Check out more pictures below!
With that said, we had become busy in our jobs and a little disorganized. My house was built in 1999. In all closets, the builder had the top-most shelf at 29" from the ceiling. That is an incredible amount of wasted space! My husband is a gem! He added shelving for me in all the closets.
The coat closet (located in the kitchen area) now has room above the coats for seldom used serving items, the bread maker, the electric griddle and other sundry kitchen items.
The linen closet now has room for all the linens plus other items that need a home and don't get used much. Those have been relegated to the top shelf or two.
The first guest room's closet has lots of open hanging space for guests and holds the few board games we keep for the grandchildren and it houses wrapping supplies and artificial flowers that I change out seasonally.
The second guest room closet has now been maximized and is now the best (second only to my closet - will be featured in another story)!
Over 18" of space inside the closet on either side of the door |
add a 16" support - made out of a 2x3 cut to size |
2 x 3 supports on each side, painted the same color as the walls |
add melamine covered 16" deep shelving |
Top shelf - placques we want to keep and not hang. Other shelves to store items for gifting andstored for swapping out seasonally. |
Added top shelf - some dead storage, seasonal items, linens for this room;Lower shelf haolds craft supplies |
Lots of open hanging space for guests |
Right side has hanging space for shower curtains, table cloths.... |
So, this whole project was done for $42 plus about 4 hours of cutting, painting, screwing into the wall.
If someone was "living" in this room, the side shelves could hold sweaters, hats, purses. And, if this was the case, I would change up the middle section to have one ventilated shelf (where the top melamine shelf is) and have half for long hanging clothes (dresses) and half for for short-hanging clothes (shirts/pants) and would add a lower ventilated shelf at the appropriate height for this purpose.
I guess the whole point is - you have to re-think what the builder gives you and tailor the storage for your needs!