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Posts with tag shelving

Organize the Garage

We all know people who can no longer fit their car into their garage. Perhaps we are even among them. (Hey, I just moved, okay? And we downsized dramatically! And there are no basements! And, and, and... I'll take my own advice soon, I swear!) The garage has become a repository for all the stuff that they have nowhere to store. Look around your neighborhood, I am willing to bet that most people are using at least one of their garages for storage.

Did you know that Americans are renting storage units to store all of the stuff that won't fit into their houses? According to this article "self-storage units cover 72 square miles, the area of Manhattan and San Francisco combined." That's a whole lot of people storing a whole lot of stuff, that frankly they probably do not need.

My take on the self storage phenomenon for the average suburban American? Get rid of it. Make decisions about what you really use and need, then get rid of the rest. If it isn't useful or making your life better in some way, then you do not need it. The problem that most people have is that they do not organize their stuff and therefore they cannot find it when they need it.

Continue reading Organize the Garage

Stack a set of shelves

shelving unit of boxesA set of ten boxes, nested one within the other. The largest is perhaps two feet square and a foot deep (60 cm x 60 cm x 30 cm), the smallest half those dimensions.

You can purchase the yummy unit shown at right through Seletti, or -- using instructions provided by those generous folk at Seletti -- you could make your own very personal unit, and save yourself a significant bundle of cash!

You'll need a collection of sturdy wooden boxes in various sizes, decorating materials, and two sections of heavy-duty strapping.

Continue reading Stack a set of shelves

Pam Garrison's embellished closet makeover

Pam Garrison's pretty closet, at an angle.Pam Garrison is a relatively well-known artist and craft blogger: you may have seen her work in the Somerset family of magazines, or over at her blog.

Recently, Pam wrote about a decorating project she'd done in her own home: she made over the closet in her art room by papering its interior and adding shelves.

There's nothing so unusual in that, but the paper is entirely vintage (and vintage-style) wallpaper scraps, put up in a patchwork style. The effect is a cheerful and pretty collage. She credits the inspiration for the project to Alicia Paulson of the popular blog Posie Gets Cozy, who has done a closet door in a similar style.

Read more about how Pam did it, along with some further suggestions of my own, after the break.

Continue reading Pam Garrison's embellished closet makeover

Creating kid-friendly storage solutions

Kid's grid bookshelf with toys, by Maggie Vink.

I recently adopted a 10-year-old boy. Despite his having a big room with a big closet, a big dresser, and a big bookshelf, his stuff has slowly spilled out to the rest of the house in a big, big way. I've reassigned drawers and shelves all over the house for his belongings, but still we've had trouble keeping any semblance of organization.

I don't know about your kids, but for my son, anything that requires too much effort is useless. The over-the-door rack I bought for his baseball caps? It's completely empty. The case I bought for his Hot Wheels cars? It doesn't even house one measly little vehicle.

But there are kid-friendly storage solutions. What I've learned is that when it comes to kids and storage, easier is better. I'll discuss what I did after the break.

Continue reading Creating kid-friendly storage solutions

Plastic shelving in any color you want


I was in desperate need of shelving to display my goods at upcoming craft fairs. I did quite a bit of searching on the good old internet, looking at what other people were using. I really needed to take price into account: I'm always one to pinch pennies where I can.

I noticed that in a lot of people's display pictures, they were using basic plastic shelving. I had seen that type of shelving for sale at stores like Wal-mart and Target, where it mostly comes in drab plain old white. I did see a few sets in black, but I really want my items to pop off the shelves, and with the black shelving, my items would just sort of meld into the background.

For a moment I considered trying to find something else, but then something clicked inside my head. I'd recently made over my plastic patio furniture using Krylon Fusion spray paint, so why not just paint the shelving whatever color I want?

I was going to go for gray, but when I saw the Krylon Fusion For Plasic Fusion Hammered in silver, I couldn't resist. And the painting was easy: full coverage in only two coats. It took about two cans for a set of four shelves, so the price is nice.

I've since decided to use this shelving in my craft area when not vending at craft fairs. It looks too good to just store away!

Books in the rafters

Rafter-mounted bookshelves, from Apartment Therapy. Fair use size.If you have a lot of books, like I do, sometimes it becomes challenging to store them. Decent bookshelves that won't bow under the weight of the books can be expensive, particularly when you need a whole wall or more of them. And the books can be in the way when you have nowhere to put them... oh, the piles I have tripped over!

Some people suggest using bracket-supported shelves near the ceiling as a way to put extra storage into a room, whether for books or for knickknacks, but books can be so heavy that it's probably smart to be skeptical about that idea, even if the supports are properly screwed into wall studs. Also, until relatively recently, the most widely available brackets that could support more than a few pounds of weight were in styles only appropriate for country decor... nothing sleek or modern.

On a similar theme, but with a much more distinctive look, are the "rafter shelves" that have been running around the blogosphere recently, after an appearance on Apartment Therapy Los Angeles. You can read more about them after the break!

Continue reading Books in the rafters

Get to work with a desk for two

Two desks in one, from DIYideas.com. Fair use size.While I was working on another post, this double-desk project, a workspace for two, caught my eye. A bookshelf with file baskets hung on its side separates two desk surfaces. The overall effect is like those library study carrel tables that you may have used in high school or college. You can download the instructions for the Two's Company desks at DIY Ideas.

Not much is ever really new. If you like this project, check out Christopher Lowell's wonderful book Seven Layers of Organization, which has several similar desks built with bookshelves and doors. (Why a door? Because they're commonly available, usually pretty inexpensive, and the hole for the doorknob is perfect for wrangling the cords and wires that proliferate at the back of most desks.)

The May/June 2007 issue of Blueprint also had a pair of desks which were placed back-to-back, as these were, but with a sheet of colored Plexiglas between them. This set-up is perfect for a shared home office, or for siblings who have to share a bedroom. If you'd prefer to use the Plexiglas, it shouldn't cost too much more than a sturdy bookshelf. It should be the same width as both desks, 28" or so taller than the desks' writing surface, and should be 1/4" thick with polished edges.

Clicking through the other ideas in the DIY Ideas: Get To Work gallery, you will see an artist's studio that uses shelving with standards/anchors and brackets, as well as hanging shoe bags. There's also a basic desk whose top has been livened up with rectangles of peel-and-stick vinyl floor tile, and some ideas to make your home office more relaxing.

[via Apartment Therapy]

Need shelves? Try rain gutters

Rain gutter shelvesMy kids and I are voracious readers and we seem to accumulate books at the speed of light. Basic build-it-yourself bookshelves are fairly inexpensive but, let's be honest, they're also really boring. The other day, I went looking for some new and interesting ways to store books and came across the neatest idea at FamilyFun.com: rain gutter shelves.

Here's the plan: measure the walls where you want the shelving to hang, then run down to the nearest home improvement store. Gutters are typically sold in ten-foot lengths, but ask to have them cut shorter if you need to. Then grab a handful of brackets to attach the gutters to the wall, some decorative end caps, and head home.

Hammer the brackets to the wall (use a level to make sure your shelving will be straight), then insert the gutters and place the end caps. There you have it, instant bookshelves!

Build a Zen shelving unit

Shake up your living room! Bookcases don't have to be boring. Have you noticed that the big home decor stores have quietly introduced bookcases sporting more unusual styling? Like this one from Crate and Barrel, for instance. Yet this is something the DIY'er might like to try his or her own hand at. Need ideas? I found this wonderful example from Lowes sister site, LowesCreativeIdeas: it's a "Zen" shelving unit -- "inspired by the clean lines of Asian design." Visit the site to check out their photo of what the finished project will look like. Isn't it just gorgeous?

A rundown of materials needed and instructions are on the site, along with diagrams and the finished-work pic. However, you can download a pdf of full instructions from the site, too. Nice. The Lowes elves estimate the total cost to be around $120, which is substantially less than it would cost you to buy ready-made. On the down side, this looks like it would be fairly time-consuming for a beginner woodworker like myself. (Read: completion date estimated sometime in 2010.)

Here's a thought: "fake it, don't make it." I wonder if you could cut corners by using pre-made storage cubbies, like this one of mine pictured above. You could attach them within A) a frame of your own design or B) an unwanted bookcase with the shelves removed. Once painted to match and installed, no one would notice they are not all one unit.

American Girls doll cabinet

Cabinet for 18

Do you know the American Girls? They're a family of dolls and related products. Each doll is a character created to represent a particular era in America's past, or a special girl from the present, and each doll has a set of meticulously detailed historical clothing, furniture, and accessories (not to mention books and movies) that you can buy. The 18" dolls have been a kiddie status symbol for the last two decades, so much so that Mattel eventually bought the entire concept from its original producer, Pleasant Company.

The thing is, American Girl stuff can get expensive. Some parents deal with this by buying genuine dolls, but picking up the accessories on eBay. Others buy everything the line has to offer, and still others buy similar, less-expensive dolls from stores like Target. The storage trunks for the American Girl dolls, sized to hold their beds and accessories and styled like a clothes chest from each doll's era, are some of the priciest items in the line, and may be the least interesting to kids who aren't completists. They mostly run between $159 and $175.

Instructables user WilyHacker has a solution to the storage trunk issue: why not build your own? From a common purchased white melamine storage cabinet, they have created a very viable unit for American Girls and similar dolls, perfectly sized to hold all of their furniture and accessories. Aside from the cabinet itself, you'll need some findings and a few power tools. If you don't have all the tools, you could have a lumber yard make any cuts you need, and maybe skip the step with a router and use L-brackets, painted white, to hold up the vertical divider.

Why would you want to build one? Well, maybe the name-brand storage trunk is way out of your budget, maybe it doesn't fit into the look of your kid's room, or maybe you'd rather spend the money on more accessories for the doll belonging to your own little American Girl. Any way you look at it, this is one sweet project.

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