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How To... Make Your Own Invisible Bookshelf

02-27-shelf.jpg

Thanks to AT reader Rob, the Apartmequarium guy from last year's Smallest Coolest Contest, we're sharing the coolest how-to for making your own invisible bookshelves. Check it out here.

We love this because it's one of those projects where you get the greatest results with such little means. Easy-to-find, cheap materials, a little (very little) elbow grease and voila!

 
 

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How To..., shelving & storage

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Comments (20)

I guess there isn't a way to do it so that you wouldn't ruin a book, is there? It's a really cool idea, especially for people who have 12 foot ceilings (like I do). My roommate and I have TONS of books.

posted by Katy on 2007-02-27 13:12:04

Is anyone else having trouble with the links? I click on it and it has an error.

posted by Sylvia on 2007-02-27 13:30:02

The destruction of a book, any book, just to achieve a visual illusion bothers me.

posted by Design Dabbler on 2007-02-27 13:33:47

DD,

why is that?

posted by Archie on 2007-02-27 13:43:43

Go to a thrift store and pick up an old looking hard-cover book with an interesting title. Ruin it. Bask in its functionality :)

posted by Kelly on 2007-02-27 14:27:59

You can get the shelf bracket for $11 and you won't destroy a book. It is by Umbra and they call it the Conceal Book Shelf. You can do an internet search with that name and it will come up. I got mine at Linens n Things. If you use the bracket, you can change the entire look of what you have on the shelf, rather than have one book permenently there.

posted by John on 2007-02-27 14:49:39

you can get a fake book (entitled "Ceci n'est pas un livre") shelf at the Container Store

posted by Sarah on 2007-02-27 15:00:22

Archie: Books represent knowledge and enlightenment. Even if a particular book is old and "past it", it still represents the idea of knowledge. Destroying it is to me akin to destroying something sacred.

posted by Design Dabbler on 2007-02-27 17:14:17

Design Dabbler, I respecfully disagree. Would you consider Paris Hilton's doggie diary (or whatever it was) sacred? ;) If you were to think of books as objects, I think that there are many books not worth the information contained in them, and their individual value is subjective like any other object.



Mlle Kate

posted by Mlle Kate on 2007-02-27 18:05:09

I do think that books are sacred for what they symbolize. The Paris Hilton example you quote -- is there really such a thing? -- does shake my faith, though.

posted by Design Dabbler on 2007-02-27 18:07:05

DD, I kid you not: "The Tinkerbell Hilton Diaries: My Life Tailing Paris Hilton" was published in 2004. My favourite amazon.com review features the sentence, "This book is pretty cute, all things put together, and D. Resin whoever he may be has a cunning way of seeing events from a Chiahuahua's (sic) point of view." I'm not sure if he's serious or not...

Sorry to contribute to the destruction of your faith in literary mankind.

Cheers,

Mlle Kate

posted by Mlle Kate on 2007-02-27 18:42:35

I say why go to all that when you can buy a Conceal shelf for $9.99

http://www.utilitieshome.com/store.php?crn=99

Umbra also recently introduced a version of this for bath towels that is a very cool bathroom design idea

http://www.utilitieshome.com/store.php?crn=91&rn=577&action=show_detail

posted by Dennis on 2007-02-27 20:30:52

Somewhere on the link i read that instead of ruining a book you can use a piece of wood and photocopy a book jacket to wrap around it. Or I was thinking you could just paste a book jacket to the piece of wood and paste on a photocopy of the 'pages'.

book lovers rejoice!

posted by Eryn on 2007-02-27 22:00:20

All of my books have a certain symbolism, and that's (in part) why I have and treasure them. That being said, I know there are awful books out there. I guess I just don't hold them in the same category as *books*. Anyway, Design Dabbler, I agree--but it shouldn't shake YOUR faith, since you wouldn't have the Tinkerbell book in your apartment, even as a lowly shelf.

posted by Renee on 2007-02-27 22:44:30

Like others have mentioned, the Umbra conceal bookshelf does the same thing without you having to sacrifice a book, and considering it's price there's not much reason to DIY one.

posted by Grizzly on 2007-02-27 23:49:39

why keep and display books? done reading it? pass it on...

posted by minimalist on 2007-02-28 01:48:00

Genius. Give the man a job!

posted by Di Overton on 2007-02-28 09:29:26

I swear I saw this in Readymade or somewhere within the last month.... Anyone else?

posted by Kate on 2007-02-28 10:11:46

Kate-Instructables maybe?
http://www.instructables.com/id/EOFOYM0RBUEXCFH30A/

posted by Tai on 2007-03-13 13:15:07

I'm for the functionality.
usually i buy paperbacks and these end up getting all messed up and uglied after being stowed in my pocketbook for the length of time i read them....i'll take the book with me everywhere to read whenever i have free time (waiting on lines at a supermarket....waiting for a train or bus...whatever)
since i don't worry about the condition of ALL of my books, no big deal. the ones i do care about i keep on a regular shelf and they're not in my kitchen. Also, i don't hold onto books after i've read them. i like the idea of using my cookbooks as shelves in this way...besides, since i use my cookbooks and i'm not the neatest cook...they get a little messed up anyway. i'm not worried about them getting ruined on an umbra shelf or something like it.
LIFE WOULD JUST GO ON.

posted by little flower on September 30th 2008 at 4:21pm
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