1. This is better used for T-shirts, for button-up shirts, please hang, don't fold. 2. Even for Tees, I use carton board to cut and make one at zero-cost but with several adaptations - width to fit 1/2 or 1/3 the width of the drawer, length-wise folding in fourth or the height of the drawers, not just in halves. That way instead of putting a stack of flat shirts into the drawer, making it hard to pull anything from the bottom, I have all shirts going vertically and they could stay that way because they are twice thicker. Whatever shirt you want - color, print, collar - you could pull out easily (check Japanese style).
I have very anxiety-inducing perfectionism to the point where it was easier to leave clothes scattered everywhere than handle the stress of unevenly folded clothes. If one shirt was even just an inch wider in the stack, I’d end up refolding everything to relieve the anxiety. This product isn’t useless or a waste of money, just not for demographics of people like you.
@@draic890 You are meant to fold or tuck in the sleeves by hand first, before the first flip over of the side panels. This reduces it to only three flips in total.
The reason for one is so that you can have the fold to be equally folded in the same distanced spot rather than just eyeballing it. Anyone can fold a t shirt but I don’t like uneven folds causing wrinkles when the ones next to them are overlapped on each other