![]() You know the ones I mean – the films you come back to time and time again. And recently, the advent of electronic media and the fact that it’s much more readily accessible, is starting to render DVDs less necessary.īut it is nice to have a few around, so how do you choose which ones to keep and which ones to get rid of?Ĭlear a shelf completely – put all the DVDs from it onto the other shelves or in a pile on the floor. One was getting Sky – giving me access to hundreds of movies at the press of the button meant I didn’t really buy any more DVDs, so my collection stopped growing. Two things have prompted me to thin out my DVDs. But it still took me far too long to thin them down. ![]() Anything that goes in a box because it doesn’t fit on a shelf will never be looked at again, no matter how much you love that particular film or TV series. ![]() There was no point in having a shelf like this – it’s not inviting, you don’t want to go to look for something to watch. It was horrible – I could never find what I wanted, and despite my best ‘Tetris’ attempts at getting as many on the shelf as I could, I still didn’t have enough space to fit everything. I had shelves with DVDs piled up on top of each other to the point where it was almost impossible to pull one out without pulling the whole lot off the shelf they were so tightly packed. I bought most of them at £3, so they didn’t represent a significant investment, but they were certainly something I found it difficult to get rid of. DVDs are one of those things that some people hoard.
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