Continued...When I open my Barnett binders and look at the tabs, I can visually follow the generations down, and I can easily find and track the sub-family groupings.
1. Barnett Barnett & Hannah Roberts [
orange]
2. Esther Barnett & Joseph Samuel [
blue]
3. their child & spouse [
yellow (yellow)]
4. their children & spouses [
green]
3. their child & spouse [
yellow (yellow)]
4. their children & spouses [
green]
3. their child & spouse [
yellow (yellow)]
4. their children & spouses [
green]
2. Benjamin Barnett & Maria Relf [
blue]
3. their child & spouse [
yellow (yellow)]
4. their children & spouses [
green]
3. their child & spouse [
yellow (yellow)]
4. their children & spouses [
green]
3. their child & spouse [
yellow (yellow)]
4. their children & spouses [
green]
If I get up to generation #6 of a family, I start at the top tab (orange) again but it’s labelled 6. (name).
Depending on the amount of luck I’ve had with research, each sub-family (say, second generation couples & their descendants) might end up with their own binders.
Once I’m done printing out reports and documents, and I know how many binders everything is split into, I’ll create Dymo labels for the outside of the binders (on the spine) to indicate which family groupings are inside. Because I have so many binders, I create labels to show the entire line of descent leading to that particular family grouping inside that particular binder, as follows.
1. Barnett Barnett & Hannah Roberts
2. Benjamin Barnett & Maria Relf
3. Benjamin Barnett & Jane Law
Then I use a highlighter marker to highlight the people whose paperwork is filed inside that particular binder.
1. Barnett Barnett & Hannah Roberts
2. Benjamin Barnett & Maria Relf
3. Benjamin Barnett & Jane LawAlso on the outside of the binders (on the spine), at the bottom, I’ll create labels that say:
BARNETT Family
Binder #1
BARNETT Family
Binder #2
And so on. I can see from the label at the bottom of the binder where each one belongs, in order, on my bookcase. And I can see from the label at the top of the binder whose info is inside, so I can pick the right binder off the shelf when I want to refer to something or update something.
This is what works best for me and the way my brain works. This system has evolved over time, so only some of my family groupings are filed in this way. I am currently in the process of updating my Barnett binders for the first time in 11 years. I’ve been doing research over the past 11 years, and filing everything electronically, and recording it all in my Reunion file, but now I need to create new reports, print out all the new stuff, set up new binders, create new binder dividers, print out a gazillion labels, etc.
You might think, from all of this, that I enjoy filing. Well, you’d be wrong.

Filing is drudge work at the best of times, but, for me (as someone who needs to see it all on paper and who also wants to leave a record that others can follow after I'm gone), it’s necessary, and so I force myself to do it (sometimes -- at other times I procrastinate by writing long, detailed responses on Rootschat threads).

I hope this is helpful, even if only as an example of how one person has fine-tuned a personalized filing system over time. Ultimately, it all depends on how your brain works, and what you find, through trial and error, works best for you.
Regards,
Josephine