Apartment Sized Lower Kitchen Cabinet With Undercounter Regrigerator
The 59 Best Kitchen Cabinet Organization Ideas of All Time
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Your kitchen is with you through everything. The stove has seen plenty of best friend dinner parties, the counters are all too familiar with your failed attempts at sourdough, and your floor has served as the perfect seat during late night ice cream parties for one. So it only makes sense that your space reflects you and how you work within it. A good setup can make or break your cookspace, but when it comes to actually organizing a kitchen — or tidying up a small kitchen for that matter — things get tricky.
Utility is often the priority, and style takes a back seat, but it doesn't have to be that way. Whether you're trying to figure out the best way to store your spices or exploring different ways of styling out your countertops, cabinets, drawers, and pantries can come in handy in plenty of ways. Take a peek at these fabulous kitchens where design and functionality coexist in harmony. Armed with these stylish layout and organizational tips, I promise — you'll never have to experience a tupperware container avalanche ever again!
1. Rethink your refrigerator
When it comes to organization that looks good, the refrigerator is usually the last place anyone wants to tackle. There's nothing pretty about packages of produce and cheese, right? Wrong. Instagrammer Amira of Dusk2illDawn has proven that even the shelves holding this week's grocery run can still be beautiful with the help of baskets, clear food containers, and thoughtful arranging.
2. Declutter for happy hour
Your butler's pantry or at home bar doesn't need to display all your goodies. Select a few special glasses or prized items to highlight, like YouTuber Taryn Newton did here, which will create a clean, minimalist cabinet look that's as stylistically stunning as it is well-organized. Stash your not-so-pretty glasses, generic bottles, and more utilitarian items neatly behind non-glass front cupboards.
3. Build out the storage you really need
Drawers were made for storage and organization, but that doesn't mean they're always well-suited to your needs from the get go. Blogger Adrienne of The End of the Gravel Drive shows how adding drawer inserts can turn things like topsy-turvy stacks of bowls and jumbles of cutlery into an efficient, streamlined setup.
4. Swap out boring bins
DIYer Cat of Modern Boho Cottage found a more stylish alternative to your classic plastic bins, which can look a little plain to those that have an eye for design. She opted for opaque black and white storage containers to make her pantry pop and keep her snacks tucked away.
5. Experiment with color coordination
Focus on curating a color story for tea towels and utensils so you'll feel invested in keeping your kitchen tidy and looking its best. Blogger Megan of Sugar Color House exemplifies this idea perfectly with her drawers, which are filled with pastel colored linens, measuring cups, and serving pieces. When things look this visually organized, you'll be more motivated to keep them that way!
6. "File" your baking sheets and muffin tins
No one wants to pull the cookie sheet out from under six others. Store them vertically instead of piling them on top of each other. A tension rod gives you instant, usable slots so you can slip bakeware in and out with ease.
7. Use turntables inside your cabinets
Turntables are the kitchen storage secret weapon when it comes to making any dead space functional. Use them to make spices accessible or so that you can see and grab exactly the right hot sauce from your collection. They're also great for organizing bottles of oil that you might keep in the cabinet next to the stove for easy access while you're cooking.
8. Use drawer dividers everywhere you can
Drawer dividers keep like items with like and help direct your hand to exactly the utensil or tool that you need. They also keep items from being piled on top of each other and from sliding around in drawers.
9. Eke out extra storage space by installing toe-kick drawers
This storage hack is a bit more involved to implement, but if your kitchen cabinets are just too full, adding hidden drawers to your toe kick areas maximizes cabinet space and is the perfect solution for storing flat or rarely used items. Family Handyman has great how-to instructions, if you're handy.
10. Take things out of the cabinets
One of the keys to successful organizational systems that can be maintained is that spaces aren't overcrowded. If you're short on kitchen cabinet space, consider taking some items out of your cabinets and storing them elsewhere in your kitchen. Taking pots and pans out of your cabinets and hanging them frees up valuable cabinet space and it can look really good.
11. Become your own barista
Don't relegate your snazzy coffee or espresso machine to the back of the cupboard. Make your own chic little coffee bar in an empty corner with a freestanding cabinet, just like Blogger Kristen Garaffo of Kristen at Home did here. With a setup this good, you'll be looking forward to that caramel macchiato every morning even more, and you'll have all of your latte-making tools and supplies in one place, too.
12. Forget classic cabinet storage
Why, yes, cutting boards most definitely can be wall art! Just look at blogger Christine Sentz of The Gray House Design Co. and her wall of pretty wooden pieces. Not only does this free up in-kitchen space in your cabinets for other items, but it's also a perfect way to organize your prep tools in a way that doesn't feel like a basic storage setup.
13. You can even use the sides of your cabinets
It's amazing how much space goes wasted when you stop to really look at your kitchen. If you have cabinets with exposed sides, use them! Add a rail, hooks, or even shelves.
14. And use the space above the cabinets, too
If your cabinets don't go all the way up to the ceiling, you can still make use of that above-cabinet space. Turn it into storage for bulky (and not-often-used) pots, the cookbooks you pull out every once in a while, extra ingredients, or even a spot to show off a collection.
15. Create a "pantry" in a drawer
You don't have to be confined by where you're supposed to store things. If it makes sense for you to put items that would typically go in a pantry in a drawer instead, do it. These bins from The Container Store can be used to separate items in deeper drawers and keep them tidy and accessible. Labels keep everything where it's supposed to be.
16. Store small pantry items in a sponge holder
Those kitchen sponge holders that suction on to the side of the sink? With some adhesive strips, you can securely stick those onto the sides of your pantry storage, or the back of a cabinet door, or even right on your kitchen backsplash to keep small snacks at reach (and keep them out of your cluttered cabinet).
17. Use hooks to hang mugs on the underside of shelves
Hanging mugs from hooks takes advantage of the unused space above a stack of plates or bowls. And you'll be able to reach your favorite mug without shuffling the others out of the way.
18. Hang cleaning sprays with a tension rod
An oldie but a goody, this tip makes good use of the awkward cabinet space beneath your kitchen sink. Hang your cleaning sprays from a tension rod affixed across the cabinet and keep what you need simultaneously out of the way and within reach.
19. Or with an over-the-cabinet towel bar
Those small cabinet door towel racks can be flipped around so the rung is on the inside of the cabinet instead. The rung, like the tension rod, provides a perfect handle for hanging your cleaning bottles.
20. Store mixer attachments in your mixing bowl
Mixer attachments, especially the whisk, take up a lot of space. Guess what stores them perfectly and keeps them right where you need them? The mixing bowl! If you're worried about attachments scratching the bowl, line it with a towel.
21. Turn a pegboard into a pantry
If you don't have cabinet space for your dry goods, you can bring them out of the cabinets with this pegboard pantry scheme.
22. Decant your staples
By pouring pantry staples like sugar, pasta, and grains into uniform and matching containers, you not only maximize space, but you also get rid of unsightly boxes and bags and keep everything airtight and fresh to boot. Labels ensure everyone knows exactly what's what.
23. Store serving platters vertically
Use a cutting board organizer to store your serving platters on their sides. This way you can pull out and put away exactly what you need when you need it without having to pull a pile out of the cabinet and go through a stack.
24. Add drawers to your cabinets
Installing drawers in your cabinets transforms them from untamed caves into orderly storage units that serve up exactly what you need. Simple drawers like the ones above can house small, light items, while heavy-duty drawers can accommodate larger, heavier items, such as pots and pans. If you can't install your own, find a right-sized free-standing drawer unit to set inside your cabinets.
25. Hang bags with pants hangers
This tip is genius, and it gives wire shelves their one redeeming quality—you can hang things from them. Pants hangers serve as both chip clip to keep contents fresh and hangers, to keep bags from flopping everywhere and chips from getting crushed.
26. Organize drawers with diagonal drawer inserts
Diagonal drawer organizers make tidy cubbies for both your long cooking tools and the small ones without wasting space and without having to mix items in slots that are too big for them.
27. Store small appliances on rolling plant stands
You might actually use your ice cream maker when you don't have to haul out two rows of small appliances to get to it. Inexpensive rolling plant stands turn your pantry floor into a functional appliance garage you'll love.
28. Store like with like
Storing similar things together serves both aesthetic and a practical purposes: Grouping items that look the same is pleasing to the eye and having the same kind of things together also helps you know what's where—and what goes back where.
29. Label everything
When you're looking at a collection of disparate containers filled with all kinds of different contents, it can be visually and mentally overwhelming. Labeling restores calm. Yes, you know what's inside just by looking through clear containers, but labels give you just the amount of distance and information to not have to perform that mental exertion. Seems slightly ridiculous; makes a huge difference.
Read more: 9 Things You Can Label to Make Life Easier and Stay Organized Forever
30. Cover glass cabinet doors
Glass cabinet doors can be a beautiful component of kitchen cabinetry. But not when what you see through those doors is unsightly. If you need to make utilitarian and unaesthetic use of a glass-fronted kitchen cabinet, consider covering it with attractive paper.
31. Make your own pot lid hangers
Use Command hooks to make instant, custom pot holders that live on your cabinet doors. Hold each lid up to the cabinet door and place Command hooks at 8:00 and 4:00 (pretending your lid is a clock face). The lid should rest securely within these hooks and you'll be able to grab it when you need it.
32. Use a dish rack to organize kids' dishes
A dish drying rack is perfect for storing and organizing kid dishes, cups, and utensils, which you want to keep within easy access, but don't want the kids having to stack and unstack.
33. Hang a curtain rod below the cabinets
To free up a drawer or two, mount a curtain rod below your cabinets to hang your utensils (with S hooks or just hooked on). You can mount it to the backsplash, or directly to the bottom of your upper cabinets.
34. Create instant storage with stick-on shelves
For organizing small items that you need quick access to, Command strip-mounted caddies are an excellent solution. Just stick them on the inside of cabinet doors to make storage out of thin air.
35. Go mostly neutral for basics on open shelving
Clear glasses and white dishware give the eye a place to rest on open shelves.
By avoiding eye-catching patterns and colors, you cut down on the busy look that open shelves can fall prey to.
36. Or embrace color completely
This on-display kitchen proves in such a delightful way that drawing attention to the utilitarian objects that are visible in a kitchen with open shelves can be beautiful.
37. Add shelf risers
Shelf risers double your usable cabinet space. To maximize the vertical space in your cabinets (or in your pantry), add shelf risers. They allow you to store things on top of each other without stacking and to pull things out without the hassle of unstacking.
38. Use a toilet paper tube to keep mats rolled
Baking mats prevent stuck-on cookies and we love them. But they're floppy and thin and big and not so easy to store. Rolling mats and inserting them in a toilet paper tube allows you to store them neatly in a drawer.
39. Install a magnetic knife strip on the side of your cabinets
If there's no room in the drawers or on the countertop for a knife block, and no room on the walls for a knife strip… well, you can mount that knife strip directly on the side of your upper cabinets to keep important tools in easy reach (of adults, at least).
40. Or put a magnetic knife strip inside your cabinets
Shuffling around for sharp blades isn't safe. A magnetic knife strip makes excellent use of otherwise wasted space and keeps blades safely out of the way yet within sight and reach.
41. Rainbow-ordered books look good anywhere and everywhere
Storing books in rainbow order is a polarizing topic, but can anyone deny how awesome it looks? Arranging cookbooks in rainbow order on open shelves in the kitchen says that somebody took the time to put them that way and makes everything feel deliberate and tidy.
42. Adjust the height of your shelves
Sometimes the most simple solutions are also the most elusive. Realizing that you can adjust your shelves can transform the inside of your cabinets into spaces that work for you and your personal kitchen cabinet storage needs. Try it.
43. Leave space between sets of items on open shelving
Allowing items to breathe, even on shelves that are full, gives the illusion of space. Avoiding a crowded look prevents even open shelves from looking cramped and cluttered. Especially note the space around the stand mixer in the photo above. Breaking up stored items with art also creates the relaxed look of extra space.
44. Store messy items on saucers
If you store things that tend to drop debris or leave messes, set them on top of small plates or shallow bowls. This will keep messes from spreading all over your pantry or cabinet interiors and will keep neighboring items clean as well.
45. Add a "shelf" with a tension rod
Tension rod to the rescue again! Create an instant shelf for small items by putting a tension rod across the length of a cabinet. It's perfect for setting spices, small jars, and boxes of specialty seasoning on.
46. Install a sink tip-out tray
Create a spot for bottle brushes, pot scrapers, and sponges behind that hitherto fake panel between your counter top and your under-sink cabinet. Just look for a "tip out tray" kit that includes a tray and a hinge to install.
47. Employ the pantry "golden rule"
The pantry golden rule says that you must be able to see everything that's inside. This can be applied to the interiors of your cabinets and drawers as well. The benefit is that you'll always know what you have, you'll be forced to edit what you keep, and it makes putting items away so much easier.
48. Go through your food storage containers
Food storage container organization is tough. There are so many shapes and sizes, and each container has a lid that also has a shape and size. To make everything nice and neat, the first step is going through your entire collection to see what you have, what you can get rid of, and what you might need.
49. Then store the lids with a roll-up drying rack
Combine a roll-up drying/cooling rack and a plastic storage bin—which will allow you to store all those messy, mismatched food storage lids in one tidy, easy-to-grab spot.
50. Arrange items by height
Little things make a difference when it comes to storing a collection of items. Just like arranging children's books by height on a bookshelf looks tidy, placing pantry items or items within kitchen cabinets according to height lends a definitive air of orderliness (even when there's more on the shelf than this).
51. Use magnets on the underside of your cabinets
The surface underneath your cabinets can also be used to keep items organized and off of surfaces. Here, spices are stored in jars and affixed with magnets to a strip on the underside of cabinets. Not only is this a storage solution for spices, but it frees up interior cabinet space for other items.
52. Create a pantry cabinet
If you don't have a dedicated pantry, you'll need a way to store dry good, oils, spices, and all the things a pantry would normally house. Installing pull-out drawers in a cabinet allows you to see everything you have while also maximizing your square footage of space. Pulling items from the top like you can when they're stored in pull-out units is also far easier than digging and shuffling inside stationary spaces.
53. Use a cabinet door to hang your paper towels
54. Add a bunch of containers to your junk drawer to contain smaller items
When you corral little things in sections, you prevent the jumbled mess that junk drawers so often become. You can find the things you need, have some idea where to put new items you toss in the junk drawer (stick like with like), and at the very least, are better able to see what you have.
55. Label the tops of spice jars stored in drawers
You'll drive yourself crazy guessing which container the cinnamon's in and picking up six before you grab the right one. Save yourself the hassle by adding simple labels (masking tape and Sharpie are fine!) to the tops of your spice jars. The concept works for other jars stored in drawers as well.
56. Line up your labels
We tout the usefulness of labels to tell us what's in our containers and to direct us and others about what goes where. But one important detail makes even the labels look organized: lining them up. In this open-shelving kitchen, the lined-up, uniform labels add to an overall sense of orderliness, even when many disparate objects are on display.
57. Apply styling principles to items on shelves
When collections are grouped together rather than scattered throughout a space, they look intentional and artistic rather than junky. This concept isn't just useful for the set of globes you have on display on your living room bookshelf; it works just as effectively in the kitchen.
58. Use a rolling cart to add even more storage to a pantry
A rolling cart that fits into your pantry maximizes the space allotted to storage without sacrificing any functionality. To get to items either on the cart or behind it, all you have to do is roll it out. Store the same category of items on the cart, such as baking items, so that you can bring them all close to hand when you need them.
59. Or use a rolling cart to keep all your kitchen basics together
If you're really tight on storage, put your most-often used kitchen essentials on a cart together, and move it to wherever you're chopping, stirring, or washing. If you're always using it, it's never really in the way.
Shifrah Combiths
Contributor
With five children, Shifrah is learning a thing or two about how to keep a fairly organized and pretty clean house with a grateful heart in a way that leaves plenty of time for the people who matter most. Shifrah grew up in San Francisco, but has come to appreciate smaller town life in Tallahassee, Florida, which she now calls home. She's been writing professionally for twenty years and she loves lifestyle photography, memory keeping, gardening, reading, and going to the beach with her husband and children.
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Apartment Sized Lower Kitchen Cabinet With Undercounter Regrigerator
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