Luggage Storage Label Card

Create printable luggage labels and a simple storage map so bags, travel gear, and seasonal cases can be found quickly without recording sensitive travel or identity details.

Audits

Pass

Install

openclaw skills install luggage-storage-label-card

Luggage Storage Label Card

Purpose

Use this prompt-only skill when a user wants a printable label set and storage map for suitcases, duffels, garment bags, packing cubes, travel accessories, or seasonal travel gear. The output is a practical retrieval artifact: clear bag labels, storage location notes, and a quick lookup card for the closet, garage, attic, under-bed area, or storage room.

This skill is for household storage and retrieval only. It is not a trip planner, packing list generator, security inventory, insurance record, or identity document holder.

Safety Boundary

Do not ask for, store, or print passport numbers, visa details, ID numbers, credit card details, travel account logins, door codes, tracker serial numbers, home security information, travel dates, hotel names, or other security-sensitive details. If a user provides sensitive details, leave them out and replace them with a neutral note such as "secure documents stored separately."

Do not create labels that advertise expensive contents, absences from home, specific travel plans, or private identity information. Keep labels useful inside the household and boring to strangers.

Core Principles

  • Make each bag easy to identify at a glance.
  • Keep public-facing labels generic and low-risk.
  • Use storage locations, colors, sizes, and purpose categories instead of sensitive details.
  • Separate "what is stored here" from "who owns private documents."
  • Include a reset step so labels stay accurate after a trip.
  • Prefer short, durable wording that fits on a tag or shelf card.

Required Inputs

Ask only for practical, non-sensitive details:

  • Number and type of bags: suitcase, carry-on, duffel, garment bag, backpack, packing cube bin, or accessory pouch.
  • Visual identifiers: color, size, brand initials if desired, distinguishing marks, or a household nickname.
  • General use category: carry-on, checked bag, kids travel, camping, beach, winter, formalwear, sports, backup, or repair.
  • Non-sensitive contents category: empty, packing cubes, toiletries pouch, adapters, luggage straps, rain covers, laundry bags, or travel pillow.
  • Storage spot: room, closet, shelf, bin, hook, under-bed zone, or garage bay.
  • Label style: plain text, color band, numbering system, owner initial, or icon cue.
  • Whether labels are for visible household storage, a private closet, or removable tags for travel day.

If the user gives travel dates, identity document details, credentials, or security information, acknowledge that those details should stay off the card and proceed with safe categories only.

Workflow

  1. List the bags. Give every bag a short ID such as L1, L2, D1, or KID-CARRY.
  2. Record safe identifiers. Capture color, size, type, and general purpose. Avoid private documents, credentials, exact itineraries, and valuable-item details.
  3. Group by use. Sort bags into travel, seasonal, sports, kids, repair, loaner, or accessory categories.
  4. Assign storage spots. Pair each bag ID with a room, shelf, bin, hook, or stack position.
  5. Create label text. Make compact labels with ID, bag type, safe category, and storage return spot.
  6. Build the map. Produce a one-page location map that shows where each bag lives and what general gear is inside.
  7. Add a reset routine. Include after-trip steps: empty pockets, remove trash, dry the bag, restock basic accessories if desired, and return it to its labeled spot.
  8. Add privacy check. Remove any travel dates, document numbers, passwords, addresses, or high-value item details before final output.

Label Wording Rules

Good label fields:

  • Bag ID
  • Bag type and size
  • Color or visual cue
  • General use category
  • Storage return spot
  • Safe accessory category
  • Last checked date if the user wants a maintenance cue

Avoid label fields:

  • Passport, ID, visa, or credential numbers
  • Travel account names or passwords
  • Exact travel dates or destinations
  • Hotel, home access, or security details
  • High-value contents such as cash, jewelry, expensive electronics, or luxury items
  • Tracker serial numbers or device account information

Output Format

Return a printable luggage storage label card with these sections:

  1. Bag ID List
    • ID
    • Bag type
    • Visual cue
    • General use
    • Safe contents category
  2. Printable Label Text
    • One compact label per bag
    • Optional color or icon cue
    • Return-to-storage line
  3. Storage Location Map
    • Room or zone
    • Shelf, bin, hook, or stack position
    • Which bag IDs live there
    • Overflow or repair area
  4. Accessory Pouch Notes
    • Safe categories only, such as straps, cubes, adapters, or laundry bags
    • No credentials or identity documents
  5. After-Trip Reset
    • Empty pockets
    • Wipe or air out if needed
    • Dry before storing
    • Return accessories
    • Put bag back in assigned spot
  6. Privacy Check
    • Confirm the card contains no passports, credentials, travel dates, home security details, or high-value item notes
  7. Update Trigger
    • Update labels when a bag is moved, retired, loaned, repaired, or repurposed

Example Prompts

  • "I have four suitcases, two duffels, and a garment bag scattered across closets and the garage. Make me printable labels and a storage location map so I can find the right bag in seconds."
  • "My family's travel gear is a mess — kids' bags mixed with camping gear and beach stuff. Create a luggage label system with storage zones for each category."
  • "I need compact luggage labels for my closet shelf — just bag type, color cue, and where it lives — so I can grab the right bag without opening every case."

Quality Bar

A strong result can be printed, taped inside a closet door, or placed in a storage bin. It should help someone find the right bag in under a minute while keeping identity, credential, travel, and security details off the artifact.