Storage space is at a premium for
nearly everyone these days. Since 87% of Americans live in
small or medium-size homes, finding additional storage has
become a hot topic. The good news is that every home, no matter
its size, has potential storage space that goes unnoticed.
These simple but creative solutions can help you gain extra
storage in unexpected places.
Buy Double-Duty Furniture
- Look for furniture that serves more
than one purpose, such as a coffee table with built-in drawers,
a side table that also functions as a display case for collectibles,
or chests and tables with enclosed cabinets.
- Buy benches and ottomans with hinged
tops for out-of-sight and easily accessible storage.
- Find an armoire or entertainment
center designed to fit smaller rooms and create enough extra
space to store everything from old photo albums to linens
or electronic equipment. Or look for one that fits into
a corner. Multiple drawers and shelves maximize their holding
capacity.
- Use a sleeper sofa and chair as perfect
multi-use furniture in bedrooms or other living areas of
your home.
- Look for a couch made with built-in
drawers hidden beneath the seat cushions.
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Find Free Storage Containers
- Save your disposable butter and margarine
containers to store small items in the kitchen, hobby area
or workshop.
- Use cans with plastic lids or plastic
baby-wipe boxes to hold buttons, threads, nuts, nails, screws,
washers and small project items.
- Recycle baby food jars and empty
mint tins by using them to organize the smallest shelf or
drawer.
- Cut plastic milk containers in half
to hold small toy accessories or puzzle parts in your child's
room.
- Store paintbrushes (with the brush
end up) in tall potato chip containers.
- Keep spools of ribbon on a paper
towel holder. Cut centers from spools if needed to fit.
- Place magazines in recycled laundry
detergent boxes decorated with magazine covers.
- Keep just about everything in hanging
shoe bags with clear pockets.
- Use an empty rectangular tissue box
as a convenient holder and dispenser for small garbage bags,
plastic grocery bags and small rags. Secure it to the inside
of a cabinet door with thumbtacks.
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Control Your Closet
To
fit more into your closet, plan storage that reaches all
the way to the ceiling. Stow suitcases, out-of-season clothes,
and rarely used items on harder-to-reach upper shelves.
- Save space in your closet by adding
hooks to the door for belts, ties, or shoe organizers.
- Use shelf organizers and dividers
to keep things neat and easy to find.
- Put an inexpensive cardboard or plastic
drawer unit in your closet to increase storage space.
- Hang your clothes by style and color
and give the clothes to charity that you haven't worn in
over a year.
- Install tiered double-hanging rods
to accommodate shirts and pants. This way, they can hang
above and below each other, taking up less space than hanging
side by side.
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Save Space in the Bedroom
- Under-the-bed storage boxes fit in
tight, narrow spots; some even have wheels for easier access.
Just slide the boxes under a bed frame to store out-of-season
clothes, gift wrap, kids games or just about anything else.
- Increase the space in a child's room
by using a bed platform with built-in drawers.
- Kids will help keep things out of
the way and off the floor if a row of wooden pegs line one
wall of their room. Make sure the pegs are within the child's
reach.
- Store toys and books in low shelves
and secure bins that won't fall over. Old chests and trunks
also make creative tables with toy-storage capability.
- Use a wall hanging with storage pockets
as a great space saver for keeping coloring books, pencils,
rulers and other small items together in one place. Buttoned
pockets help keep sharp scissors or glue out of reach of
a toddler who shares a room with an older child.
- Canvas and wooden clothes hampers
make excellent, easy-access containers for toys. Use a large
hamper for stuffed toys and a smaller one for books and
puzzles.
- Store seldom used clothing or other
materials inside your luggage and travel bags rather than
just storing them empty.
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Maximize Kitchen Space
- Fit space-wasting corner cabinets
with lazy Susan carousels or three-fourths circle shape
shelves.
- Install pullout shelves or baskets
that use up all of the space in a deep cabinet.
- Place stacking platforms in taller
shelf spaces to save room.
- Buy drawer partitions, turntables
and other organizers specially designed for kitchens, at
a large discount store. These inexpensive and ready-made
organizers fit into your existing cabinets.
- Consider hanging pot racks, a grid
system or a few hooks to make the most of vertical wall
space.
- Free up drawer space by using a decorative
canister or crock to hold often-used utensils, such as spatulas
and spoons.
- Mount under-cabinet racks to display
your prettiest stemware or teacups. You can also mount paper
plate holders, electric can-openers and automatic coffeepots
under kitchen cabinets to leave extra room on your countertops.
- Clip wire inserts onto the undersides
of shelves to turn unused space into valuable storage.
- Use your oven for hiding seldom-used
pots and pans, but remember to remove them before turning
on your oven.
- Choose a sturdy folding step stool
to help you access out-of-reach storage space without requiring
much of its own.
- Reduce paper clutter in the kitchen
by hanging a bulletin board or magnet board on an unused
wall.
- Save space in your freezer with lightweight,
vinyl-coated wire units, designed to double stack things
on a pantry shelf. Just lean the units against a side or
back wall to store small juice cans and large frozen items
in the same vertical space.
- Place small jars like spices on inexpensive
plastic turntables, so they'll be at your fingertips with
just one spin.
- Transform a jumble of pan lids by
mounting lid racks on cabinet doors or the inside of a pantry
door.
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Organize your Bathroom
- Hang a mesh organizer over shower
curtain rings. Stash shampoo and conditioner in large pockets,
and place soap, razor and other bath accessories in the
smaller pockets.
- Look for a toilet tank magazine rack
that fits on the side of standard tanks without hooks. It's
great for keeping books, magazines and catalogs handy, but
off the floor.
- Use acrylic bath canisters to organize
cotton balls, makeup, hair accessories and other everyday
grooming articles.
- Fit an unused corner with a high
cabinet that features adjustable shelves to accommodate
towels and other bath accessories.
- Mount storage racks to the inside
of cabinet doors. Those used for plastic wrap and tin foil
work fine for small bathroom items.
- Consider buying or building a small,
wall-mounted cabinet for use above the vanity, toilet or
tub.
- Put your bathroom door to work with
hooks that can be used to hold towels, robes, or mesh bags
filled with toiletries or bath toys.
- Baskets, boxes, or other containers
work well for your prettiest towels and other bathroom linens.
- Rolled-up towels fit beautifully
in an inexpensive wine rack. Each curved bottle holder stores
a towel and saves under-counter storage space. Attach two
wine racks to the bathroom wall to hold even more towels.
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Try These Home Office Solutions
- Tuck an armoire into a corner for
a one-stop office that becomes a pretty piece of furniture
with its doors closed. Look for one with a foldout desk
for even more usable space.
- Use a corner desk to convert an area
of the bedroom or guest room into a home office. A small
corner desk only needs space to accommodate 30" on
each side, and a 14" depth to accommodate a computer
monitor and accessories. Corner desk units that include
a hutch require about 52" of height. Look for one with
a raised shelf for the monitor and a slide-out keyboard
shelf.
- Buy office equipment that can be
rolled out of the way when not in use. Also, place inexpensive
casters on file cabinets to create moveable storage space.
- Free up floor space with shelving
units that hang on the wall. Wall hooks or pegs can also
provide additional off-the-floor storage in your home office
area.
- Remove doors from a closet to transform
it into a home office, complete with desk, computer, file
cabinet and shelves.
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Check out Storage Shed or Garage Tips
- Get rid of clutter in your storage
shed or garage by organizing yard tools. Fasten 16-inch
scrap 2 X 4s at a slight upward angle to each side of a
wall stud. This allows you to hang a wide variety of tools
within easy reach.
- Tack an old leather belt along the
edge of a shelf to store hand tools.
- Keep socket wrenches easily accessible
by securing them to a lightweight chain, and hang them on
the garage or shed wall.
- Use empty bleach bottles as nail
organizers. Just cut out a section of the top and store
them on their side or upright. The handles make for easy
carrying.
- Recycle blackened, neglected muffin
tins in the garage as holders for small fasteners, nails,
eye-screws, washers, electrical parts and more.
- Mount pegboard wherever you can in
a shed or garage, including the inside faces of cupboard
doors. Hang items like paintbrushes, adjustable wrenches,
extension cords, hand tools and much more.
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