We've been hunting for a cool space-saving shoe rack for months now--we're sick of our entryway looking like a perpetual tornado of shoes! Unfortunately, with the way the front door opens, space is pretty limited so our shoes end up piled up on top of each other until we get motivated to put them away. Thanks to the Megan and Scott at Not Martha, they've come up with their own DIY solution to a modern shoe rack for their tiny entryway.
[ Photos from Not Martha ]











Nice for canvas or suede shoes, but I wouldn't use that for my good dress shoes that I wear to work, etc. as it would scuff the leather.
view bepsf's profile
I did a similar paint-free setup. Posted it on Ikea Hacker :). http://ikeahacker.blogspot.com/2008/02/all-to-do-with-shoes-shoes-shoes.html
view Gursk's profile
I wonder if you could cover the planks with some combo of foam and fabric to (1) protect dress shoes and (2) give it a bit more "grab" for those of your shoes that are flatter in the toe?
view ljbmonkey's profile
I just amused myself by imagining a Fin de Siecle Viennese home with the shoes lined up inside the door, and the Pope's shoes lined up inside his in his digs in the Vatican, and so forth. . . . What IS it with people's shoes right inside their doors? What happened to the concept of "the closet"?
I don't care HOW you arrange your shoes by the door: it's still a catastrophe. Put them AWAY!
view Aulaire's profile
While Aulaire does have a point - about neatness...
At least for Asian & other folks who take off their shoes when they enter houses - a shoe storage solution next to the door makes a lot of sense. It's a pain to have to drag your shoes off to the closet as soon as you get in the door - and multiply that by multiple family members - you get a mess unless you organize by the door.
I think this is a great solution.
view pods's profile
..and taking of your shoes when you enter your home is also recommended, you don't want to bring s**t from outdoors inside your home.
This was here on AT yesterday/couple of days ago (i think):
http://consciouschoice.com/2008/01/healthyliving_lead0801.html
view Lilli K.'s profile
Fin-de-siecle Viennese and the Pope have one crucial thing in common here, though, Aulaire: household staff.
view prolix's profile
I don't have household staff, and my shoes still make it to the closet. Hubby has the hang of it, too. Considering he's a drummer, I'd say that pretty much anyone can handle it. ;) I stash a pair of slippers under my desk and just change when I come home.
view mightyrosebud's profile
Is it so hard to kick them off at the door and carry them to your dressing room and put them away whilst you get changed into your houseclothes?
view HongKonger's profile
I think we've got a cadre here of believers in putting shoes away! And I still find the trend of leaving shoes by the door appalling, despite comments in defense. As HongKonger says, is it so hard to put them away?
And I'll bet a spending spree at the most expensive shoe store in town that 99.9% of people in western society suffer through the unspeakable labor of putting their shoes away.
Let's for fun PhotoShop herds of shoes into everybody's photos of lovely rooms that they send in to AT.
Yes, Asia. But it's hard-wired into their culture since forever. I lived for a while in a Japanese house in Kure-shi, a suburb of Hiroshima. The entryway had a broad floor of smooth river rocks leading to several equally broad steps up into the house. At any given time, depending on the number of people inside, there were several to many pairs of shoes neatly lined up on the river rocks. But we were in Japan, and it was ancient custom, and it looked right, even great.
Usually when a new trend takes hold, there's something about it that pleases the trendies in some perhaps subconscious way. What is satisfied by the sight of shoes inside the door?
And really, Lilli K, shoes with poo are OK inside the door?
view Aulaire's profile
Aulaire - if shoes lined up in your ancient Japanese garden look so fantastic - are you saying that Asian people who live in modern apartment buildings are doing aesthetic no-no's when they take this custom to their modern everyday lives?
view pods's profile
Interesting question, pods. I'm snagged on it, because (based on what I saw in then-comparable buildings) I have to answer a general yes to your question. Jumbles of ugly, often dirty plastic sandals? Yuck. I had the luxury of the perfect setting, which influenced my view. In the case you describe, generally an aesthetic no-no.
view Aulaire's profile
Some of us don't have closets or space in the bedroom but we do have a tiny bit of space near the front/back door. So that's where the shoes go, as organized as the space allows. And no, I do not have an overabundance of shoes. I have two pairs of flats, a pair of running shoes, and a pair of dressy shoes. All of which get good use.
While I don't particularly care for this solution (so strange! the floating shoes!), I'm sure that for some people (who are not trashy terrible people because of their shoe storage location) this would be a good solution to an unavoidable problem.
view sallysitwell's profile