It's often been said that "there's no such thing as too many books, just
not enough bookshelves". When we reorganized the kitchen after getting it
debugged, we wound up moving all of the tea-related stuff to the baker's
rack. The bottom shelves already had tea in them, but the upper shelves
had cookbooks.
We moved the cookbooks, temporarily, into boxes, and I set about thinking
about where to put them. The five feet of blank wall in the living room,
just to the left of the existing bookshelves, looked about right, so I
ordered another Elfa top rail and three standards from the Container
Store, which is the only place you can get the stuff anymore.
When I first switched to
Elfa
shelving, it was before the Container Store bought the company in 1999,
and you could still get Elfa components from Ace Hardware. They were
cheaper, too, and came in metric sizes.
The only Container stores in the Seattle area are in Southcenter (near the
SEATAC airport) and Bellevue. I ordered online and had it shipped, thank
you very much, during one of their occasional sales.
Elfa shelf standards have two rows of slots, with U-shaped brackets.
(They're mostly compatible with two-row standards from other
manufacturers.) They're strong. Single-slot brackets are flimsy. The
standards come in two flavors--screwed to the wall, or hung from rails.
These days I prefer the ones that hang from rails because you don't have
to worry about finding studs.
The rail I needed to put up is 80 inches long. (I should, arguably, have
gotten a shorter one. Whatever.) One end was going to end up over the CD
towers, and there wasn't enough room for my stepladder there. And
besides, I wanted it to line up with the shelves that were already there.
That meant using a level and a short piece of rail to mark the position
for the right-most and third-from-the-right screws, installing wallboard
anchors, dangling the rail from that one screw, and trying to hold it
level while putting in the other screw. That's when I discovered
that I'd let the level slip, or something, and put the second anchor about
two inches too high.
After fixing that, it was just a matter of putting in the rest of the
screws. I like using
walldog screws for that - they're designed to hold well in drywall.
I managed (by pure luck) to get one of them into a stud, close to the left
end. So that's good.
Tomorrow or Thursday I'm going to have to go out and buy some boards.
Most of my supply of lumber has deteriorated from being left outside
several times during various moves. Ugh. *sigh*
So much for the idea of putting a TV on that wall. We've been without it
for two years and haven't missed it much.
[Crossposted from
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