Why are Japanese housewives' families so tidy? How did they do it?

The environment of Japanese families is mostly clean and orderly. It is also difficult to see garbage on the streets of Japan. Their garbage classification is very strict. The housewife's duty is to keep the family clean and take care of their daily life. These are just part of their work. A competent housewife should also calculate the family's expenditure budget and make purchases and consumption according to the plan. Discount sales in supermarkets and shopping centers are like a fortune.

Japan is an aging country and many service industries can see very old people. Taxi drivers are mostly elderly people, and there are many elderly people in the food service industry. Most Japanese men work long hours. As full-time housewives, women have a lot of time to study, organize and store relevant content at home. The design of the Japanese entrance is concave, so the Japanese have developed a good habit of putting slippers in the entrance, reducing the soil brought into the room. When going out to wear shoes, the steps here can be turned into a shoe changing stool, which is very convenient. This drawer is well designed to accommodate. In Japan, even if the kitchen drawer is opened in a tourist hotel, several kinds of tableware and articles will be put in different storage boxes.

Neat and comfortable, this is the idea that Japanese housewives are good at dividing a large storage space into countless small spaces with a single storage box. After partitioning, the items to be stored will be put in, which will be very orderly. The cross storage box is also a good thing to divide a large space. Its design has an all-white cover. Even if you put a lot, the items inside are colorful and look neat. The use of cross storage boxes also includes another storage concept of Japanese housewives, that is, discarding the original packaging, such as the original packaging bag of sink filter screen and rubber band pouch. Take them all out and put them in the same box. The drawers are clean and easy to find.

Japanese pots are usually very small or shallow and can be put in drawers on the base wood. If it doesn't fit in, it will also be put in this Japanese storage basket with pulleys. The storage basket can store pot covers, pans, frying pans and baking pans. The interior is deep, and a pulley is specially added at the bottom to facilitate pulling. Vertical storage space can also increase storage space more than plane storage space.