
Most creative desks have a cup overflowing with pens, markers, and tools, even though you reach for the same few every day. There is the Muji gel pen for sketches, a couple of render markers you trust, and then about 15 other things you keep just in case. The Pareto Principle says 80 percent of your output comes from 20 percent of your stationery, which feels accurate once you notice how often you dig past everything else.
Pareto Pot is a stationery holder designed around that rule. Designer Liam de la Bedoyere noticed his own reliance on a handful of hero tools and built a pot that prioritizes those while still keeping essential counterparts within reach. It is a small desk object that treats hierarchy as a feature rather than pretending every pen deserves equal billing, using form and compartment size to make your most-used tools easier to grab.
Designer: Liam de la Bedoyere


Sitting down to sketch or render, your main pen and key markers naturally drop into the larger front compartment, while backup colours, fineliners, or highlighters slide into the smaller rear section. Without thinking about it, you end up with a front row of tools you use constantly and a supporting cast that is still close but not fighting for attention every time you reach for something.


The object is made from bent and welded sheet metal, forming a nested, teardrop-like footprint that balances minimalism with clear function. The outer shell wraps around an inner wall to create two compartments in one continuous gesture, so it reads as a single form rather than a cluster of tubes. The result feels industrial and precise but not cold or overdesigned, more like a small sculpture that happens to organize your pens.


The base is wide enough to stay put when you grab a handful of markers, and a cork underside protects the desk and adds grip. The height keeps pens upright and visible without making them wobble or tip when you pull one out in a hurry. It is the kind of object you can slide around a crowded workspace without worrying about tipping or scratching the surface underneath.


A small “80/20” mark on the side acts as a quiet nod to the idea driving the form, not a loud logo. It is a reminder that the pot is not just another cylinder; it is a physical diagram of how most of us actually work, a big space for the few tools that matter most, and a smaller one for everything else.

Pareto Pot is less about storing as many pens as possible and more about making it easier to focus on the ones that pull most of the weight. It does not tell you which tools to love; it just gives them a better spot to live in. For anyone trying to tame a chaotic pen cup without giving up their favourite analog tools, that feels like a quietly smart upgrade.