How to use the "ultra-deep drawer" at the bottom of the flow table? Homeworkers share tips to make kitchen storage zero dead corners

If you pay attention to some details when storing, the space at home will look more holistic and beautiful. Japanese home-based storage expert Kyoko Nomura often shares relevant details on the community, and there is a video that introduces you how to use the space under the sink. The deep-shaped pulley in the sink can store large kitchen utensils such as bowls and basins, but some smaller items such as paring knives, scissors, crusts, soup spoons, etc. are often buried underneath or deep, which makes it take a lot of time to search or pick up when used.

Kyoko Nomura shares a small trick, which is to use the space behind the door to draw the door. This place seems to be a dead corner, but in fact, as long as you install a sticky hanging pad on the back of the door, you can easily hang a lot of gadgets.

Although these small items can also be hung on the wall, cabinet or pumping machine, they are prone to appear messy and will make the entire kitchen space easier if stored in the cabinet door.

Did this idea make your eyes lit up? In addition, Kyoko Nomura has also shared other "storage techniques under the sink". For example, she suggests that large items should be stored upright instead of lying flat. In addition to scattered small items like the door just picked up, they can also be stored in a whole way through the use of boxes.

Kyoko Nomura said that facing the deep-shaped storage cabinet of the lower sink, the most important thing is "to allow everything to be in a clear position so that you can see it at a glance when you take it." Keeping the well in place can save a lot of precious time.