Tips For Camouflaging Those Pesky Power Supply Cables, Like A Sanyo Fw32d06f

By William Thompson


You are not unlike most individuals if the electronic devices you own have increased instead of decreased over the past few years. All of these devices come with their own power cables, like the cable that supplies the power to your television, the Sanyo fw32d06f. If the sight of these tangled cables have gotten on your nerves enough to do something about them, then professional organizers have some good advice for camouflaging them.

Zip ties are good for a lot of things. When you've got a lot of cords hanging down, one way to make them less conspicuous is to tie them together. If you're really creative, and depending on your decor, you can decorate the stream of cords with colorful bows, clips, or butterflies, if it fits your style. You can pick up a multiple prong outlet at any big box, hardware, or home improvement store to plug in your cables and cords.

Another good idea from professional organizers concerns labeling. When you have one or two cables or cords together, you don't have much of a problem. When you have several of them all running together, which one goes to which device or fixture can get confusing. All you have to do to solve the problem is label each cord or cable. That way you won't unplug the television when you were trying to unplug the lamp.

A quick and easy way to hide cables and cords is by using a basket you've placed underneath the television that's mounted on a wall or under a console. If your television is sitting on a stand that has shelves, you can set the basket on the lowest one. Wicker baskets are popular, attractive, affordable, and easily found in local home improvement stores. You just bundle the cords, tie them together and then loop the cord over a hook so they disappear neatly into the basket.

If you've got a chair that sits beside your wall mounted tv or next to your television that is sitting on a table, you can camouflage the cords behind it. You simply attach the cords with a clip you have fixed on the back of your chair. There are several ways to go about this.

How successful you are depends mostly on the fabric the chair is covered in. Wood chairs with lots of raised ornamentation may not work. You should probably try one cord at a time to see how much the clip will hold effectively.

Hiding cords and cables in storage boxes is another way to solve your problem. This trick has more than one use. You just need to purchase an attractive storage box that has a closed front. You'll find them for reasonable prices at big box and home improvement stores.

You bore a hole in the back of your box, set the box below the television or console and then run the cables through the hole in the back of the box. The surge protector can sit in the bottom of the box with its cord running back through the hole to the outlet on the wall.




About the Author:



No comments:

Post a Comment