Bedroom wardrobe in one of the most important space that need to that need to be arranged. The idea is the same, only allow the necessary items in your Bedroom wardrobe and the rest will be a breeze. Put in mind that we need to make sure that it is clean, and the door hinges are lubricated for a perfect feel day. With that below that the 7 wonders that you could do to sustain your cupboard.

1. Design your ideal bedroom wardrobe closet space

The best way to organize a good bedroom wardrobe, cupboard and closet is to design and build one. Since with this you could design to your hearts desire. But, bare in mind that you still need to organized them accordingly. Check out resources on what to do.

If not, get creative to work with what you have (and yes, it’s possible to organize a closet without an actual closet). Take note of your closet’s best features: Maybe you have tons of vertical storage space, built-in shelving, or multiple hanging rods. Use these to your advantage when arranging your bedroom wardrobe.

For the areas of your closet that is difficult to access such as the hard-to-reach upper shelves or total lack of shelves altogether, the space could be used as a medium term or long term storage for your stuff.

Arrangement and location are usually based on frequency of use, as such this location is ideal for those hardly used staff (quarterly or yearly). Kadi from Wizard of Homes used a hanging shoe organizer to store t-shirts, and large plastic bins to store beach clothes, bathing suits, and hats. A great idea for sustainability – a reduce, reused, recycle program.

Maybe your open-plan closet would benefit from plastic rolling dressers. If you have too many shelves and not enough hanging space, maybe you can remove a few shelves and hang bar instead.

The possibilities are infinite. Just need to be creative.

2. Store your most used clothes at eye level

Keep everything you wear on a regular basis in the middle of your closet at eye level so it’s easy to find and grab in your early morning traffic rush hours. Put lesser-used pieces directly above or below your most popular clothes, and relegate your least-worn items to the top shelf.

This concept is also interesting when we implement them to your kids cupboard or bedroom wardrobe. Use the same eye level concept for your kid clothing. This arrangement would help you to organize the cupboard or bedroom wardrobe better as your kid would likely search those in front of of them rather than up and down. Mostly used should be at their eye level.

3. Store your clothes by category in bedroom wardrobe

This tip may seem obvious, but it makes all the difference when you want to locate your cozy favorite blue sweater in a jiffy.

Keep like items with like items. Store all your belts in the same spot, hang your sundresses alongside each other, and keep your workout shirts separate from your pajamas. The main idea here is when you have all of them together, you would only buy new ones if you can’t find them in the category. A good 5S solution that is for your bedroom wardrobe.

4. Store your clothes by color in bedroom wardrobe

Color coding may not be your forte, but it will result you picking out an outfit so much easier, especially if you’re a visual person. But, organizing them may be tedious in your bedroom wardrobe. Being an OCD I have no issue with this, so it may not be for everybody.

But, you do not need to drive yourself crazy trying to remember the exact order of the colors in the rainbow. Even creating the most general color distinction will make your closet easy to navigate. This is especially true when your office started to ask for the color thematic clothing on a weekly basis.

5. Roll t-shirts, pajamas, and workout clothes into storage boxes.

Things like cotton shirts, leggings, and polyester shorts tend to be thin and pliable, making them perfect candidates for the roll and tuck technique.

This technique is a major space-saver if you do it right. Rather than folding and stacking your softer, thinner clothes, simply fold them in half and roll them into neat little tubes.

Tuck your rolled clothing into shoe boxes (great for sliding into drawers), or use wire baskets or clear bins (perfect for shelves). I love this ideas, as it support my UN SDG on reduce, reuse and recycle.

Try out container store which could help you in for a great solution.

6. Hang scarves on hangers inside your bedroom wardrobe

This is especially true in Malaysia where a large number of population are using different kind of scarves. Sure, you can roll them up or stack them if they’re really thick, but tying your scarves on a hanger is a way better option for organizing them. Color coded them is you need to. My wife spend at least half an hour daily to match her scarf with the clothing.

Furthermore, hanging your scarves keeps them wrinkle-free and easy to see and access, meaning you’re more likely to actually use them on a regular basis.

7. Use the “Bring in one, Sent out one” rule to keep your clothes collection in check.

Last but not least, despite your best organizational efforts, you may still end up with massive heaps of ill-fitting, outdated, or unloved clothes at the end of every year (or every season if you’ve got a serious shopping addiction).

So how do you prevent things from getting out of hand?

If you have a small 850 square feet apartment like me, then probably you could adopt a simple rule as “Bring in one, Send Out one” policy.

What is it exactly? Just what it sounds like.

For every new item you bring into your closet, you get rid of another. Got a new pair of timberland shoes? Let go of the old crappy jacket you haven’t worn in two years. Bought a fresh belt? Say goodbye to an old shirt. If you are more meticulous in your space, one pair of shoe in, one pair of shoe should be out – as easy a 1, 2 and 3.

It’s simple, easy, and ensures your collection of clothes never gets too large to manage. This would definitely help so ensure that your cupboard or your bedroom wardrobe does not overfill.