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Bedroom Storage Furniture

Make efficiency your No. 1 goal when deciding how to organize your bedrooms.

White laminate kids closet with shelves, drawers and hanging space. Photo: Philip Harvey

This storage unit for the kids' room sports flexible, easy-to-clean laminate components.

When you're planning storage, take a look at your bedroom with fresh eyes. Perhaps you like the informal look of simple bins and baskets. Or you may prefer antique furniture and cabinetry. In any case, efficiency should be your goal.

Clutter-busting closets
You can never be too rich or too thin -- or have too much closet space. We can't help you with the first two, but there are a few things we can point out about the third.

Specialized stores and mail-order outlets can help you find your own closet hardware and accessories. And if you don't want to do anything but write the check, there are talented designers who can help you take advantage of the numerous closet systems available. Check your Yellow Pages under "Closet Designers."

Hangers, bins, and bags
Take stock of your wardrobe, and you'll quickly realize that some things are longer than others, that some things are better stored folded than hung, and that lots of things get lost. The old adage "Out of sight, out of mind" could have been written about the contents of your closet.

The way to keep all those formerly lost items from disappearing again is to put them where you'll see them.

Doubling up clothes rods is a key space-saver (in a child's closet you can even triple up). Position the top rod 6 1/2 to 7 feet off the floor and the lower one 3 to 3 1/2 feet up; err on the high side. A single rod is usually just under 6 feet off the floor; you'll probably still need a short length of single rod for coats and the like.

What about systems?
The most basic system -- the home-center standard that's easiest to work with and offers the most options for the do-it-yourselfer -- uses coated wire for rods, shelves, and accessories. Various component kits allow you to fit the system to virtually any closet; you can turn corners, stop short of side walls, even make the unit freestanding. Other widely available organizers use coated steel planks, wood, melamine-surfaced particleboard, or MDF (medium-density fiberboard).

Many of the MDF-based systems sport those ubiquitous rows of "system 32" holes up the sides of their panels, allowing each module to be fitted with shelves, drawers, doors, or anything else that can plug into the holes. You can also change components around when you need to.

You can have any degree of finish you like, from purely utilitarian up to fine cabinet quality. In fact, a well-finished closet can be one of the high points when you show off your house -- especially to a friend who still tosses things in and then chancily crams the door shut.

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