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First, I designated each drawer
as a place for one category of supplies, and I marked each drawer
with a little index card that I stapled to the front of the drawer
with a staple gun.
One drawer is for electrical
items. This includes outlets, outlet covers, electrical testing
equipment, wire crimpers, lamp pieces and any other electrical
thing we are likely to use. (Just as with any organizing, don't
save stuff you'll never use just because you can. ;-)
We have a drawer for paint supplies:
roller handles, paint brushes, sand paper and such. (We don't
keep paint there. We have a separate small plastic shelf unit
with our stash of paint.)
The top left drawer is our nail
and screw drawer. We have two plastic embroidery floss organizers,
each with twenty or so slots. We use one organizer for nails
and the other for screws. When both of these containers are in
the drawer, there is still room for a few whole boxes of the
nails and screws we use most often.
We seem to have problems with
cords, so one drawer is just for cords. It includes a few lamp
cords, cable wire, phone wire and other cords. I make each one
into a coil and slide it into a toilet paper roll to keep it
separate from the others. My husband likes to just wind each
one up
and wrap it like a noose.
There is a drawer that includes
nothing but batteries, one for glues and adhesives and another
dedicated exclusively to light bulbs.
Another drawer is for miscellaneous
hardware. This is the drawer for felt chair legs, baby locks,
door stops and all kinds of other items that don't have homes
in any of the other drawers.
We also have one drawer set
aside for miscellaneous tools. This drawer is for those tools
that we don't use every day, but that come in handy every now
and then. We use it for things like pipe wrenches, channel locks,
a wire brush and extra socket sets.
On top of the dresser, I placed
several small rectangular plastic containers the size of shoe
boxes. One has hammers and such, one has screwdrivers, one has
pliers and crescent wrenches. I have four or five of these all
together. Essentially, they contain the tools we use most often.
This arrangement also leaves us a little counter space on the
dresser.
Using an old dresser for this
purpose has made life so easy! I see them all the time at garage
sales for $10. This is well worth the price for the amount of
storage you can get and if you like to find new uses for things
that otherwise might hit the landfill, an old dresser might just
do the trick! Think outside the box! |