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Way back when I had my first child and daughter (almost 14 years ago), the word TOYS never really entered the mind. Of course my daughter got lots of fluffy animals, dolls, baby/toddler toys and bits and pieces; however it never really occurred to me that ONE day I would have a house full of toys.

After 14 years and 7 children (yes I have seven kids – 4 girls and 3 boys and in that order); you can imagine the amount of toys this household has accumulated over the years. We have gone from a small corner of the house to an entire ‘playroom’; in fact one would think upon entering this room that it could pass as a kindergarten or pre-school.

Over the years I have tried many different storage solutions for toys; some have lasted longer than others, and what seemed great ideas at the time; turned out to be a complete waste of money.

Before you continue reading, I want to also point out that today, toys are made to be broken. Nothing is made to last and most toys are “Made in China”. These toys are usually only played with once (Christmas Day or a sibling destroys another’s precious toy) and have to be thrown out the following day. As a parent, you come to realise that even though these toys break often, they also still seem to multiply at rapid rate and before you know it, the toys are out of your control.

So here is the rundown of storage solutions for toys I have actually tried and used over the years:

Plastic Storage Box Containers (with lids)

These I have tried on a number of occasions for toy storage. While they were great in the beginning, what didn’t occur to me was how many other uses they had, such as:

  • Being used as carts, automobiles or trains with a child inside and another pushing/pulling up and down hall ways and all corners of the house.
  • Used as a stage for theatrical productions, musicals and dance parties.
  • For props and even as costumes in these theatricals (dressing as a tortoise or turtle).

All resulted in the containers becoming broken, cracked and/or damaged. This one below is full of puzzles. I dare not remove it from the messy bookcase above and beyond!

Calico/ Material Cube Bags

I purchased two of these a few years ago, one a Pixar Cars design the other Disney Princesses. Both lasted about a month as these got torn and ripped as their other uses were:

  • Inverted and made into chairs or bean bags.
  • Again used as props or costumes Hiding apparatus, e.g. Jack-In-The-Box
  • The handles were also exceptional for a game tug-a-war or two.

Round ‘Flexible’ Plastic Storage Buckets

These in the beginning were fantastic and I thought I had finally found something that worked. I purchased 6 of these and various toys were stored inside ~ wooden train sets, to cars and trucks, doll house furniture to baby dolls. They were also easy for tidy up time for the children. Unfortunately I was dreadfully mistaken and the downside to these are as follows:

  • They got used as tug boats and row boats
  • Deck or lounge chairs
  • Skipping ropes and even dressing gown cords were tied to the handles and used to pull others around in them.

Note the cracks down either side of the handles…

Mini Garbage Bins – One word GIMMICK!

Stupid me bought 4 of these and at present we still have three and a quarter of them (a red one has a wheel snapped off the bottom).
You can imagine all sorts of fun children can have with these.  Here they are ~ note the red one with the limp!

Playroom Post

As you can see, the above systems are not working. On the other hand I could go to IKEA and buy some great items of furniture and spend more money than necessary. But we already some great pieces of furniture in the playroom (a bookshelf over toybox and a full length book shelf) that I could work with.

Unfortunately the playroom is one area of my home that I am forever trying to keep on top of, but I am determined to go from disorder to organised in the near future!

Please head over to No Excuses! Easy organising for large families as there are many other great organisation ideas, recipes and household hints you might be interested in, otherwise here are a few to get you started:

“Don’t panic, you will get there in the end”

Tiredness, stress and “I just can’t be bothered”

“If you don’t ask, you don’t get”

  • Great article thanks for the tips

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  • I don’t think there is an answer! Even if there was I probably wouldn’t be able to get my children to actually use it, tonight the poor dog can’t even find a space to lie on the loungeroom floor!

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  • I tried putting half in a basket to play with n half away in a plastic container to be brought out every now and then. My 15 month old worked out how to open the plastic container :-/ End of that idea lol

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  • I love the storage container with lids. I spent weeks sorted out all our toys. Throwing out broken ones.Finding all the parts to things and then labeling each box with what was in each box including the amount of pieces if the toy had pieces. The labels also had it some pieces were missing. I felt so ultra organised and I had this wonderful idea off only having one in the house and storing the rest in the shed and swapping the box every couple of week. Well it well well till hubby let the kids in the shed and I went in to find my weeks of work spread all over the shed. Needless to say I was NOT happy. Ah well the plan sounded good.

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  • omg toy overload at my house to. we have multiple storage bins, tubs, containers and I really dont know why we have so many toys still laying around everywhere.

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  • I have the exact same overflowing bin look

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  • We have the wheels bins.they overflow look untidy but I couldn’t care less about the way it looks in this rooms

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  • lol i love this article i still wish i had more storage but lot of the storage items are not designed to last very long but at least you can recycle them 🙂

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  • I brought an ikea wardrobe with shelves at the top and plastic sliding drawers at the bottom so all the toys are stored neatly away and delicate things you can put up high. it then can be used later as a cupboard / wardrobe.

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  • I like using a chester drawer so they can easy find their toys and also clean them up so the room looks perfect

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  • I actually have a mini garbage bin in each of my kids’ bedrooms. So far so good – they’ve worked a treat!

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  • I like to make things disappear by throwing them in the wheelie bin! All the cheap plastic junk toys that kids tend to accumulate are moved on pretty quickly around here. In the case of a child asking about its whereabouts I just tell them it broke and I had to throw it out. Seriously your house can be overtaken if you never move things on. For day to day each of my children have a big material basket full of toys and the rest are stored away in tubs in a cupboard. From time to time I rotate them so that they have new things to play with and you don’t have everything out at once.

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  • I was and still am woefully unprepared for toy storage! I just try to keep a toy box type thing in each room and we pick up things where they lie at the end of each day and chuck them in that room’s box. One day I’ll sort the toys out so all the bits of things are together… one day!

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  • we have a portable cot filled with toys! Grrr. . and we still have toys everywhere in the house.

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  • we have the hammock in the corner of the room and one see thru large box for each kids room. And we still have toys of some sort in every room.

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  • Hahaha this made me laugh, I began reading this article thinking ‘yes I’ll get a solution to our copious toy problem’ But Lisa seems to have the same problem lol (although I don’t have 7 kids lol)

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  • there never seems to be the right solution. Those ‘rubbish’ bins are quite small, &b what if they want something from the bottom? We just have those storage tubs with wheels. They’re transparent & seem to do the trick.

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  • Thank you for the LOLs from your article. I’ve given up on toy bins. My 14 year old now uses half is cupboard as his toy chest!

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  • thanks for this nice article..

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  • If the toys are piled into the wheelie bins, then my son will tip the lot out to find what he is looking for, and usually drags it to the lounge to do that, but then complains it is too hard to clean up afterwards.

    Reply

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