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THE matriarch of Britain’s biggest family has showcased how she gets wardrobes in order when sorting clothes for her 22 kids. 

Sue Radford, who shares her bumper brood with husband Noel, candidly snapped the “awful mess” in her young daughters’ bedroom.

Sue described her younger daughters' wardrobe as an "awful mess"
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Sue described her younger daughters' wardrobe as an "awful mess"Credit: Instagram
She shared her time-saving hack for getting their clothes in order
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She shared her time-saving hack for getting their clothes in orderCredit: Instagram

The shared wardrobe had clothes piled in, rather than folded and organised for easy grabbing. 

Earlier today, the 48-year-old mega mum took to Instagram stories to tell her fans she was planning to “tackle the awful mess”. 

An hour later, she updated that the clothes and pyjamas were all folded or rolled in their rightful places. 

But there’s a little hack Sue executed to keep things in order - she placed sets together rather than having separate shelves and drawers for tops and bottoms. 

read more on the radfords

Pairing up matching items even meant she unearthed clothes that she thought she’d lost. 

“Now that is so much better,” she said. 

The Radford family shot to fame with parents Sue and Noel welcoming more children than any other couple in the UK.

The older ones are Chris, 34, Sophie, 29, Chloe, 28, Jack, 26, Daniel, 24, Luke, 22, Millie, 22, Katie, 20, James, 19, and Ellie, 18. 

The younger kids in their brood, who still live at home, are Aimee, 17, Josh, 16, Max, 14, Tillie, 13, Oscar, 11, Casper, 10, Hallie, eight, Phoebe, seven, Archie, six, Bonnie, four, and Heidie, three.

Sue and Noel spent the last few years renovating their 10-bed former care home in Morecambe, Lancashire.

Dubbed “millionaire mansion”, it is complete with a hot tub, outdoor bar and uber-modern kitchen. 

In the family’s Channel 5 series 22 Kids and Counting, the family revealed that they want to leave their home. 

They allege that fans keep showing up on their doorstep, taking pictures of the house and even wandering into their garden.

“People turning up at the house has been a regular occurrence,” Sue said.

“I'm happy to speak to people when I'm out and about, but on your doorstep is too much.”

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