Tupperware Lid Holders (Kitchen Organiser) on Printables solves a kitchen problem almost everyone recognizes: the drawer or cabinet full of loose food-container lids that never stays sorted for long. Instead of stacking lids flat and hoping they behave, this design gives them dedicated upright slots so the whole cabinet becomes easier to read and faster to use.
This is not a weak novelty listing. Public source data on Printables shows about 8,995 likes, 17,668 downloads, 81 makes, roughly 92,517 views, 75 ratings averaging about 4.83, and 5,106 public collections. That is unusually strong proof for a kitchen-organization file and more than enough signal to justify featured-file coverage.
What problem this print fixes
Container lids tend to become a daily friction point because they are flat, slippery, and awkward to stack. Once a drawer or cabinet gets a mixed pile of different shapes and diameters, grabbing the right lid turns into a small search job every time. This organizer turns that pile into visible slots.
- keeps lids upright so you can identify sizes faster
- reduces drawer and cabinet pileups
- makes unloading dishes less annoying because lids have a defined home
- works well for households that reuse containers constantly for meal prep, leftovers, and packed lunches
Why this one stands out
GoodPrints3D already covers container-lid storage through the IKEA 365 lid holder, but this model earns its own spot because it has much broader public proof and a wider kitchen fit. It is not tied to one container family alone. That makes it a stronger editorial example for readers trying to solve the general loose-lid problem rather than only one branded system.
If your kitchen is mostly built around IKEA 365 containers, start with the IKEA 365 lid holder article. If you need a broader food-container-lid organizer, this file is the better match.
Where it makes the most sense
- kitchen drawers that currently collect mixed lids in a flat pile
- cabinet shelves where lids fall over behind bowls or food containers
- meal-prep kitchens where repeat access matters more than perfect aesthetics
- busy homes that want a simple repeatable storage system instead of another loose basket
Print and material notes
This kind of organizer usually works well in PLA for normal indoor kitchen use because it mainly needs dimensional stability and enough stiffness to hold repeated insert-and-remove cycles. If the holder will live near heat or heavier abuse, PETG is a safer default. For the broader tradeoffs, see the GoodPrints3D filament guide and the functional settings guide.
When ordering one makes more sense
If you want the storage fix without dialing in fit, bed space, or reprints, it is reasonable to outsource it. Kitchen organizers are only worth printing if they end up getting used every day. If you want this model made for you, use this quote link: Get this printed.
Ownership and print-offer note
Public Printables page data exposes excludeCommercialUsage: false, which suggests commercial use may be allowed, but this review pass did not independently confirm the exact human-readable license wording on the live source page. Editorial coverage is clear. Anyone treating the exact file as a repeat catalog item should still confirm the live license wording directly.
Editorial take
This is a strong GoodPrints3D candidate because the use case is instantly understandable, the kitchen benefit is real, and the public proof is far stronger than a random organizer upload. It is the kind of file that makes everyday storage less annoying without asking people to redesign their whole kitchen.
Need help from a professional 3D print farm? Reach out to JC Print Farm if you want a matched set, cleaner fit guidance, or help translating the file into a finished kitchen organizer.
If you want this kind of cabinet fix without testing bed size and fit yourself, request a quote and include the source link plus the lid sizes you use most often.
Common questions
Is this better than the IKEA 365 lid holder?
Usually yes if you want a broader organizer for mixed container lids. The IKEA-specific file is the better match when that container family dominates your kitchen.
Will PLA hold up for this organizer?
For normal indoor cabinet use, usually yes. PETG makes more sense if the holder will see more heat, tougher handling, or a busier utility setting.
What should I send if I want one made?
Send the source URL, a note about the lid sizes you use most, and whether the organizer will live in a drawer or cabinet so fit choices stay aligned with real use.
Who is this model best for?
Homes that constantly reuse food containers and are tired of loose-lid cabinet piles get the clearest win from this design.