Too Many Clothes and Not Enough Bedroom
The commercial and residential building trend for today is more living
area space and less bedroom space. When an apartment complex has to
compromise - the large bedroom and its accompanying storage space
will be the first to get the pink slip.
Lack of storage space is a flash from the past, when storage was not
in walls or in shelving but in massive pieces of furniture each had
a specific purpose and the grouping seemed to take up the whole room.
As a renter - you'll have to supply your own storage.
What's the solution? Consider how America used to live. Small bedrooms
herald back to way before the fifties, when people accumulated fewer
things and consumerism was less focused on the individual and more
on the common good of the family. That changed substantially after
World War II and the birth of the "Me" Generation - better
known as baby boomers. An exhilarated nation lavished new goods bought
cheaply from around the world on its families, children and grandchildren,
and consumerism has never taken a step back. No longer are we happy
with one of everything (one winter coat, one TV) - now we have been
enculturated to appreciate variety over value.
Increased availability and reduced prices for consumer goods has created
an enthusiastic consumer for collecting small goods - clothes, trinkets,
and accessories. For those who love to shop at The Gap and The Limited
, and can afford to buy a whole new wardrobe every season, lack of
closet space and smaller bedrooms can be a real inconvenience.
If space is a problem, look to the past on how to solve it and make
it work for you in the meantime.
1. Revamp Your Wardrobe.
How did our grandmothers manage with those tiny closets and fancy
carved wardrobes that we now use to hold our TV's? The answer is simple
- they had fewer clothes and they took better care of them.
Throw out anything you have not worn in over a year. Be brutal. Clothes
hanging in your closet won't give you any additional value, they just
keep getting limper until you never wear them at all.
Assess what is left for wear and tear. Weed out some more. Again be
brutal.
Try to make a mix and match plan with what remains. Any item that
doesn't go with at least two or three other items, you don't need.
A blouse should go with at least a skirt and a pair of pants, and
perhaps, jeans. A sport coat should complement at least two different
pairs of slacks. Some clothes can traverse the seasons and work layered
under other things. A T-shirt can add warmth to a medium weight sweater
that will get you through most cold days.
2. Buy fewer clothes and take better care of them. Any new
item you buy automatically makes at least two items in your wardrobe
obsolete. Don't believe me? Do the math. You'll likely wear a new
item as often as twice in the first week you own it, then you might
wear it as often as once a week or more for a few weeks more. You'll
also stop wearing items from the same "era." Why? The psychological
associations are simply too strong. If you really want to buy something,
look at how long the season is to wear it - 3 months to six months
depending on the climate in which you live then divide the number
of wearings (once a week) into that period. That is a quick way to
decide if you realize that the great blouse you just found is going
to cost you $30 a wearing because the seasons are about to change.
Joan Crawford was right. No more wire hangers...ever. The thin wire
wears a groove into clothes and causes unsightly lumps in anything
with a knitted fabric. Knits should be folded and stored. Wherever
possible, get your hands on coat hangers or plastic hangers and use
those for your hangables.
3. Decorate with some of your favorite wearables. Is your hat
collection taking up too much room? Hang one on your bedpost, make
an arrangement on the wall. Accent with bunches of upside down dried
flowers. No way to keep your ties neat? Create a rack on one wall
or use as a headboard. Ties can add color and style. Add to your collection
with funky ties from the back of Dad's closet or the Salvation Army.
4. Put everything on the walls that you can, including lighting.
Lamps take up a lot of room on small bedside tables, room you may
need for other things. Brace small shelves on the wall on either side
of your bed and present your lamps like works of art. Invest in shelves
that you can take down and take with you when you move. Create vignettes
on the shelves that can be useful and bring color and urban wit to
your bedroom - books, memorabilia. Decorate with items that are distinctively
you.
One of the most charming decorative items from the past are wall shelves,
brackets and sconces. If you go into new furniture stores, you will
see that wall storage is making a huge comeback and at very expensive
prices.
5. If your bedroom isn't large enough to accommodate the kind of
furniture you really want, paint a tromp-l'oeil version of what you
want. Tromp-l'oeil is the art of painting or fabricating something
so that it looks like the real thing. One decorating style book suggests
painting a canopy on the wall and ceiling behind and above the bed
to give the illusion of elegance. Rooms with small windows can be
similarly fooled with paintings that feature windows and pictures
of beautiful views.
6. Change the way you study, pay bills, or work at home. Move
the "home office" out of the bedroom and find a convenient
place in your more spacious living room area.
Psychological studies show that when you study, read or do work that
requires concentration, you will perform better away from areas associated
with relaxation and sleep. The reverse is true also. You will sleep
better away from demanding reminders of projects due.
7. Keep it simple. A few large pieces of furniture will have
more utility than scaled down versions of more items. Use one nightstand
instead of two, but make it a large one. Use a large dresser that
can accommodate all your foldables. Out of season items can be stored
in boxes and put in the closet or under the bed.
Blanche Evans
is the editor of Agent News and associate editor of Realty Times.
She is the author of "Homesurfing.Net: The Insider's
Guide To Buying and Selling Your Home Using the Internet,"
Dearborn. Visit Homesurfing.net for more information and to
order discounted copies. Ms. Evans is the principal of Newbury
Communications, an editorial marketing and business writing
firm. E-mail Blanche at: BlancheEvans@realtytimes.com
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Written
by Blanche Evans
Copyright © 1999 Realty
Times. All Rights Reserved.
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