Set your tray size, pick your gear, and drag it into place — every shape is drawn to real device dimensions. When it looks right, reserve your spot (it's free). From there we finalize the design together: I send you a 3D proof to approve, and full payment is due once you sign off — before any carving begins. Then I make it and ship it.

How it works — step by step
  1. Size your tray. Enter a width & height (or tap a preset), and pick Rectangle, Circle, or a Custom (SVG) outline. Toggle inches/mm anytime.
  2. Add your gear. Click pieces from the Accessories list — each is drawn to its real dimensions. Don't see yours? Hit Upload your own shape to drop in an SVG cutout.
  3. Arrange & size. Drag to move, grab the top handle (or use the Rotation field) to turn, and set exact sizes in the Selected panel. Snap-to-grid keeps it aligned.
  4. Reserve your spot. When it looks right, click "Join the waitlist with this design." It's free — no payment yet.
  5. Approve & pay. We finalize the design together and I send you a 3D proof. Once you approve it, full payment is due — then I carve and ship your tray.

Accessories

Loading gear…

Have a piece we don't list? Upload a single-outline SVG and it drops onto the tray for you to size and place.

Selected

Click a piece on the tray to select it. Drag to move, grab the top handle to rotate, ✕ to remove. (Delete / arrow keys work too.)

Reserve your spot

No payment now — this joins you to the waitlist. We work designs in the order they come in, then reach out to finalize the details together and send a quote.

Submit a Missing Device

Don't see your device in the tray designer yet? Send a clear top-down photo and we can use it to create a footprint reference for future tray layouts.

How to take the photo
  • Set the device in the orientation you want it to sit on your tray.
  • Use a light-colored background (graph paper works great).
  • Put a scale reference beside it — a ruler or a quarter are good references.
  • Shoot straight down from above — not at an angle.
  • Avoid shadows and glare.

The better the photo, the more accurate the tray pocket can be.