The $25 Space-Saving Solution New Parents Need
published NowI always knew in theory that babies can come with a lot of stuff (a crib! a high chair!), but I didn’t really get it until I had my own baby this year. Suddenly I have a playmat where my coffee table used to live, and piles of baby laundry to trip over in every corner.
Since we planned to stay in our one-bedroom apartment for at least the first six months or so of her life, I tried to be incredibly stringent about what we bought, nixing tons of things on the registry must-have lists. No diaper trash can, no swing (though I was tempted on some fussy days), and no bottle drying rack. I didn’t use a drying rack in the before-kid times… I just dried my dishes and put them away. Why would I need one now?!
But as with many things I thought I knew about parenting, I was laugh-out-loud wrong. We’re constantly washing bottles, pump parts, and pacifiers (they’re like the hair ties of the baby world… where do they all go?!). And I was wasting major counter space with everything strewn about (putting things away? What’s that?!).
The beautiful drying rack solutions most of my friends recommended were for seriously spacious kitchens — or, at least, ones in actual houses with more than a couple of rooms. I didn’t have that much room to spare if I wanted any surface left for occasionally cooking a meal. So I found this option from Oxo . It fits under my upper cabinets, taking up more vertical space than surface space (a classic small-space solution). I measured, and it truly takes up less than a five-by-twelve stretch of countertop space.
Buy NowAfter using it for a few weeks, it’s a serious space saver and super efficient. We can fit a whole day’s worth of bottles on the hooks, and the little bin on top is perfect for bottle tops and pacifiers.
And apparently I’m not the only one who loves it — it has more than 6,000 5-star ratings on Amazon.
Listen, a half dozen bottles and their various accoutrements are never going to win you a design competition. But if you have to have them out (and boy do I), this is a convenient, reasonably good looking way to do it.
This post originally appeared on Apartment Therapy. See it there: The $25 Space-Saving Solution New Parents Need
Laura Schocker
Editor-in-Chief
Laura Schocker is an editor, writer, and homebody with more than a decade of experience in lifestyle and digital journalism. Before Apartment Therapy, she worked as the digital director at Real Simple and the executive healthy living editor at The Huffington Post. Her writing has also appeared in Conde Nast Traveler, BBC.com, Prevention, TheBump.com, and TheNest.com, among others. Laura is a three-time Webby winner and was chosen as one of Folio's Top Women in Media. She has a bachelor's and master's degree in Magazine Journalism from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. She lives in NYC's Upper West Side with her husband, daughter, and two plants.
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