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Sneak Peek: Hidden Office from Martha Stewart Living

2007-12-13-msoffice.jpgWe just sneaked a peek at a preview PDF of the upcoming January issue of Martha Stewart Living and thought this idea was a great do-able one for small, smart spaces. Now you see it...a small home office located in the center section of three bookcases in the main living area....and now you don't: (check below the jump for the non-office view and details on the diy project)

2007-12-13-desk2.jpgThis set-up is simply three bookcases encased in a frame, with a hollow door on tracks.

The door can be placed centrally when the office is not in use, and simply slid over when work beckons.

The full how-to and plans will be available on the MSL site after the release of the issue at this link.

It's part of a multi-page feature article called "Hidden Assets" all about hiding the useful, but not always beautiful, items that we all live with. It will appear in the January issue, available on December 17th.

Thanks, Michele!

Comments (21)

I have been stalking the midtown newsstands every single day waiting for the January issue. Anyone know when it's going to be out?

posted by duckumu on 2007-12-13 17:23:10
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I bought this issue last Monday at my local newstand opposite the Parkchester #6 subway station in the Bronx! It's the shop at the corner of Metropolitan and Hugh Grant Circle. go figure...

posted by gertie G on 2007-12-13 17:29:07
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wtf! I've been to the Murray Hill Borders and a bunch of newsstands and have not seen it. I normally catch it somewhere around the end of the first week of the month.

posted by duckumu on 2007-12-13 17:31:51
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That Martha....so clever.

posted by hdtex on 2007-12-13 18:15:07
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Omg, i love it soooo much... but who's office actually LOOKS like that!?!?!

posted by mrsemerald on 2007-12-13 18:15:28
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I can't believe how homey those barcelona chairs look. Only Martha could do it.

Beautiful white barcelona chairs

posted by reginaregina on 2007-12-13 18:19:31
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if i weren't so busy working out/managing my finances/jumpstarting my social life/ in january this could be my jumpstart project!!

posted by carolynapplebee on 2007-12-13 20:12:36
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Anyone else immediately think of this IKEA hack?

posted by lindsey kathlene on 2007-12-13 20:14:02
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anybody know where that rug is from?

posted by Johnp on 2007-12-13 21:36:52
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This is so clever I almost forgive Martha for folding Blueprint.

But I'd hang a painting on the sliding panel. It's too obviously hiding something; if I saw it in someone's house I'd spend the whole night wondering (murphy bed? tv?).

posted by Lisa Hunter on 2007-12-13 22:39:17
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mrsemerald,

"who's office actually LOOKS like that!?!?!"

I was thinking along the same lines, although I thought to myself "if our office area looked like that I wouldn't need to hide it."

Exactly why this is a perfect solution right?!

posted by K on 2007-12-13 22:47:37
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So Here's an idea...

how about a smallest coolest home office contest...

C'mon AT.

posted by Nisha on 2007-12-13 23:46:57
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great idea...a step above similar "ikea" like designs...

posted by detroitbob on 2007-12-13 23:54:17
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No one's office looks like that. I mean, how handy that all their books match the color scheme and have blank spines.

I can't spare space in my bookcases for anything but books, and if I had to squat on a tiny stool to use my computer I'd go crazy.

I think hiding your home office is kind of a dated concept, like having a decorative cabinet for the telephone (or the refrigerator, or the television set). Everyone has these things, they're part of life as much as the furniture. Why go to so much trouble to pretend they aren't there?

posted by kostia on 2007-12-14 03:11:06
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Even the dog fits in with the color scheme. Kinda creepy!

It's a great idea for a small space, though. It may be true that everyone has a computer, but that doesn't mean I want to stare at it all the time.

posted by Nougat on 2007-12-14 10:05:40
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Nougat--ha ha ha....I'm imagining someone on a walkie talkie "Black lab?!? What the $*$@#&#! I said GOLDEN!!!"

posted by Christine (the one in DC) on 2007-12-14 10:14:38
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My place is so small there's no place for a desk at all and my computer is stashed in the bottom compartment of a cabinet in my kitchen. I have to sit flat on the floor to use it, but it doesn't bother me, and neither does the idea of having to use a backless stool. No, what puts me off is not the stool or the cramped size of the work area but the sterile, stagy, coordinated-out-the-wazoo tastefulness of the whole thing, complete with unread books & Rent-a-Pooch looking to an offscreen handler for direction. Why bother covering up such an immaculate fraud of an "office" in the first place? The whole thing's bogus.

But I still like the concept of the big unit. Just not done is such a soulless way.

posted by magnaverde on 2007-12-14 11:36:08
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lindsey kathlene-
That was the first thing I thought of as well.

It looks like what they've done with their books is to create paper "book jackets" for them with plain paper--it's not any less functional to me than the people who seem to think it's a good idea to organize a book collection by color.

I struggle with creating an office solution that doesn't look immediately like an office--because of the size of my home I have no choice but to have my office space to one side of my living room. While I'd like it to be less obvious, that doesn't mean I'm trying to pretend that it isn't there, but it also shouldn't be a focal point of my room--especially if I'm in the middle of a messy project, it would be so much easier to just close it away in a cupboard than having to leave it all out for everyone to see when I have company (and no time for serious tidying of the office).

This is definitely over the top Martha, but I'd love to see more solutions for integrating a home office tastefully into a living room space.

posted by graphxgrrl on 2007-12-14 12:00:26
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I agree that this is over the top but I love the idea of it - It would never in a million years work for me and my small space. With that being said, I do love the fact of constructing this maybe on a smaller scale and, instead of a desk, maybe hiding my nasty media center - even a flat panel TV is disgusting to me!!

posted by Emily Nytko on 2007-12-14 16:01:50
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i love the idea. and just got the new magazine in the mail, it is fantastic. lots of great ideas.

and my pets both match the color scheme of my house, unintentionally!

posted by brand-eye on 2007-12-14 21:52:04
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You could totally IKEA hack this. There's a sliding door now available for the PAX wardrobe, in either birch, white or with a mirror. Get the deepest PAX, one or more sliding doors and appropriate shelving. Even tricked out it would cost well under $1000. You can give it a built-in look too by filling in any gap between the PAX and the ceiling, either with other IKEA shelving or just with custom-cut sliding panels installed in a track.

posted by sunspot42 on 2007-12-17 14:20:53
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