5 Bedroom Storage Ideas

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2. Maximize your closet

"Before buying bulky dressers or armoires, make sure you're getting the most out of your closet — especially when it comes to hanging space," says Kristine Becker of Closet & Storage Concepts. "You can always add drawer or shelf units but it’s harder to change the rods."

Before you start drawing up plans for your bedroom storage closet, analyze what you plan to keep there. To figure out where to install rods, for example, estimate how much space dresses and suits take up versus shirts and jackets. For longer items, you need full-length vertical space under the rod. If the bulk of your clothes extend less than three feet, hanging two sets of rods, one high and one about 40 inches above the floor, will double the amount of clothes you can hang in that space.

Consider what you need to access on a daily basis versus every few months. Your favorite walking shoes should be front and center, whereas those strappy Manolo Blahniks can be stashed in their boxes on an upper shelf for special occasions. Shoe cubes, tiered tie racks and slide-out laundry bins help keep things tucked away but easily accessible.

Becker suggests getting shoes off the floor, where they tend to end up in a mix-and-match pile, and putting them in individual cubbies. She also believes in minimal drawer use. "Stuff like sweaters and T-shirts should be on an open shelf where you can see them all at the same time," Becker says. "If you’re looking for your favorite sweater and you’ve put four others on top of it in a drawer, you’ll never find it. You might as well give it away. The only thing that should go in drawers are things that don’t fold well — socks, underwear, bras. Usually four to five drawers per person is plenty."

Lise Lingo utilizes every inch of the bedroom closet she shares with her husband in Washington, D.C. Racks on the wall behind the door hold shoes and the door itself has a full-length mirror. In-season clothes, hats and belts hang from hooks on narrow side walls. "I'm a big fan of the slide-out tie racks that work with wire shelving systems. I use mine for belts," Lingo says. "We also have built-in shelves in a corner behind the clothes rods that are good for deep storage — like shoes my husband seldom wears."