If you want several matching organizers for a media room, office, or guest setup, JC Print Farm can help.
Before you pay to have a downloaded model made, use the screening guide, the rights and permissions guide, and the handoff guide so the organizer you order actually matches the room and the items you want it to hold.
The Desk Organizer Remote Control Holder on Printables by Lukas3D earns a spotlight because it solves a very ordinary clutter problem with a layout people can understand immediately. Public source traction is also strong, with roughly 1,478 likes, 7,144 downloads, 24 makes, 29 reviews, and about 18,000 views. That is enough proof to treat it like a real utility file instead of another generic organizer upload.
What this organizer is actually good for
The file name points to remotes, but the bigger value is giving small everyday objects a stable home. Divided compartments work better than a catch-all tray because they keep items visible and stop everything from collapsing into one pile.
- living rooms where remotes keep disappearing into cushions or blankets
- desks that need a defined place for remotes, pens, or small accessories
- bedside tables where chargers, remotes, and glasses cases mix together
- guest rooms, waiting areas, or media setups that need repeatable organization
Why this file works
A good organizer does not need to be complicated. It just needs clear compartments, a sensible footprint, and enough visual order that people naturally put things back in the same place. That is what this model gets right.
It also fits well beside other small-space cleanup articles on GoodPrints3D because it solves the kind of recurring everyday mess that keeps rooms from feeling finished.
What to check before you print or order it
- measure the remotes, pens, or accessories you actually want it to hold
- check the table or console footprint so it does not become another oversized object
- pick a color and finish that fit a visible room, not just a workshop shelf
- use enough walls and top-surface quality for a cleaner household result
For the broader material decision, use the filament guide and the PETG guide.
Where it fits best
Living rooms and media consoles
This is the most obvious use case. The organizer gives each remote a visible parking spot and keeps a console from turning into a junk shelf.
Desks and home offices
It also works well as a desk caddy for the smaller items that otherwise migrate around a workspace all day.
Nightstands and shared rooms
Anywhere multiple people use the same surface, a divided organizer helps the space reset faster after daily use.
When ordering makes more sense than printing
This file is a good outsourced-print candidate when you want a cleaner result for a visible room, need several matching units, or simply do not want to spend printer time tuning another small household accessory. Organizers look easy until the first version ends up too rough, too light, or slightly wrong for the items you planned to store.
If the goal is fast cleanup with a finished look, ordering can save time.
Ownership and print-offer note
This Featured File highlights a model published by its original creator on Printables. GoodPrints3D did not design the file. If you want this exact model printed without running your own machine, use the quote link above so the source file travels with the request and the print can be reviewed against the model you actually picked.
Common questions
Can this hold more than remotes?
Yes. Pens, styluses, reading glasses cases, small chargers, and similar accessories are often a good fit as long as the compartment sizes match what you actually use.
Is PLA enough for an organizer like this?
Usually yes for indoor desk or living-room use. PETG is worth considering if the organizer may get handled more roughly, sit in a warmer room, or see heavier daily use.
When is it worth ordering several at once?
If you want matching organizers across a media room, office, guest room, or short-term rental setup, a small batch order is usually simpler than making each one separately.
Related reading
- How to choose downloaded 3D models that are actually worth outsourcing for printing
- Can a 3D print service print a model you downloaded? Rights, permissions, and what to check before you order
- How to ask a 3D print service to make a downloaded model without guesswork
- Desk Bag Hook
- Under-Desk Drawer
Editorial take
This is a stronger Featured Files pick than another generic catch-all because the shape is obvious, the use case is broad, and the public traction shows people actually keep it around. It works best as a low-friction cleanup fix for visible rooms, desks, and bedside surfaces where small items keep drifting out of place.