In a busy household, the children’s bedroom often becomes a place where clothes, toys, school bags and craft supplies collide. The most settled rooms tend to lean on furniture that holds a lot without dominating the space. These eight storage ideas draw on real UK family bedrooms and focus on pieces that earn their floor area through everyday use.
A wide chest of drawers gives several deep compartments for clothes and doubles as a surface for a lamp or a few books. Look for handles that small hands can grip and a height that allows a child to reach the top drawer. The children’s chest of drawers range covers compact three drawer designs as well as longer six drawer pieces for shared bedrooms.
An adult sized wardrobe can swallow the wall of a small bedroom. A child specific wardrobe places the hanging rail lower so that clothes are within reach, and the smaller footprint leaves more floor open for play. Explore the children’s wardrobes selection for single door and double door options that suit standard UK room sizes.
The area beneath the bed is often the largest unused space in the room. Built in drawers or rolling crates hold spare bedding, out of season clothes or larger toys. If the bed has no built in option, a shallow crate on castors slides in and out without scratching the floor.
A small cabinet beside the bed keeps a torch, a book and a glass of water within reach. The children’s bedside tables range covers low slim shapes that suit narrow bedrooms. A single drawer is usually enough since deeper cabinets tend to collect clutter rather than help.
A lidded toy box at the foot of the bed contains soft toys and provides a perch for putting on shoes. Look for a slow close lid for safety and rounded edges that suit a child’s bedroom.
A short open bookcase gives children a clear view of their reading choices and encourages independent picking. Two or three shelves at lower heights work better than a tall narrow unit, which tends to feel out of reach.
A simple row of hooks at child height absorbs school bags, dressing gowns and the odd hat without taking floor area. Mounted just inside the bedroom door, the hooks become the first stop after school, which keeps the rest of the room calmer.
If craft or building toys are a regular activity, give them their own corner with a small set of stacked baskets. Bringing together different pieces from the children’s storage furniture collection allows you to scale the corner up as the child grows. A clear category for each basket prevents the activity spreading across the whole room.
At Furniture in Fashion we see many busy households finding their rhythm once the storage is shaped around how the family actually lives. With free UK delivery and a wide modern range, fitting out a children’s bedroom that copes with daily life is straightforward.
As a guide, plan for a chest of drawers, a wardrobe and one additional unit such as a bookcase or toy box. This combination covers most family routines without overcrowding the room.
A mix tends to work best. Closed storage hides clothes and clutter, while open shelving puts books and a few favourite toys on display and encourages independent use.
Any unit over around eighty centimetres tall should be secured to the wall with the bracket provided. This is essential in bedrooms where children may climb on drawers.
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