Baltimore Sun Sunday

Sort your footwear by displaying your shoes

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SHOES, quently you wear them. Shoes worn daily or weekly should get prominent storage in the center of your closet system or entryway where they’re easy to put on and stow away. Seasonal and activity-specific shoes, such as hiking boots and formal footwear, can be stored in a garage, attic or back-closet shelf. This is where plastic or color-coded shoe bins and boxes come in handy. Although it’s less important for storage solutions to match the closet, retailers are catering to younger customers who want total coordinati­on and control.

Jimmy Seifert, a closet department buyer for the Container Store, says wardrobe systems are becoming less of an afterthoug­ht or careless catchall. “Younger customers ... in particular, want a polished, edited look,” he says. “Matching hangers, shoes on display, handbags on shelves. It’s sort of extreme minimalism, or extreme declutteri­ng. Everything out in the open so you know exactly what you’re working with.”

To attract material-minded millennial­s, retailers are expanding their closet offerings to include store-inspired display cases and high-tech storage boxes.

The Container Store sells plastic, dropfront containers for collectibl­e sneakers, and a box specifical­ly sized to fit upright high heels.

In April, Ikea teamed up with Los Angeles streetwear designer Chris Stamp on a line of limited-edition plastic shoe boxes called Spanst. They’re a sneakerhea­d’s dream, monochroma­tic and stylishly simple, designed to look like little shipping containers with built-in showcase lights.

“We’re tuned in to what this generation wants,” says Janice Simonsen, a design spokeswoma­n for Ikea North America, “which is to feel proud of their shoes without going too loud or bulky.”

For her custom closets, Adams draws inspiratio­n from high-end boutiques and dressing rooms where elegant lighting and a tidy aesthetic instantly put shoppers at ease.

“It’s relaxing, but more importantl­y, it makes you want to wear what’s on the rack,” she says. “Why wouldn’t that also work at home?” Some of her favorite closet-design techniques, such as LED-lit shoe walls and jewelry display cases, elevate the homeowner’s collection and make them excited to wear it.

“I know it sounds over-the-top, but it’s rooted in practicali­ty, in using what you already have,” she says.

How you store and display your shoes comes down to how much space you have. People with walk-in closets or a garage for seasonal storage have more options than those in a city apartment. But thoughtful, creative organizati­on can make even the smallest closet feel surprising­ly powerful. Which is to say: It isn’t how big the closet is; it’s how you use it.

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