Workbenches and home offices fill up fast, and once the keyboard, headphones, soldering iron, and phone all fight for space, productivity takes a hit. A new MakerWorld release from designer Meyui tackles that mess head-on with a tidy, fully 3D-printable set of modules that lock together however your desk demands.
The Modular Desk Organizer System is a four-piece kit that includes a phone stand sized for a classic iPhone, a pen holder, a small storage cup, and a base tray that anchors everything in place. Each module repositions freely on the tray, so a left-handed maker can mirror the layout in seconds, and the compact footprint keeps the design friendly to crowded benches.
The project was shared this week through Adafruit’s weekly 3D Thursday feature, and the STL files are hosted free on MakerWorld. For makers who like coordinated workspaces, the same designer offers a wider modular family, so the iPhone set can grow over time without redesigning your desk from scratch.
What makes it work
The clever bit is the base tray. Instead of gluing the modules in fixed positions, each piece keys into the tray, letting you rearrange the phone stand, pen holder, and cup based on how you actually work that day. The phone stand is angled for hands-free video calls or tutorials, and the pen holder is deep enough for a stylus, calipers, or small screwdrivers. Because everything is parametric, the design holds up well to scaling for larger phones or thicker pens if you want to remix it in your slicer.
Build it yourself
This is a print-and-assemble project, so the bill of materials is short and beginner-friendly. You will need a desktop 3D printer with a build volume large enough for the base tray, a roll of PLA or PETG filament in your color of choice, and basic post-processing tools like flush cutters for cleaning supports. No electronics, no fasteners, no glue.
- FDM 3D printer with roughly a 220x220mm build area
- PLA or PETG filament (one or two colors)
- Flush cutters for support cleanup
- Optional: deburring tool for crisp edges
Drop the STL files into your slicer, print at standard quality, and your desk gets a serious upgrade in a single afternoon. If you have been meaning to dial in your slicer profiles or test a new filament color, this is a low-risk project that pays off every workday.
Frequently Asked Questions
What modules are included in the desk organizer set?
The kit prints four pieces: a classic iPhone stand, a pen holder, a small storage cup, and a base tray that anchors all the modules and lets you reposition them.
Can the layout be customized for left-handed users?
Yes. The modules key into the base tray rather than being fixed in place, so you can mirror or rearrange the phone stand, pen holder, and cup to suit a left- or right-handed setup.
What will I learn if I build this?
You will get hands-on practice slicing multi-part STL files, dialing in print settings for parts that need to fit together, and post-processing supports. It is a great first project for learning how tolerance and orientation affect snap-fit prints.
