Bob Hiemstra

In a perfect world, the coats in your front hall closet would
hang as pristinely as those in a Beverly Hills
boutique beautifully draped on fine wooden hangers and within
easy reach. More likely, they're jammed in amid a jumble of
assorted clothing, boots, bags, vacuum-cleaner attachments,
toys, and baseball bats. But closet overcrowding isn't
inevitable. Sometimes all that's called for is a bit of pruning
and reshuffling. Once you do it, you'll breathe a lot easier,
and so will your coats (no kidding, their fibers need fresh air
to live a healthy life, just as we do). Here's how to organize a
closet you'd be proud to show your mother.
Step 1: Take Stock
Before you begin making over your hall closet, think about how
you use it, says Jann Webster, market manager for Schulte
Corporation, a manufacturer of high-end storage products. Is
your closet for everyday use or for guests only? Do you store
only seldom-used, dressy coats in it, or just everyday attire?
How close is your closet to the most commonly used entrance? The
answers can help you decide what to leave in-and take out. Since
most homes have at least two points of entry the front door for
guests and parents, and another door for kids you'll probably
need to tackle the front-door coat closet first and then the
mudroom or side-door storage areas.
Now you're ready to do an inventory analysis. Start with the
hall closet. If you store things other than clothes there,
decide whether they can be moved. Could you stow the dog food in
the pantry? Will the golf bag fit in basement storage? "If you
don't have another spot for the vacuum cleaner or the board
games, then build a separate place for them in the closet away
from the coats," says Ginny Snook Scott, learning and
development manager for California Closets.
Next, ask family members to go through the closet and decide
what they're ready to shed. There are no hard-and-fast rules
about when to retire a coat (outerwear, which tends to transcend
fashion cycles, will probably outlast the average blouse or
sweater), but there are some common-sense principles. If you
haven't worn a coat in two or three years, you probably never
will, so put it in the donation pile. If a coat's collar or
cuffs are becoming worn or the buttonholes are unraveling, give
or throw it away. The same principle goes for gloves, boots,
scarves, and hats.
Step 2: Divide and Conquer
Once you've pared down, you can start making decisions. Each
family member should end up with no more than three or four
short coats or jackets. In addition, each adult in the house
probably has at least one full-length dress coat. If you have
only one average four-foot-wide closet, you can expect 10 to 13
coats to fit comfortably on the rod enough room for the
outerwear of a family of four with three coats each.
But how do you accommodate the gear of a family of six? When
coats outnumber the square footage of a closet, consider these
options.
Store in-season items in the hall closet and move infrequently
worn things elsewhere, perhaps to a cedar closet, which repels
moths, or onto rolling garment racks. Try a rolling rack from or an expandable garment
rack.
Consider moving certain items to different closets, to an
armoire or a chest, or to hooks, old-fashioned coat stands,
cabinets, or shelves. You can designate the front closet for
formal outerwear and guests' coats, for example, and store
everyday wear in a mudroom cabinet.
Step 3: Control Clutter
Your next step is to detangle and arrange the little
things hats, scarves, gloves, and umbrellas. Stow gloves and
scarves in bins, drawers, or rolling baskets placed on the
closet floor. Translucent hat boxes from the Container Store let
you see hats while preserving their shape; unlidded cedar
stacking boxes in various sizes allow easy access to scarves and gloves while keeping
them in order.
Scott's do-it-yourself solution for storing kids' shoes and
backpacks in the closet: milk crates. For hats, scarves, and
gloves, she recommends labeled stacking boxes, in a different
color for each child. Scott
also suggests installing a hook on either side of the door for
extras.
Step 4: Outfit the Back Door
If you have a closet at the front door but none at the second
point of entry, don't worry. There's an abundance of storage
systems designed for these areas.
For coats and jackets, get a standing coatrack, put up a peg
rail (mounted at a child-friendly height of 28 inches), screw
hooks onto the back of a door or a wall, or install cabinets.
For shoes, sports equipment,
books, hats, and gloves, use bins (made of anything from plastic
to metal mesh), trunks, or repurposed apple crates.
If space is at a premium, Scott recommends installing cabinets in
the garage. A bench there will allow people to sit while removing
boots. And, a final tip: Always place
easy-to-clean mats below any shoe rack and just outside the door,
too.