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Storrmmee Storrmmee is offline
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Default Lining a lazy Susan cupboard

get butcher papaer or brown paper bags, peice together a pattern from that,
make sure it fits, then put pattern on real liner, cut and poof there you
are, Lees
"Julie Bove" > wrote in message
...
>I have two of those lazy Susan type cupboards where the roundish shelves
>just sort of go around and around. The cupboard is not a complete circle.
>I had previously lined them with white Contact paper but that didn't work
>so well. I couldn't get a piece that was the right size so I wound up
>piecing some together. It looked like crap. I decided to remove the paper
>in the flour cupboard after I discovered the weevils. That cupboard has
>since had pretty much everything replaced except for the salt.
>
> The other cupboard has mainly canned goods but the liner is old looking
> and starting to rip.
>
> I have bought some of that spongy liner with the holes in it in the hopes
> that it will keep things from sliding. One problem I've had is stuff
> flying off the sides as the shelves spin around.
>
> But how to cut it? This might be easier to install because it is more
> flexible. I had purchased some white liner online that just didn't work
> at all. It was very stiff and slick and even when cut in pieces there
> turned out not to be enough of it. I am not sure the stuff I have now is
> big enough to be able to put just one piece in. I don't really know how
> to explain it but the curved design is baffling me. Also the fact that I
> can't access the entire cupboard at once. I can only get to like...half
> of it or so.
>
> Any ideas? Or hmmm... Maybe I could pay my nephew to do the lining for
> me. He's had a heck of a lot more math than I have.
>