The Oxford cloth storage box is the most suitable for bedding storage. My non-season clothes are also vacuumed and placed in this box. The transparent window makes it easy to identify the content. There are zippers on the top and side for easy access. There are iron wires to support it, so it is not afraid of stacking. The size is rich and suitable for various spaces. The material is tough and not easy to be damaged.
For sundries, you can buy small translucent boxes with the same size, which are available in IKEA and Daiso. They will not look messy when stacked neatly, and the translucent is also easy to identify. I bought a lot of them. Sewing boxes, camera accessories, mobile phone accessories, and medicines are individually boxed. It is clear at a glance and easy to access.
In addition, if the order of magnitude or volume of the storage items is not particularly large (such as quilts), I strongly recommend putting the same items in the same storage box. When I was young and ignorant, I once bought four shallow and wide storage boxes. At that time, I was complacent that the shallow storage boxes would not mess up the things on the top in order to get the things below. As a result, there are two of these four storage boxes. I got a scarf, two hats, and you know the result—almost every time I look for a scarf or a hat, I have to go through four similar storage boxes.
Another point of my blood is not to buy too small storage. For example, when I first started using the cosmetic box, I liked it very much, and it felt all kinds of exquisite, but slowly I found that when I often packed things, thicker ones couldn’t fit in, and taller ones couldn’t fit in, and there were a lot of tasteless places. Although I still have one, it is also because it contains a drawer with a side opening, which is very popular in my heart. I removed all the partitions from the small compartments and turned them into large drawers. The less grid storage will be more universal in various situations.
Of course, in the follow-up, we still need to maintain the concept of separation and purchase, and purchase things with restraint. If you can’t help but chop your hands, no matter how well you plan at the beginning, you will not be able to solve the problem of expansion of things later.