Floor plan proposals - What works, what doesn't?

  • Erstellt am 2017-05-11 20:04:09

j.bautsch

2017-05-19 08:54:25
  • #1
Habits and life circumstances are simply different, we just wanted to show what can be sensible about a walk-in closet and refute the argument "clothes gather dust" whoever ultimately decides for or against a walk-in closet has at least then thought about it and weighed the pros and cons
 

Climbee

2017-05-19 09:19:18
  • #2
Because I can still snooze the alarm clock, but when my guy then walks over to the closet (and first bumps into the closet door), opens the closet door (suppressed curse because he caught his toe on the bedpost), opens the first drawer, wrong, closes it again, opens the second one. Closet door closed, next one opened, takes out a shirt etc... then I am definitely awake...

...so long story short: I AM looking forward to our closet room
 

ypg

2017-05-19 10:13:54
  • #3
The most disgusting thing is the light that is turned on and stays on for a long time.
Dressing room is therefore very necessary for some, a nice-to-have for many, and not necessary for others.
By the way, I belong to the "irresponsible" ones who live without doors in front of the clothing racks and can see the full range of clothing every day when I enter the room. Before it gets dusty, I have already worn and washed them anyway. Nothing gets dusty that quickly.

In short, greetings
 

Climbee

2017-05-19 10:40:09
  • #4
I have some things that I rarely wear. Or winter clothes, of course, that gather dust in the summer and vice versa. But that's also a matter of belief (my brother and his wife also live without a closet in the classical sense).

No no, no light here, the phone flashlight is turned on and when he pulls the underwear out of the drawer, the phone falls clattering down or he holds it in such a way that it blinds me directly. Of course, he's terriiiibly embarrassed... but then I’m definitely awake
 

11ant

2017-05-19 11:39:10
  • #5


That’s where the new trend of leaving out the entrance vestibule backfires, also shifting the clean-walking zone into the "cozy" part of the hallway.

Besides, I’m of the opinion that there shouldn’t be any mud at all: you can put mats in front of the door, not just to write "Welcome" on them; and the tradition, still commonly found on older houses, of installing a boot scraper at the entrance doesn’t harm new houses either. You’d scrape the mud off your boots, and the mat took care of phase two. Of course, only if you didn’t walk over it like a "Hans schauen in die Luft" (Hans looking at the sky). Does the youth, born with their hands in their pockets, no longer understand this?
 

Aotearoa

2017-05-19 11:47:56
  • #6
Laugh.....we have everything lying around and still there is sometimes a little star, a small piece of earth, earth dust etc. right after the front door. We have 2 small children (2 & 4), still the construction site outside and I am really glad that we do not have the stairs right by the front door. Even if it is only a little earth dust, it also sticks to socks and spreads around.
 

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