WHILE it might not be something you've given too much thought to before, it turns out there's a "right" way organise your kitchen drawers.
A dad-of-three has insisted his culinary storage layout is foolproof, and suggested others who kept their cutlery, utensils and tea towels differently needed to "sort their lives out" – sparking a huge debate.
In a post on his 'How To Dad' Facebook page, Jordan Watson shared a picture showing how he had arranged his kitchen drawers.
At the top, the New Zealand-based parent kept cutlery, followed by utensils, then tea towels, and finally a "big random mess" of items at the bottom.
Captioning the snap, he wrote: "If your kitchen drawers are not in this order then you need to sort ya life out."
In another post, he explained: "A few people are arguing tea towels should be in the bottom drawer.
If your kitchen drawers are not in this order then you need to sort ya life out.
"I'll let you in on a DadHack here. Babies will moan at your feet as you try and cook three meat and vegetables for dinner.
"That is unless you have the bottom (baby accessible) wonderland of randomness drawer open for them to entertain themselves.
"Obviously remove the pointy things from the big random mess drawer first."
His original post has received more than 6,000 'likes', however the comments section included a wide variety of viewpoints.
One person wrote: "We have one cutlery drawer mess and then three big random mess drawers. And don't get my husband started on the plastic nightmare cupboard.
Another commented: "Ours goes utensils, baking paper/foil/random bits, cutlery then tea towels.
"Gets almost every one that the cutlery isn't at the top, but that way our two-year-old can help set the table without assistance."
A third shared: "Tea towels live in the linen cupboard! Third drawer is for rolls of glad wrap/aluminium foil/baking paper."
In other homeware news, we told you how a mum has transformed her grubby old stairs for just £10 using Poundland buys.
We also revealed how a bloke has created a stunning garden bar using "tatty old pallets" and Wilko lights.
And picking light-coloured pots for your garden means you can water plants less.
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