Making the most of every corner
Living small doesn’t mean living without comfort or a little bit of magic. It just asks for some creativity, a bit of clever thinking and the right mindset. Whether you’re in an apartment, a snug cottage or simply working around limited storage, there are plenty of gentle ways to make a home feel more open and a lot more liveable.
This isn’t about a perfectly curated, minimalist showroom β mine certainly isn’t. It’s about making the space you have work for the life you actually live.
πΏ Start with a declutter reset
Before we add a single shelf or shuffle the furniture around, we declutter. It’s the part most of us want to skip, but it’s the part that changes everything.
A few questions worth sitting with:
- Do I actually use this?
- Does it serve a purpose or bring me joy?
- Would it be more useful in someone else’s hands?
Letting go of the excess makes a room feel lighter almost straight away. And once you’ve had a proper sort-through, you can finally see what genuinely needs a home β not just what’s quietly been piling up.
π§Ί Think vertical β use your walls
When floor space runs out, look up.
- Floating shelves above a desk, a doorway or in the bathroom
- Hooks, pegboards or hanging racks for tools, bags and kitchen bits
- Tall shelving or bookcases that reach toward the ceiling β they draw the eye up and make a room feel taller
The simple rule I come back to: if you can’t spread out, build up.
ποΈ Choose furniture that pulls double duty
Hard-working pieces are a small home’s best friend.
- Storage ottomans that quietly swallow blankets, remotes and board games
- Beds with drawers or a lift-up base to save your wardrobe the load
- Fold-out desks or wall-mounted drop tables for compact corners
The bonus is that pieces like these make tidying and rearranging so much easier too.
π§© Create zones, even in one room
Open-plan and small living areas can feel restless without a little definition. A rug, a thoughtful furniture placement or a shelf can mark out a zone β a reading nook here, a workspace there, a spot for meals.
Having defined little areas helps a home feel intentional rather than cramped.
πͺ Light and reflection
Natural light is your quiet ally in a small space. Keep windows clear of heavy curtains and lean toward lighter colours that bounce the light around. Mirrors do the same lovely trick β a large one opposite a window can open a room right up.
There’s something grounding about a room that holds the light well, especially through the grey of Winter.
π¦ The hidden spots you’ve been walking past
You’d be surprised how much storage is hiding in plain sight:
- Under beds, sofas and stairs
- Behind doors β over-the-door racks and hooks earn their keep
- Inside wardrobe doors for scarves and accessories
- On the backs of pantry or cupboard doors for spices or cleaning supplies
Every centimetre counts when you use it well.
πͺ΄ Keep it simple
Small spaces breathe easier with a little simplicity. A consistent colour palette, clear surfaces and a few pieces you truly love will always do more than a crowd of small things fighting for attention.
π‘ A last thought
Organising a small space was never really about restriction. It’s about intention β giving every item a home and every corner a purpose. Do that, and even the smallest rooms can feel open, welcoming and properly lived in.
