Monday, March 8, 2021

Storage 101: Master the Closet

This is the last part in my Storage 101 series. You can catch up on the previous parts here: Intro 1 2 3 

At the end of 2020, we began organizing our master closet and we finished everything in January 2021. It was a spur of the moment project which had been in the works for a few years behind the scenes.

When we bought this house almost six years ago, I really liked the master closet. It was large, spacious, and had shelves and rods to hang and fold clothes. It never came up as something needing to be redone because its functionality was okay.

But there came a point where okay was not good enough.

I began to realize I wanted more drawer space instead of hanging space. In January of 2019, I found a drawer shelf unit secondhand and went to go pick it up. My daughter was nine months old at the time and it was a brutally cold day. To my lack of preparation, the shelf did not fit easily into my car, and although it did fit when we switched the car seat to the other side, I could not lock the car seat back in place and safely or legally drive home. So the kind husband offered to load up the shelf in his pickup truck and drive it home for me. The drive wasn't far as they only lived five minutes down the road, but he didn't have to do any of this.

Kind people exist. You just have to meet them.

I bought new drawers compatible with the shelving unit and set it up in my side of the closet. I used this set up for almost two years before finally realizing it wasn't working anymore. Clothes would sit on top of the drawers and pile up into a stack. The drawers themselves were not enough space for me to easily store and remove the items, and the overall look was very sloppy. 

One evening last December as we were going through the motions to wind down for the evening, we landed on the topic of redoing our closet again. I asked my husband about constructing a drawer unit the way I wanted and we talked about the price of wood and supplies. This led to a quick google search to see if I could find something pre-made and adapt it to my liking. This google search ended up being a rabbit trail which led us to design our custom closet using Elfa from The Container Store. 

We had perused the Elfa collection years before. One evening for fun about five years ago, we were at The Container Store looking at their custom closet solutions. At the time, I was thinking about getting a shoe organizer. The Container Store had these beautiful gliding shoe racks which actually held a good number of shoes. We got a small design drafted up, but that was the end of it.

This time as I thought about installing some new drawers in the closet, we decided to redo our entire closet so it could be almost completely custom. Translation: Hubby saw how good my side looked and he wanted his side to look that good too. In order to do this, we had to remove three closet rods, retexture the wall to match, and paint. It sounds easy on paper, but it was actually a two-day process because we needed to wait for everything to dry properly. I also ended up redoing the wall texture twice because the first time did not match as well as I wanted it to. 

Then we began installation. The Elfa system is designed to be very DIY-friendly. First, we installed the top tracks. We measured and had them cut so every single screw would hit a wall stud for the most secure installation. It is a few extra steps, but I believe it's worth it considering these are going to hold up to 100+ pounds depending on how much clothing you're storing. Then we hung the hanging standards and used brackets to install gliding drawers, gliding shoe racks, and shelves. It was a lot of fun. Was it a lot of work and did it take a few tries to get it the way I wanted? Yes, it absolutely did. But I found the work very therapeutic and exhilarating from my normal SAHM and working part-time duties.

I'm not going to lie. After we finished the closet, there were a few times when I would purposely go to the closet, sit in it, and admire our work. 

Wifey's Drawers

Wifey's Hanging + Shoes

Hubby's Hanging + Drawers. The picture is deceiving. Our halves are almost equal.

Wifey's Long Hanging

That is all my clothes I own and wear in our closet. Do I own a lot, less than average, or a normal amount? I've always wondered because I never thought I owned a lot. But once I realized how much storage I needed to store it all, it made me start to wonder if I actually have a lot of clothes...or just normal amounts. 🤷🏻‍♀️

This was not an inexpensive makeover of our closet. However, I was also able to reuse some of the old storage solutions in our kids' closets. The shoeboxes that used to hold our shoes are now in my son's room holding his shoes. 

I was able to fit 3-4 pairs of shoes in each box and labeled them by putting
a scratch piece of paper under the lid as a simple DIY label. 

I was also able to repurpose the shelf and drawers I originally had in my son's closet to hold his clothing in larger sizes. My daughter already had one of these shelves because hers is one I inherited from a friend back in college for my apartment. 

This is the original drawer unit I purchased second hand
being repurposed in my son's closet. There was never anything wrong with it.
'I just realized I was exploding each bin with clothes and needed more space.

I'm not one to spend a lot of money, and especially not spending money on things to hold my things, but this was completely worth it. Even now, as I finish this blog, I'm getting excited all over again for how functional and aesthetic this closet makeover is. Good things are worth the cost. Thanks for reading. 🙂

No comments:

Post a Comment