I Sent a Pro Organizer Photos of My "Awkward" Kitchen Cabinet, and Her Brilliant $10 Storage Fix Changed Everything
Briefly

A newly moved-in homeowner discovered an awkward corner cabinet with a deeply recessed section that is difficult to access. The recessed corner is best used for items not needed daily, such as holiday mugs, baking supplies, or canned-goods overflow. A professional organizer recommends installing lazy Susans to allow spinning access to condiments, sauces, and cans without removing everything. The organizer suggests a bamboo model from The Container Store. The homeowner measured cabinet depth to ensure fit, initially bought a two-tier lazy Susan that conflicted with shelving, and returned to seek alternatives.
My husband and I recently moved into a new home, and in my excitement to have a moderately bigger kitchen, I failed to notice two things: 1) We have substantially less counterspace. 2) We have a (very) weird cabinet. It's the one in the corner - I'm sure some of you have this cabinet, too. Part of it is easily accessible through the cabinet doors, and the other part of it falls back into the recesses of our cabinetry, with no way to get in aside from pulling everything out and sticking my whole arm back there. Why do cabinets like this exist? I'll never know.
"The hard-to-reach corners are always tricky when it comes to organizing cabinets, but I've found they're best used for items you don't need every day, like holiday mugs, baking supplies, and overflow of canned goods," she said.
So off to the store I went to find some similar options. I measured the depth of my cabinet first to be sure the lazy Susans I bought would fit in there. At first, I purchased a single two-tiered lazy Susan because apparently I forgot that the cabinet has multiple shelves, and a second tier would hit the shelf above it. Oops! Back to the store.
Read at Apartment Therapy
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