by kai
The Asanoha Kumiko pen holder 3D print by designer Meyui is a desk organizer that translates centuries-old Japanese woodworking into something any FDM printer can produce. With 6,907 downloads and 18,512 likes on MakerWorld, it has become one of the most celebrated minimalist printable objects in the home printing community.
Kumiko is a Japanese joinery technique that assembles small pieces of wood into geometric patterns without nails or glue. Meyui translates this tradition into FDM printing, wrapping a hexagonal pen holder in an Asanoha (hemp leaf) surface pattern that reads as deliberate ornament rather than maker showiness. The outer texture catches light as you move around the object, while the form stays clean and resolved.
The holder comes in two sizes: large at 110 by 95 by 100 millimeters and small at 94 by 81 by 90 millimeters. Both share the same slanted opening angle, which tilts pens toward you for one-handed retrieval. Inside, nine compartments with varied diameters organize everything from broad markers to thin mechanical pencils.
Print the Asanoha Kumiko Pen Holder on Any FDM Printer
This model prints at 0.16mm layer height, two walls, 15% infill, and requires no supports. The two-component construction, an outer shell and a separate inner insert, lets you print each piece in a different color. Navy and silver, beige and cream, black and white: the combinations work because the form is restrained enough to let color do the work. Print time runs roughly eight hours for the large profile.
Download the model free at makerworld.com/en/models/1258888. Meyui also offers a small hex variant and an A1 Mini-tuned profile for those dialing in settings for a specific machine.


