Old House Love; Character and Charm and ZERO Storage
Who doesn’t love a historic home with it’s gorgeous fireplace, crown moulding, and tall ceilings? If you’re nodding your head with a dreamy gaze, you’re not alone, and if you’ve ever lived in one of these beauties, you can probably sympathize with other historic home owners who have very little storage in their homes. “I’m a minimalist, it’ll be fine!” you say? That’s what we also said roughly three years ago when we bought our home that was built in the year 1900. As we began moving our belongings into our new digs, we started realizing we didn’t have a place to put key items like bathroom towels, extra bed linens, throws, curtains and other textiles. In the tiny kitchen, we found there was very little cupboard space, nowhere to store our common appliances like the toaster, blender, and mixer- let alone pots and pans. With one main closet in the living room and a makeshift closet that was added by a previous owner, we quickly learned we’d have to get creative, and even though our circumstances happen to be that we’re in love with an old house, maybe yours is just that you plain don’t have enough storage. Either way, we have ideas to help remedy.
A history lesson: Why are there few to no closets in old houses?
As you might imagine, during the time when many of today’s historical homes were built, people didn’t own more than a few articles of clothing, which also means they didn’t need much storage space. The handful of items they did own were usually folded and placed in a trunk or a chest of drawers, or hung from a wall hook. Later, as people began needing space to store their clothing, they started using freestanding pieces of furniture like armoires, or chifforobes. Closets were used as places of privacy, for study, or discreet conversations. Personal valuables were typically kept in a cupboard and not necessarily in the bedroom.
Here are four creative ideas for adding storage to your home.
We write about all things house and home because we’re slightly obsessed, which is in part why we make great real estate agents. If you’re thinking about buying or selling a home in the future, we’d be honored if you’d include us in your process of interviewing local real estate agents here in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
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