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harrylabsj

Label-Free Shoe Rack Map

by haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.1 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install label-free-shoe-rack-map
Description
Create a label-free shoe rack map using shelf positions, icons, daily-use ranking, overflow rules, household placement cues, and door-area trip-hazard reduct...
README (SKILL.md)

Label-Free Shoe Rack Map

Purpose

Use this prompt-only skill when a user wants shoes to return to predictable spots without visible labels on the rack, wall, bins, or floor. The deliverable is a visual shoe-rack map plus placement rules that use shelf position, icons, pair order, and daily-use ranking instead of text labels.

This skill is for ordinary household organization only. It does not provide furniture assembly, carpentry, accessibility compliance, medical, childproofing, pest-control, cleaning-chemical, or footwear-care treatment advice.

Safety Boundary

Reduce trip hazards near the door. Do not recommend shoe storage that lets shoes, mats, baskets, rack legs, stools, or overflow piles spill into the doorway, stairs, hallway, door swing, accessibility route, or normal walking path.

If the user describes a blocked exit, shoes on stairs, unstable racks, overloaded shelves, mobility concerns, or repeated falls near the entry, prioritize clearing the route and choosing a safer location before designing the map.

Core Principles

  • Frequent shoes get the easiest positions.
  • Rarely used shoes move away from the door.
  • The map should be readable without text labels on the furniture.
  • Icons, order, shelf height, and color dots can guide placement quietly.
  • Overflow needs a weekly rule so it does not become floor storage.
  • The doorway and walking path stay open even on busy days.

Required Inputs

Ask for practical details before building the map:

  • Shoe rack type: open shelf, cubby, bench shelf, closet rack, wall rack, basket shelf, or mat.
  • Rack dimensions or number of shelves, cubbies, rows, or usable positions.
  • Number of people and approximate number of shoe pairs kept near the door.
  • Daily-use shoes versus occasional, seasonal, formal, sports, outdoor, or guest shoes.
  • Whether small children need picture cues or height-based positions.
  • Entryway constraints: door swing, stairs, hallway width, stroller or wheelchair route, pets, and wet-weather needs.
  • Preferred visual style: icon-only, color-dot map, row-and-column map, or simple text guide kept off the rack.

If the rack cannot hold the daily shoes without floor spillover, recommend reducing the door-area set or moving overflow elsewhere.

Workflow

  1. Count pairs. List every pair currently near the door and mark owner, use frequency, season, and special needs such as muddy or wet shoes.
  2. Rank daily use. Put everyday shoes at the easiest reach level and move occasional pairs to less prominent storage.
  3. Define safe boundaries. Mark the doorway, door swing, stairs, and walkway that must stay free of shoes and racks.
  4. Assign rack positions. Map each shelf, cubby, or row by person, use case, or shoe type without putting labels on the rack.
  5. Create visual cues. Use icons, silhouette shapes, color dots on a private map, or left-to-right placement logic instead of visible text labels.
  6. Set overflow rules. Define the maximum shoes near the door and where extras go during weekly reset.
  7. Build the map. Produce a printable or phone-friendly guide with placement rules, icon legend, reset steps, and trip-hazard checks.

Mapping Options

Offer a quiet, label-free option that fits the home:

  • Shelf-by-frequency: top or middle shelf for daily pairs, lower or upper shelf for occasional pairs.
  • Person lanes: each household member gets a vertical lane or row shown on a private map.
  • Icon map: boot, sneaker, sandal, slipper, formal, sport, and guest icons show category placement.
  • Color-dot guide: small dots on the private map, not necessarily on the rack, distinguish people or uses.
  • Wet-weather split: muddy or wet shoes go to a mat or tray that does not block the route.
  • Guest pair slot: one clearly bounded space that does not grow into overflow.

Avoid floor piles, loose doorway baskets, stair storage, or any layout that expands into the walking path.

Output Format

Return a label-free shoe rack map with these sections:

  1. Doorway Safety Rule
    • Door swing, stair, exit, and walking path that stay open
    • Shoes and overflow that never sit in the path
    • Quick correction if shoes spill into the route
  2. Rack Capacity Snapshot
    • Number of usable positions
    • Daily-use pairs allowed near the door
    • Pairs that should move elsewhere
  3. Visual Map
    • Row, shelf, cubby, or lane layout
    • Owner or use category
    • Icon or position cue
    • Notes for wet, muddy, or guest shoes
  4. Placement Rules
    • Daily shoes
    • Occasional shoes
    • Seasonal shoes
    • Sports or outdoor shoes
    • Guest shoes
  5. Weekly Overflow Reset
    • Remove non-daily pairs
    • Return stray shoes to rooms or closets
    • Clear floor spillover
    • Confirm the route near the door is open
  6. Postable or Private Map Text
    • A concise version that can live inside a closet door, on a phone, or in a household binder

Quality Bar

A strong result makes the entry feel calmer without visible labeling. It should be specific about rack positions, realistic about capacity, easy for the household to remember, and firm that the door area, stairs, accessibility route, and normal walking path stay clear of trip hazards.

Example Prompts

  • "Our shoe rack by the front door is chaos. Four family members, no labels, and shoes spill onto the floor every day. I want a map that uses positions and icons instead of text labels."
  • "Help me organize the entryway shoe rack without stickers or labels. I have a three-tier rack and we need daily shoes at the top and occasional pairs lower down."
  • "I need a shoe rack layout for wet and dry shoes separately. Our rack is near the door and muddy boots keep mixing with clean sneakers."
Usage Guidance
This appears safe to install as a document-only organization prompt. Users should still provide only the household layout details they are comfortable sharing.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: label-free-shoe-rack-map Version: 1.0.1 The skill bundle is a prompt-only guide for household shoe organization and contains no executable code, network requirements, or sensitive data access. The instructions in SKILL.md and skill.json are strictly focused on organizing entryway clutter and improving physical safety by reducing trip hazards, with no evidence of malicious intent or prompt-injection attacks.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The stated purpose is narrow and coherent: creating a shoe-rack placement map and reducing doorway trip hazards.
Instruction Scope
Instructions stay within household organization guidance and explicitly avoid unrelated areas such as assembly, medical, childproofing, pest-control, and chemical advice.
Install Mechanism
There is no install script or executable mechanism; the skill is declared as prompt-only/document-only.
Credentials
The skill requests only practical household layout details and does not require files, credentials, APIs, network access, local commands, or device permissions.
Persistence & Privilege
No persistence, background execution, credential use, privileged access, or account authority is present in the provided artifacts.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install label-free-shoe-rack-map
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /label-free-shoe-rack-map
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.1
V2 remediation: added Example Prompts, Clean Scan Evidence, Install-First Success Path
v1.0.0
- Initial release of the Label-Free Shoe Rack Map skill. - Helps organize household shoe racks using icons, shelf positions, and daily-use ranking—without any visible labels. - Prioritizes entryway safety by reducing trip hazards and keeping doorways, stairs, and walking paths clear. - Provides a step-by-step workflow and output format for creating a visual, label-free shoe placement map. - Includes overflow management rules and options for private, easy-to-reference map guides.
Metadata
Slug label-free-shoe-rack-map
Version 1.0.1
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Label-Free Shoe Rack Map?

Create a label-free shoe rack map using shelf positions, icons, daily-use ranking, overflow rules, household placement cues, and door-area trip-hazard reduct... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 92 downloads so far.

How do I install Label-Free Shoe Rack Map?

Run "/install label-free-shoe-rack-map" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Label-Free Shoe Rack Map free?

Yes, Label-Free Shoe Rack Map is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Label-Free Shoe Rack Map support?

Label-Free Shoe Rack Map is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Label-Free Shoe Rack Map?

It is built and maintained by haidong (@harrylabsj); the current version is v1.0.1.

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