Front elevation reads three rows of trays. Sharpies and gel pens up top, paint pens in the middle, colored pencils on the bottom row.
The unit is a shallow wall cabinet with three internal shelves, mounted to wall studs via a French cleat. Each shelf holds removable trays sized to the pen type that lives there. You lift any tray straight up and forward to take it with you, slot it back in when done. Pen tops sit above each tray rim so you can see what is where at a glance.
The pivot from the desktop stadium-tier concept is deliberate: a wall mount lets you reclaim 10 in of desk surface, and a flat-paneled rack reads cleaner on a wall than a stepped box. The modular tray idea you wanted survives the pivot. It is still the core of the design.
A note on Baltic birch. Real Russian/Latvian Baltic birch has been hard to source since 2022. What Iffland calls Baltic birch today is often domestic Apple Ply or European birch, both of which are excellent for this. If they hand you a 13-ply void-free panel, you have what you need regardless of label.
| Tool | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Impact driver | Owned | Pre-drill, then drive screws into studs for cleat mount. |
| Miter saw | Owned | All carcass cuts and tray-wall cross-cuts. Set a stop block for repeatable lengths. |
| Tape measure, square, level, pencil | Owned | Standard layout work. |
| Rubber mallet | Owned | Seating tray assemblies during glue-up without denting basswood. |
| Stud finder | Owned | For locating studs behind drywall. Mark stud centers with painter's tape before drilling the cleat. |
| 1 in Forstner bit + 1/4 in drill bit | Owned | Forstner for the tray finger cutouts. 18 cutouts total. The bit pays itself off. |
| Brad nailer, 18ga | Buy · $65 | You already have 18ga brads in inventory, so the nailer is what is missing. Pays for itself across this build and the next several. Ryobi cordless or Bostitch pneumatic both work well, $55 to $90 range. |
| Bar clamps, 12 in · 4-pack | Buy · $40 | Need 4 minimum for carcass glue-up. Worth owning, every Manor build uses them. Bessey or Pony at Hocon, or Harbor Freight if budget matters more than refinement. |
| Table saw or circular saw with guide | Owned | For ripping the 4x4 ft panel into back, sides, shelves. Ask Iffland to break down the sheet on their panel saw. Most lumberyards do this for $1 to $2 a cut. |
1/2-inch Baltic birch from one 4x4 ft panel · 1/4-inch basswood for small and medium trays · 3/8-inch basswood for large colored-pencil trays.
| Item | Low | High |
|---|---|---|
| 1/2-inch Baltic birch ply, 4x4 ft panel | $45 | $65 |
| 1/4-inch basswood blanks x 5 | $75 | $100 |
| 3/8-inch basswood blank x 1 | $22 | $30 |
| Glue, screws, sandpaper (brad nails owned) | $21 | $21 |
| Pure tung oil, 16 oz | $28 | $28 |
| Forstner bit (one-time tool, used many builds) | $12 | $12 |
| Bar clamps, 12 in · 4-pack (one-time tool) | $40 | $40 |
| Brad nailer, 18ga (one-time tool) | $65 | $65 |
| DIY total range | $308 | $361 |
| Materials only, tools excluded | $191 | $244 |
| Custom millwork, comparable size and quality | $450 | $750 |
The $117 in tools (Forstner, clamps, nailer) is a one-time spend that earns back across this and the next several Manor builds. Materials-only is what this specific project costs going forward once those tools are in your kit. The $450 to $750 millwork comparison is what an Etsy-style maker would charge for a comparable wall organizer, since no small shop quotes work this small.
Basswood walls flex when colored pencils are loaded. A 11.5 in wide tray of 1/4-inch basswood with 30+ pencils inside will bow over time. The cut list specifies 3/8-inch basswood for the large trays for this reason. Do not substitute back to 1/4-inch thinking it will be lighter, the failure mode is bowed bottoms and cracked walls within a year.
Drywall-only mounting will pull off the wall. Loaded with pens, the unit weighs 8 to 12 lb. Mounted to drywall anchors alone, it will work for a few months and then sag or pull. The French cleat must hit at least 2 studs. Use the stud finder, mark with painter's tape, drive #10 x 2.5 in screws into solid wood. Drywall anchors are a backup for the cleat ends only.
Front wall finger cutout drilled too low. If you mark the 1 in Forstner cut at the bottom of the wall instead of 1.5 in up, the cutout breaks through the bottom edge and the tray's structural integrity is compromised. Mark every front wall before drilling. Confirm the cutout is fully bordered before pulling the trigger.
Tray fits too tight in its compartment, will not lift cleanly. Plan 1/8 in of clearance on every side of every tray inside its compartment. Basswood and ply both expand slightly with humidity. A tray that fit perfectly in the dry workshop binds in a humid kitchen-adjacent room in summer. Build in the clearance.
This is a lot of small joinery. 18 trays, each with five pieces, is 90 separate parts to cut and 72 joints to glue. Batch your work. Cut all the same dimension at once. Glue 6 trays at a time. The build feels long if you treat each tray as its own project, fast if you treat them as a production run.
Do not lock in tray contents on day one. Load it intuitively, work for two weeks, then move trays around based on which ones you actually grab most. The most-used trays should land at chest height where your hand naturally rests. Reorganize again every quarter.
Mount the bottom of the cabinet at 30 in above the floor. That puts the colored-pencil row at desk surface height when you are seated, and the top row at chest-to-shoulder height. Reach is comfortable across the full unit without standing or stretching.
18 trays with three sizes is a complex first version. A faster path: build one row of 6 small trays as a prototype, mount it, use it for two weeks. Confirm the modular concept actually serves you before committing to 90 parts of basswood. If the prototype works, scale up with confidence. If it does not, you have spent one weekend instead of two.
This is not a project that needs permits, inspections, or a contractor. It is a craft build that happens to live on a wall. Keep it that way. Do not over-engineer the hardware, do not substitute pricier woods, do not make it permanent. The whole point of modular trays is that the system stays light on its feet.
Once it is mounted, the work it does for you is daily. You will touch it every time you sit down to draw, write, or sketch. That makes it worth the two weekends.