full closet redesign.

Do Not Use For

  • Installing wall hardware, drilling, anchoring, or structural load advice.
  • Product safety certification, childproofing claims, or closet-system compliance.
  • Full wardrobe styling, body-shape advice, or shopping recommendations requiring current prices.
  • Storing heavy tools, bags, weighted accessories, or non-belt loads on belt hooks.

Inputs To Ask For

Ask for:

  1. Belt storage location, such as closet rod, door hook, wall hook strip, hanger, drawer edge, or accessory rack.
  2. Number and type of belts, including dress, casual, braided, fabric, wide, chain, statement, or rarely used belts.
  3. Hook, hanger, or rack type and any visible manufacturer weight limit.
  4. Belts that snag, shed, have sharp buckles, are delicate, or are unusually heavy.
  5. Preferred grouping style, such as color, width, frequency, outfit type, or owner.
  6. Items to keep, repair, relocate, donate, or remove.

If the user does not know the hook rating, use conservative language: keep loads light, spread weight across hooks, and follow the product label or manufacturer guidance.

Workflow

  1. Count the belts and inspect the current hooks, hangers, or rack.
  2. Remove non-belt items and anything too heavy for the setup.
  3. Sort belts by practical grab pattern, such as everyday, dress, casual, wide, fabric, delicate, or occasional.
  4. Identify snag risks from sharp buckles, chains, open hooks, delicate fabrics, nearby knits, scarves, cords, or loose loops.
  5. Assign each belt group to a hook, hanger slot, or rail position without crowding.
  6. Add a visible weight-limit note and a per-hook load check.
  7. Create labels, a mini index, and a quick reset routine.

Output Format

Return the following sections.

Belt Hanger Snapshot

  • Location:
  • Hanger or hook type:
  • Known weight limit:
  • Belt count:
  • Zone count:
  • Reset date:

Hook And Hanger Layout

Represent the storage area as a simple text map. Example:

LeftCenterRight
Everyday leatherDress beltsCasual fabric
Delicate or wideRepair or reviewEmpty buffer

Adjust the layout to the user's rod, door hook, hanger, hook strip, shelf edge, or accessory rack.

Zone Labels

For each zone, include:

  • Zone name
  • Belts that belong here
  • Belts that do not belong here
  • Max suggested load or conservative weight note
  • Snag or entanglement caution, if needed

Belt Mini Index

Create a quick index:

  • Belt or group:
  • Color or style:
  • Hook or hanger position:
  • Keep, repair, relocate, or remove note:

Weight And Snag Check

  • Known product limit or label to follow:
  • Hooks that look overloaded:
  • Belts to move to another hook:
  • Buckles, chains, loops, or nearby items that may snag:
  • Empty buffer space to preserve:

Two-Minute Closet Reset

  • Return belts to labeled hooks or slots.
  • Spread weight across hooks instead of stacking on one point.
  • Close buckles or lay sharp hardware away from delicate fabrics.
  • Separate dangling loops, cords, scarves, and straps.
  • Move heavy or awkward items out of the belt area.

Example Prompts

  • "My belts are a tangled mess on a door hook — I can never find the right one. Create a belt hanger map with hook assignments and labels."
  • "I have leather, fabric, and chain belts all jammed on one hanger. Help me sort them into zones with weight-limit notes so nothing gets damaged."
  • "I need a quick belt organization system for my closet rod. Give me a printable hanger map with everyday, dress, and occasional zones and a reset routine."

Safety And Boundaries

  • Include weight-limit cautions for hooks, hangers, rods, doors, and adhesive strips.
  • Tell the user to follow product labels or manufacturer limits when known; do not invent load ratings.
  • Use conservative advice when limits are unknown: keep loads light, reduce crowding, and spread weight.
  • Include snag and entanglement cautions for hooks, buckles, chains, loops, cords, scarves, delicate fabrics, and nearby garments.
  • Do not provide installation, anchoring, drilling, structural, childproofing, or compliance claims.
  • Keep the scope to organizing a small belt storage area unless the user asks for a broader closet plan.