I used to do really good with coupons... I would go dumpster diving (when I'd take in my recycling) and pull out piles and piles of Sunday papers and get like 30 of each coupon. Then I'd organize them and hold on to them until the item I wanted was on sale. (And as someone here already mentioned, it's imperitive that you only buy things you will actually use). Better yet, when Krogers has those buy 10 mega-events--then they give you like $3 or $5 coupons back off your next purchase. I would (and still do) scour the local sales flyers to see who has the best price. My MIL and I would do this and make a game of it, comparing our buys, like men swapping big-fish stories.
Well, that was a LOT of work, but really helped out when my husband and I were newlyweds and living on 1/3 of what he makes now. I only had room for a tiny garden then too.
I think eventually "they" caught on to what I was doing, because after this went on for awhile, the newspaper carriers stopped leaving such neat and easy to collect piles of Sunday papers for me. Or they'd be all strewn around on the very bottom of the bin, and hey, I have my limits. I was not about to actually climb IN the dumpster.
And besides that...it seems that they just don't put out many useful coupons in the paper nowadays anyway. Since the economy started to go downhill (and the gas prices uphill), most of your coupons are for silly, gimicky junk that isn't on my shopping list anyway. (Such as cleaning supplies that are for just plain lazy and environmentally wasteful people). I mean, where did all the $1 off cereal coupons go??
I had browsed around and thought to try the online printable coupons, but I am rather put out by all the mailing lists (and selling of my email address) or toolbars/coupon printers that you have to download that track your internet comings and goings and run quietly in the background, bogging down all your computer's RAM.
So, other than store coupons which they spit out at me for things that I regularly buy, I hardly ever bother with coupons anymore. Not that I don't want to save money--I do. But now I buy the store brand, or look for good buys at Big Lots and wipe them out, or buy bulk at Sam's, or now that I have an enormous garden, grow and preserve a lot of our food myself. The economy has also refined my already frugal nature. I have found with most things, a little can go a long way, and in our culture as Americans, boy, we sure do consume and waste a lot.