It stores all contents of the Journeys in Middle-Earth game in the core box and its two expansion boxes. The core box holds all the minatures, the battle field maps and the rules. One expansion box contains all the cards and tokens and the other expansion box the map tiles.
The bottom of the figure box consists of 6 interlocking parts making up the bottom figure tray. It holds all figures with a base diameter larger than 25 mm. It holds also the six giant spiders, which cannot be clamped in the other figure trays due to their legs reaching over the edge of the bases and three other figures (I have chosen the shadowmen) which do not fit in the top trays anymore. Altogether there are 38 enemies and the base for the witch-king in this tray. Note that one holder remains empty.
The bottom figure tray is finalized by the end plate/frame. The short and the long parts of it have to be printed twice.
The 6 copies of the top figure tray go on top of the bottom figure tray. They hold all the other figures (18 heroes and 42 enemies).
All card trays are large enough to store sleeved cards. Most of the cards are stored standing in the long card trays: the role card tray, the ring card tray and the equipment card tray.
The damage-fear card tray and the boon-bane card tray store the respective cards laying facedown. You can place these trays on the table and be ready for play.
The terrain token tray holds all the terrain tokens (which have an associated terrain card). Note that the water and fences are intended to be stored in an upright position.
The map token tray stores all tokens which are placed on a map: search/threat, darkness, fortified and difficult ground and the persons. I split each person token type (hobbit/ranger and elf/dwarf) into two of the four slots to have (almost) always a token required by the app faceup. Note that the inspiration/exploration tokens are in the player token tray.
The player token tray stores the inspiration/exploration tokens, the depletion tokens and the corruption tokens.
The banner tray, which holds the banners in their stands, needs to be printed twice.
The hero card tray holds the hero cards. There is an elongated unused slot in this tray. You could store a pencil in there, for example.
The quicksave tray can be used to hold in-use cards during a campaign. This way you don't have to sort all hero cards, items, titles… back between sessions. There was only place for 4 heroes unfortunately. The 5th hero has to be stored in one of the other card trays or in a spare tray.
Spare trays
On top of the damage/fear tray and the boon/bane tray there is some space left for one or two spare trays. I have divided the remaining height into two “height units” (HU; one HU equals 14.5 mm). You can print either one tray with 2 HU or two trays with 1 HU each (obviously two trays with 2 HU each won't fit in the box). You could print a token tray to have a second tray for inspiration and search/threat tokens on the table. Or you print a card tray as quicksave compartment for the 5th hero. If you have other good ideas for trays, leave a comment and I might design another tray.
Simply print the four holders and glue connect them using stripes of foam core (5 mm width, 67 mm height). I glued the holders to the side of the cardboard box and the foam core to the bottom.
I have included the card dividers for the hero cards as well. When printing them, add a color change right before the text starts.
Since there are a lot of dividers, I split the rest off into its own project.
German dividers: https://www.printables.com/model/384002
I have uploaded another figure tray with wider slots to fit also decorated bases.
The author marked this model as their own original creation.