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Your cart is empty.Carly G
Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2025
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Sandra S Black
Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2025
Sturdy and functional shelf. Easy to put together. Works great for holding ribbon but would be great for shoes as well
Star
Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2025
It has a great hold its super sturdy and is really tall 😭i had to rebuild it 4 times because i got confused but tbh its great and worth it
angels
Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2025
Wonderful sturdy and solid shoe rack. Using to store me craft ribbon as the shelfs can be flat or angled. Went to together in less than 1/2 hour. No tools needed unless you are going to strap to wall with included security straps. Would definitely buy again. Quick shipping.
Shania
Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2025
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RT
Reviewed in Australia on December 26, 2024
This shoe rack is easy to put together - it is nice and sturdy. It is tall and has lots of room for all your shoes. However, the instructions are not very easy to follow, and I had to figure it out myself.
Dana
Reviewed in Mexico on September 3, 2023
Muy resistente, se ve todo ordenado y no se tambalea nada, no se deforma y se ve muy estética, recomendada al 1000
Daniel
Reviewed in Mexico on July 21, 2023
Muy bueno y resistente
Cliente de Kindle
Reviewed in Mexico on October 2, 2023
Muy fácil de armar, amplia y bien diseñada
Customer
Reviewed in Canada on January 4, 2023
This is a really great shoe rack. I highly recommend it. It's super easy to put together, it's sturdy and holds a lot of shoes. I love that you can adjust the rack for taller shoes. If I had the space I would get more.
ヾ(⌐■_■)ノ♪
Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2021
I like this just ok. I got the $40 attachment to add 2 more levels and am slightly less happy with the attachment than the base model. I'm giving it 4 stars mostly because my last shoe rack was one of those plastic tube and vinyl sheeting disasters that completely collapsed after a while. This does seem sturdier for now, but some of the levels are bowing in the middle from the weight of heavier shoes, so I still have to rearrange it a bit to put the heavier pairs on the sides. I would HIGHLY recommend anchoring this to the wall, preferably into studs. Especially once I put the extra 2 levels on, it still has some movement. Put heavier shoes on the bottom to weigh down the balance if you absolutely can't anchor it. I have cats, so it got attached to the wall right away.I'm a women's 6.5 and it for sure doesn't fit 50 pairs of shoes, but that's to be expected. It fit 48 pairs before the attachment, for 10 or 12 of which I stacked one shoe on top of another. After the attachment it fits 52, with room for 2 more, still with some stacked pairs. The attachment only came with 2 connector bars total, which makes it WAY less sturdy than I would like. The base model came with 4, which is better. I assembled the attachment differently, because I'm only 5'6 and I could barely reach the top shelf, which ended up being 80 inches tall. If I had left it assembled straight across, like the base, I would only have been able to see the soles of the shoes, which I didn't want, so I slanted them and put it on backwards. I do like the flexibility this rack allows for. It came with the screw on adjustable feet in case your floor isn't level.Overall this cost around $120 and I like it, mostly because it works. It doesn't fit as many pairs as other people with larger feet than mine might like, but assembly is flexible and easy (I did mine with a hex bit on a screwdriver, which made it way easier, but it did come with a little allen thing). Its price is relatively low for the quality and I'd probably buy it again. Hope this helped!
Jason Davis
Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2020
So, first, I purchased one of those hollow-metal-tubed-framed, canvas-shelved pieces of trash and the canvas shelves began tearing away from the frame almost immediately. They tore away from their frames as if the manufacturer had intentionally perforated them specifically to do this. After 1.5 years of careful handling, periodic, impromptu mending emergencies, and a quiet, simmering resentment building upon each glance afforded it, the only reasonable course of action was to fly into a frothing rage-tornado during which it was retired, bit by jagged bit, into the trash. Shoes tumbled to the floor and scattered like refugees fleeing a Kaiju.And there they remained.I have a shoe problem which I don’t feel is any of your business. But I have a lot of kicks and they needed a home. So, in the aftermath of the previous disaster, I bought a large, plastic utility shelf—TWO large plastic utility shelves— which turned out to be stupid. I have no idea how an item as simple as a shelf-unit can exude so much awkwardness. And that was all there was to that phase. It was a stupid idea that ended up being a stupid act carried out with the casual bravado of someone with nothing to lose. Which is not the case with me. I definitely have things to lose. I don’t have that much but I do have a shoe condition.With 30+ pairs of shoes languishing in a pile and serving as a perfect monument to my ineptitude and with nary a hint of imminent relief, I proceeded to embark on the quest of a lifetime (if we can agree that by “lifetime” I mean 11 days).So, the ratio of bs, scam, ads for those really cool-looking shoe boxes that have the drawers that slide out and make the front panels pop up to access your shoes and they’re really stackable and you can see your shoes in them because they’re clear and, oh, yeah, some of them light up is 1,000,000,000,000:0.Then I found these. I kind of just looked at them for a few days. I mean, I’d just been burned by two different and avoidable mistakes and I was feeling vulnerable but I did put them in my basket. I’d come back to them fairly regularly and couldn’t stop checking them out. They looked sleek, sturdy and able to accommodate a variety of different shoe styles. During this courting process, I’d toy around with taking a chance on one of those shady ads for the magic boxes I previously mentioned but I was merely delaying the inevitable. Finally, I just took the plunge and ordered these shelves.There’s been a lot of sh_tty things that have happened this year. This shelf set is not one of them. It is perfectly designed, with shelves that can be alternated between flat and angled. If you haven’t been on a seemingly endless search for shoe-racks for the last 7 years, you may not be aware that a lot of shoe-rack-manufacturers sell angled shoe racks. And you would probably also not be aware that every single stupid one of those angled racks is designed to allow any shoes placed on them to just slide right off and onto the floor. They’re like joke shoe racks you would buy for someone you passive-aggressively hate to induce a frustration heart attack. They’re the “dribble cups” of shoe racks. Someone, sometime in the past came up with the reasonable idea of angling shoe racks so that shoes could be easily seen at a glance. Unfortunately, whoever that individual was also lacked both the mental acuity to understand the most basic principles of physics and/or the verbal skills to convey the need in their design for something to “stop” the shoes from falling. Like, a “stopper” or something.In stark contrast is this shoe rack that has been designed by a manufacturer with top developer talent who have the education and experience required to know that when you point an object at the floor and then place it on a smooth slope at a certain angle, it will definitely slide off onto the floor— unless there is some kind of “stopper” at the end to stop it from doing so and this company spared no expense in this area. When angled downward, the shoes gently rest against an upward angled lip. It’s as if they felt the thuds of countless shoes hitting floors around the world and took it upon themselves to make this ongoing travesty right.With this design feature incorporated perfectly into its functionality, this shoe rack was already head and shoulders above anything else I’ve ever encountered. Now, put a pin in that element and remember it when I tell you that, in addition to being designed by (probably) retired NASA scientists, it was also so easy to assemble that I was tempted to disassemble it immediately upon completion and scatter its components around to recreate an environment and blood pressure level more in line with my past experiences. Because, isn't there a law that specifically states that shoe-rack-construction must involve at least 278 bellowed expletives, hate-tears and PTSD? I checked and not only is there no law specifically requiring violence during shoe-rack assembly, there are no laws involving shoe racks at all. In the case of these shelves everything went together not only correctly but easily— as if the manufacturer’s intention was to create something useful and intuitive rather than something that culminates in a welfare check from the police department. It even comes with a little “S”-shaped, allen-wrenchy tool (the only tool you need) which allows it to be deftly manipulated to quickly screw in the associated bolts— all of which are exactly the same! I didn’t even know that this level of simplicity was possible.If you need a shoe rack, do yourself a favor and pull the trigger on this set. If my shoe condition doesn’t improve, I may even need to pick up another set myself.100 Bazillion Stars.
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