We always look to dress up the top of our shelves with some accents, but we often forget the underside...

West Elm has these great bracket shelves which add some interest to the underside of our shelves with a sense of style.
These shelves come in both white and chocolate with the brackets being very clean in design in a flat, circle or square shape. The bracket shelves come in three sizes - 36", 48" and 60". Prices range from $119-$159.
-David
Comments (27)
West Elm shelves come with GREAT templates for drilling... you tape the template to the wall, check level, then drill. Super easy. And these bracketed shelves are SUPER sturdy.
I used one low next to a sofa in a guest room as a side table by day, nightstand by night.
It would be great if they sold the shelves and brackets separately...
Such an improvement over the "floating" (ahem...falling) shelves they sell.
Glad it's not just us. We had the WE floating shelf up for 1/2 an hour before our cat ripped it out of the wall.
I also really wish they sold the brackets alone so you could use your own choice of shelves. West Elm won't tell where they get their brackets and won't sell them alone (I asked). No one else seems to sell any modern looking brackets at all. I could not bring myself to buy the shevles and brackets just to throw the shelves away so I finally went to IKEA for some very clean looking floating shelves that cost a fraction of these but have an even more modern look. But I still wish West Elm sold just the brackets!
Torgny--
What's so wrong with the West Elm shelves themselves?
And also, these are WAY sturdier than the Ikea floating shelves, rated for only a few pounds of support each...
"What's so wrong with the West Elm shelves themselves?"
Maybe we'd like to repurpose some pre-existing slabs of wood or install longer shelves using 3 brackets instead of just two?
Maybe the person to whom I asked the question should respond.
I'd look around to see what was available, as there are many shelf brackets out there.
Here are a few links (none identical to the ones at West Elm):
http://www.jwright.com/index.cfm?CategoryID=44&do=list
http://www.leevalley.com/hardware/page.aspx?c=1&cat=3,50659,55167&p=55167
http://www.umbra.com/ustore/product/330606/c040/trillis_shelf_bracket.html
http://www.vandykes.com/product/02007138/
http://www.lowes.com/lowes/lkn?action=productDetail&productId=179676-1469-LW-0091-8BRZ&lpage=none
http://www.paxtonhardware.com/products.asp?dept=32
http://houseofantiquehardware.com/s.nl/sc.13/category.60/.f
All of which are considerably less expensive and available individually or in pairs without the shelf.
Thanks bepsf for your comment. Please continue to speak up, freely and often. In a small space, it is important to customize and maximize shelving. Besides, the prices for these are outrageous. They're cute, but not *that* nice.
I have these shelves/brackets, The circle ones. I love them. They're very sturdy and add another element of wall art, but with a purpose.
Cute brackets!
we purchased a "floating shelf" at west elm. it's sort of drooping--not exactly floating.
we'd love to just place brackets under it like the top ones shown above. simple & modern.
besides the links that "true blue" offered, does anyone have any other suggestions?
i tried the internet & home depot and i swear, these are the only really simple, modern brackets.
thanks.
And if they just sold brackets you'd be bitching about where to find great clean modern shelves.
http://www.diy.com/sl/home-improvement/761323392-bq-modern-cast-shelf-brackets-aluminium-finish-pack-of-2.html
i found these nice looking brackets. does anyone know if they're available in the us?
thanks.
patrick (the other one)....you are so snarky. it's ridiculous. are you nice in real life and just vent your life's frustration through your comments?
brackets anyone? anyone?
Marlene--
I'm not always snarky, but I am frequently, lately, annoyed by the constant negative feedback to every little thing posted here. The editors work very hard to provide AT readers with stuff to look at, and constant content generation is not easy, yet it seems EVERY new post is greeted by "meh" "So expensive" "I could DIY it" or "my cat would eat it." And I particularly get annoyed when the retailers like West Elm get an almost automatic negative response, regardless of product.
It gets old.
But apologies for adding to the negativity if that's how you have interpreted my comments of late.
And btw, my original comment to torgny was sincere, not snarky.
And my first comment on this post was positive.
ok, now that we're past that...i'm still looking for good looking brackets.
any suggestions would be appreciated.
thanks.
I just placed this ad in the classifieds if anyone is interested or knows anyone they might pass it along to.
I'd appreciate it.
http://classifieds.apartmenttherapy.com/phpclass/ad.php?adid=6288
It's the Westelm Modular Bookcase. It's great looking but, doesn't fit in our space and we'd like to sell it. It's brand new.
I'm also wondering if anyone has any suggestion about how to hang the floating shelf properly since it's drooping slightly with the screws that come with it. That's why I was requesting suggestions for brackets.
Thanks.
K T G--
My "bitter and demanding tone" was not based solely on the response to his post. It is in reaction to a continued tide against pretty much any branded retailer, and I just simply don't get why people aren't happy to have the new(ish) choices of places like West Elm.
Sometimes there seems to be no winning, and it gets frustrating to read, day after day, how WE is cheap or expensive or doesn't sell their products in the ideal configuration or whatever the complaint du jour is.
Again, apologies for adding to the negativity which has frustrated me here of late.
robbin--
I'd suggest getting angle brackets from a hardware store and painting the "wall part" your wall color.
K T G--
You read waaay too much ire and insult in my comment(s).
"Mere annoyance" is as bad as it got for me.
And btw, my first snipe here was directed at a commenter I find to be *continually* negative, with extremely little constructive criticism ever offered... but thanks for at least addressing me in a civilized and thoughtful manner.
>>I'd suggest getting angle brackets from a hardware store and painting the "wall part" your wall color.<<
Thanks, that's a good idea.
Yeah, when I'm not being a bitter snark, I do make a valid contribution here and there. ;)