🎨 Elevate your art game with the ultimate drying rack—because your masterpieces deserve the best!
The Creative Mark Rue Panel Ladder is a lightweight, durable wood drying rack designed to hold up to 22 painting panels ranging from 4x4" to 18x24". It offers three versatile configurations—tabletop, wall-mounted, and horizontal—making it an adaptable storage solution for artists. Weighing only 4.2 pounds, it’s easy to move and assemble, backed by a 90-day warranty for peace of mind.
Item Weight | 4.2 Pounds |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 14"D x 15.13"W x 24"H |
Color | Mahogany |
Material Type | Wood |
Recommended Uses For Product | Art Storage and Drying |
Additional Features | Lightweight,Sturdy |
Mounting Type | Table Mount,Wall Mount |
K**S
Easy to put together and use but not heavy duty.
I was pleased with the versatility of the drying rack. Set up to sit on table works great and adjusts easy to different sizes.Only down side is moving location of rack you need to empty rack before moving as rack in motion is unstable. Hanging and lying flat on table it works great. Over all I am happy with the drying wrack and yes would reorder when on sale.
R**R
Not a cabinet painting rack.
As a contractor who paints cabinets a lot I was looking for a small portable rack for the cabinet doors and saw this ADVERTISED to hold cabinet doors. It will not bear the weight of cabinet doors. Tried it once, and wouldn't even hold the smallest doors. Waste of money. Maybe for paper, but the arms are too lightweight for anything else.
T**N
Not real sturdy
Hard to understand the assembly instructions. But, love to look and use once you figure it out.
R**G
sturdiness
I am so happy to be able to dry many painting boards at the same time. I have it hanging the long way from my studio wall. It came with one spacer bar that adds some sturdiness... I used it as a template and made another. Now the sturdiness is perfect.
A**L
Sturdy Art Drying Rack That Does More Than You Think
The first photo is the product unpacked, and the second photo is the drying stand put together and in use.The stand was assembled by Lori my wife who is very good at such things. She reports that the wing nut threads are somewhat rough and do not feed easily, and that there are holes opposite all the bolt holes so no further drilling is necessary. I consider the stand sturdy. As it was delivered the stand can hold smaller canvases and canvas boards much larger than the pegs would seem to accommodate. The main advantage of this canvas dryer is the vertical space between the pegs. Thick stretched canvases are easily accommodated.The second photo shows an 11x14 painting on stretched canvas resting on the dryer. You will also note a strip of wood across the front of the pegs. That small strip of wood is long enough to contact both the side stretchers thereby keeping the pegs from hitting the canvas. Without that strip of wood the pegs contact the canvas itself and push it up from the bottom. The pegs are covered with a small rubber end piece so the small pegs do not hurt the canvas by puncturing it. However, the small pegs do push the canvas up, and that worries me. I can’t say how, but I’m afraid it will harm the painting while it drys. With the wood strip that fear is gone.As long as the wood strip contacts the wood strips on each side of the canvas then the canvas will not be pushed up. Thus, the dryer will accommodate almost any size stretched canvas long way or landscape. As for canvas boards, any reasonable size can be supported. Side to side without the wooden strip and even large from top to bottom.The short size of the dryer’s pegs make tipping from the front a problem, but the wooden strip solves even that difficulty. When the canvas, stretched or board, tips to the front the higher peg stops it from tipping out. The tipped canvas lays almost flat so it doesn’t slide out. Of course, the front of the canvas (the painted part) will contact the upper pegs, but just at the bottom a bit.I cannot imagine anyone saying this stand was not sturdy or it was flimsy. It is not. If a person works on very large paintings this will not work well, but extra large paintings always need special consideration in nearly every aspect of the work. If you want to put regular thickness paper on it to dry, you will have to put a solid piece of plywood or white foam project board across the pegs. If you cut that foam board into 2 inch strips it can be used to support the stretched canvas instead of wood, just avoid going too large with the canvas.I think it is a good product. AD2
W**H
This rack is not worth the money and dosent support canvases over 11 inches wide.
I bought this for my wife for Christmas. I got it assembled rather quickly and tested it out by putting some of her Masonite boards on it which was fine and tried some of her canvases and that's where the problem showed itself. You can't use this on any canvases over 11" wide because the rods miss the frame on the canvas an poke the canvas itself which leaves demples on the canvas. The dowel rods that are used for the rests are made of wood and are very bendy and just not very strong. I was rather disappointed with this setup and felt bad for my wife because I knew she was excited about having a nice drying rack. Considering how much this thing cost I would have thought it could be used for all painting surfaces. If you want to paint a 16'x20" canvas and put it on this priduct, it will not work for you.
J**S
Creative Mark Art Drying Rack minus all of the hardware
Missing all of the hardware to put it together, no screws, no wing nuts, nothing but the wood pieces.
J**R
Quality at a Value!
Nice looking drying rack. It functions very well. It was easy to setup and put together. Seems flimsy at first but works well. Made for canvas panels and painting paper.
Trustpilot
3 days ago
1 month ago