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Creative Ways To Organise Your Books

<p>Are you an inveterate hoarder of books&quest; Does nothing get your pulse-pounding like a good hour spent trundling around Waterstone’s&comma; a gigantic pile of future reading material clasped in your arms&quest; Have you spent the last five years wondering what on Earth you’re going to do with the steadily growing pile of &OpenCurlyQuote;classics’ you just can’t bring yourself to throw away&quest; Well&comma; you’ve come to right place&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;As you’ve probably guessed&comma; I’m a fanatical reader – one of those people who just can’t bring themselves to throw out a book&comma; even if I only read it once and didn’t particularly enjoy it&period; If that’s you too&comma; then you’ll know storage can be a heck of a problem&period; While well-stacked books are great for making you look smart&comma; an impenetrable pile is only good for making a mess&period; Here are four unique&comma; interesting ways to store that Borgesian library currently clogging up your living room&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Inside Furniture<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>So you have too many books to ever hope to fit them on one bookshelf&period; What do you do&quest; Simple&colon; turn all your furniture into additional&comma; mini bookshelves&excl; It sounds crazy&colon; like the sort of tip you might expect from that &OpenCurlyQuote;kooky’ aunt you have&comma; but trust me on this&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Several design companies are now starting to pump out ranges of chairs&comma; coffee tables and sofas that are explicitly built to house books&period; With grooves cut in to keep the spines on display&comma; these nifty little pieces of consumer-art are both functional and a pleasure to look at – as well as a guaranteed talking point&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Recycle Old Items<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The problem of storage is mostly an aesthetic one&colon; if we really didn’t care how things looked&comma; we’d just cram everything into those garish plastic boxes&comma; stick them under the table and be done with it&period; But we want our books to be both easily accessible and gorgeous to look at too&period; Here’s where the recycling concept comes in&colon; if you have anything unusual or vintage kicking around your loft&comma; consider turning it into a DIY bookshelf&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Battered old suitcases – with a well-travelled look – are ideal for this&semi; simply prop the lid open and fill with books&comma; spine-up&period; Go as far with this one as your imagination will let you&colon; over the years I’ve encountered everything from repurposed grandfather clocks to hollowed-out old Mac monitors&period; The more unusual your design&comma; the better&excl;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; center&semi;"><img class&equals;" aligncenter" src&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;farm4&period;staticflickr&period;com&sol;3222&sol;2298174882&lowbar;f7d573aced&period;jpg" alt&equals;"" width&equals;"365" height&equals;"540" &sol;><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     image source<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Use Free Space<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Despite what you may feel as you look around&comma; every home has free space – just waiting to become a quirky bookshelf&period; Don’t believe me&quest; What about under your stairs&quest; Only&comma; instead of shoving your books away beneath them in boxes&comma; knock the front-panels out of each stair and stuff it full of books&comma; so their spines are visible as you walk up&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Old fireplaces are ideal for this too&colon; a little bit of work will create a nice hollow cavity that can be repainted and filled with books – creating an intellectual focal point for your living room&period; The space around windows&comma; even the space between two timber beams &lpar;if you’re lucky enough to have any&rpar; can be converted into miniature storage spaces&period; So what are you waiting for&quest; Get searching&excl;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Stacking<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>It can be simple&comma; effective and – done well – stylish to boot&period; The problem with stacking randomly is it looks shabby&comma; like guests have accidentally wandered into a junk shop&period; But that needn’t always be the case&period; Find an empty corner of your room – say the space between the side of your desk and the wall&period; Then&comma; starting with the large coffee table books and gradually getting smaller&comma; stack your books one atop another in size order&comma; spines facing outward to create a stylish little tower&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Even better&colon; try making a few of these and colour co-ordinating the spines of each book&comma; so your study gains four or five eye-catching monuments to your love of literature&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h5>Featured images&colon;<&sol;h5>&NewLine;<p><span class&equals;"license">License&colon; Creative Commons<&sol;span><br &sol;>&NewLine;<span class&equals;"source">image source<&sol;span><br &sol;>&NewLine;<span class&equals;"license">License&colon; Creative Commons<&sol;span> <span class&equals;"source">image source<&sol;span><br &sol;>&NewLine;James Lee is an avid bookworm&comma; aspiring author and writer with Design55Online&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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