21 Great Ways to Store Your Shoes
Organizing: Where to Keep Your Kicks in Style
I am the epitome of the cliched single gal who spends 90 percent of her disposable income on shoes. Storing them in a way where you can see what you have is a challenge. The best way is probably to keep them in opaque boxes with a photo of the shoes on the front. But who the heck has time for that? Here's how the pros are storing shoes these days.
Ninainvorm has tuned industrial shelves from garage tool storage to chic shoe displays. She's also accessorized them with scarves and bags.
This setup is for people who have a lot of Christian Louboutins and want to show off the red heels when In Style comes over.
Forget the china! Fill a display case with shoes. They’re worth it.
Collectors of vintage shoes and boots should leave them out to admire, as this collector has.
Work with a pro to organize your closet
Work with a pro to organize your closet
This closet has more shoes than Bob Ellis. Note the space reserved for boots along the bottom of the built-in wall.
I love that this closet keeps all the shoes in one place. What you can take away from this is that if you are out of room in your closet, you can outfit a freestanding armoire to hold all of your shoes. My one quibble: point one shoe forward and one backwards so that you can really see what you’ve got going on.
This is an excellent system for gents. Unless they collect kicks, they tend to have relatively few pairs of shoes, and this way they can see which ones are ready for a shine.
Shelves you would typically use for folded T-shirts and sweaters may be used for shoes.
I'm all for putting shoes at eye level. Otherwise, you may wind up with a mismatched pair! Again, I'd turn one shoe in and one shoe out.
Smaller cubbies are a good space saver. Not that this lucky person is short on closet space.
Upgrade your closet’s style and functionality with a custom built-in
Upgrade your closet’s style and functionality with a custom built-in
Tilted shelves are a great option, and a bumper on the front is a good way to keep them from sliding forward.
Oh yeaaaaah.... If this were my closet, I'd be very tempted to head straight to Roger Vivier to fill my shelves. Then I would have to declare bankruptcy due to credit card debt. It's a good thing it's not my closet.
This closet was on the Modern Atlanta Homes Tour a few years ago. Isn't it great the way they integrated the shoe photography into the shoe storage area?
This could have been wasted space. Instead, this clever designer has created a window seat with room for shoes underneath.
Drop-Front Canvas Shoe Boxes
If you like to leave your shoes in boxes, these are ideal: They have drop fronts so that you can stack them and then grab your shoes without making all of the boxes tumble.
This is a great back door solution for keeping snowy boots and mucky shoes from glopping up the rest of the house. Buy an inexpensive (but cute as all-get-out) rug from IKEA and provide a rack so that this footwear never makes it a few feet past the back door.
I have a drawer next to the back door in my house that is less sophisticated than this set up. I call it the "It's a miracle, I'm going to the gym"/"I need to chuck something on my feet to go get the paper" shoe drawer. It contains a pair of flip flops, a pair of gym shoes, and whatever other shoes I've kicked off near the door that week.
36-Pair Overdoor Shoe Rack
I know most of us look through ideabooks like this, with closets that are larger than one’s entire apartment and get completely annoyed. Here’s a little dose of a realistic way to save some space storing shoes – the old reliable over-the-door shoe rack.
More: 39 More Ways to Organize Your Stuff
More: 39 More Ways to Organize Your Stuff