The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Taming your kitchen sink mess

Here are tips on how to make those areas more functional, organized and attractive.

- By Jura Koncius

It’s easy to ignore the clutter around the kitchen sink as you’re rinsing kale or scrubbing a frying pan.

But if you stop to take a critical eye to your sink and the counters around it, you might get a bit of a jolt. These spaces often become repositori­es of drippy bottles, grungy sponges and assorted junk. This can be especially true if your kitchen is small and lacking counter space or storage.

“Simplicity is what you want around your sink,” says Henhurst’s Phyllis Trevor Higgerson, a New England designer and photo stylist. “As a workspace, you want it to be functional.” In her own small kitchen, she uses a Simon Pearce dinner plate sinkside to keep her products neat: a wooden dish brush in a bowl, refillable Italian glass bottles holding soap and hand lotion, and a white crock of eucalyptus. Dishwasher tabs are stashed in a stoneware canister from T.J. Maxx.

We checked in with some design pros to get some tricks on how to make our kitchen sink areas more functional, organized and attractive.

Master your bottles.

Dish soap, hand soap, hand lotion: How many of these bulky plastic bottles do you really need at your sink? “If you can possibly limit the distractio­ns and focus on what you need to do, it will make the job go faster,” says designer Betsy Barmat Stires of Frog Hill Designs in Alexandria, Virginia. “Piles of kitchen cleaning supplies are not what I like to see.”

Food52’s sleek Zone Danish silicone Zone Dishwashin­g Set With Squeeze Bottle is intended for this purpose: “It looks better than the Dawn bottle and is great from the sustainabi­lity angle,” says Peter Themistocl­es, Food52’s cookware, kitchen and pantry buyer. It’s more planet-friendly to buy larger bottles and refill your smaller ones, he says.

If you keep a dish rack out all the time, make sure it’s not looking shabby.

Corral the products you use the most.

Shazalynn Cavin-Winfrey likes to use a small tray or platter that can hold dish soap, a sponge and a brush. You often already have something like this in your kitchen, she says, and it’s nice if it’s ceramic so you can pop it into your dishwasher. She likes to have a small dish near the sink for rings and watches; a simple dip or sauce bowl in olivewood, brass or blue-and-white china are nice choices, she says.

Rethink your dish-drying method.

If you keep a dish rack out all the time, make sure it’s not looking shabby. Cavin-Winfrey prefers to keep her Threshold bamboo rack from Target ($19.99) folded and stored until she needs it. Food52’s steel Yamazaki Home Double Decker Dish Rack ($78) has two levels of storage and a small footprint, making it especially useful for small spaces where cabinet and counter space are limited. A spout moves water into the sink. “It’s minimalist and functional,” Themistocl­es says.

Give yourself a green focal point.

“I’m not really a houseplant person, but in the kitchen, you don’t forget to water plants, as they are right in front of you,” interior designer Liz Caan says.

Do a frequent clutter check.

Make it a habit to sweep everything off the area around your sink and wipe it all down, keeping out only the things you use daily. Arrange bins under your sink to store dishwasher detergent, counter sprays and scouring pads. Be vigilant about weeding out scary-looking old sponges and ratty towels.

“When your kitchen sink area looks nice and tidy, you won’t dread spending time there,” Higgerson says. “It makes a chore almost less of a chore and becomes part of a nice routine of caring for your home and caring for yourself.”

 ?? ROCKY LUTEN/FOOD52 ?? Right: The Yamazaki Home Double Decker Dish Rack ($78, food52.com).
ROCKY LUTEN/FOOD52 Right: The Yamazaki Home Double Decker Dish Rack ($78, food52.com).
 ?? SHAZALYNN CAVIN-WINFREY ?? Above: Shazalynn Cavin-Winfrey searches clients’ cabinets for small platters to corral dishwashin­g supplies. The soap pump is a $12.99 model from Target.
SHAZALYNN CAVIN-WINFREY Above: Shazalynn Cavin-Winfrey searches clients’ cabinets for small platters to corral dishwashin­g supplies. The soap pump is a $12.99 model from Target.
 ?? PHYLLIS TREVOR HIGGERSON ?? Phyllis Trevor Higgerson, a New England designer and photo stylist, uses a stoneware Simon Pearce dinner plate to corral items next to her kitchen sink, hiding away dishwasher tabs in a stoneware canister.
PHYLLIS TREVOR HIGGERSON Phyllis Trevor Higgerson, a New England designer and photo stylist, uses a stoneware Simon Pearce dinner plate to corral items next to her kitchen sink, hiding away dishwasher tabs in a stoneware canister.
 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R PEACOCK ?? A Christophe­r Peacock-designed kitchen features an integrated dish draining board.
CHRISTOPHE­R PEACOCK A Christophe­r Peacock-designed kitchen features an integrated dish draining board.

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