132,009 views ·
23 replies
132k views
23 replies
what height does the textbook say the hat rack should be at?
Hmm, isn't it mostly a question of what to have on the hat shelf compared to how big and clumsy it looks? With a deep shelf, you risk having things behind what you normally use, and you either forget what you have there or can't reach it. If you want to store hats and gloves there, it should probably be no more than 30 cm, but if it's a question of more general storage in baskets, it should fit the basket so that the basket really gets in.
When it comes to depth, one can consider that thicker jackets on hangers are about 60 cm deep, and if you only want the rod for hangers at the front edge of the shelf (like Habos), then 30-35 cm is a good depth. If you think it looks nicer for the shelf to extend more forward (like KOW's), then you should choose a deeper shelf.
When it comes to depth, one can consider that thicker jackets on hangers are about 60 cm deep, and if you only want the rod for hangers at the front edge of the shelf (like Habos), then 30-35 cm is a good depth. If you think it looks nicer for the shelf to extend more forward (like KOW's), then you should choose a deeper shelf.
Found this when I googled: https://www.byggbeslag.se/globalass...tagehojder-kapprum-kladkammaregardinstang.pdf. How's it going with the hat rack?
Apparently turned out to be a clothes bar instead.Y Yrrol said:8 years have passed and once again I searched for answers to this question and found my old thread.
I can share that I still don't have a hat rack, ended up with a free-standing Ikea bar,
but I'm sketching my own and planning to have a carpenter create it.
However, I no longer have the Habo hat rack and am curious about certain measurements.
Maybe one of you has a standard rack like Habo and could measure for me?
Curious about the distance between the shelves and how deep the shelves are with and without the distance to the wall, according to the picture:
[image]
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