Ask anyone who camps regularly about washing dishes at camp and you will get the same answer: a damp tea towel laid flat on a folding table, bowls and mugs stacked on top of it, drying at whatever pace the outdoor air allows. It works. It has always worked. And until now, it was the only option – because dish racks are kitchen objects, fixed in place, belonging to a counter they never leave.
The Slim Fold Dish Rack is the first dish rack that was designed to go where the meal goes. With a patent-pending spring mechanism that collapses the full 14-inch (36cm) drying surface to 1.2 inches (3cm) flat in under a second, it packs alongside tent poles and sleeping bags without complaint, opens at the campsite in one motion, and handles a full post-dinner load of dishes before folding back down to nothing. At $75 without a carrying case and $90 with one, it is an answer to a problem every camper has solved with a tea towel for their entire life.
The Slim Fold Dish Rack collapses from 14 inches of full drying surface to 1.2 inches flat in under a second and the carrying case means your camp kitchen finally has the one thing it’s always been missing.
One Second Flat, One Motion Open
The 1.2-inch figure is the number that earns the trust. Not folded-smaller. Not collapsed-to-a-reduced-profile. One point two inches – thinner than most paperback novels, thin enough to slide into a camping bag between a rain jacket and a cutting board, thin enough that it takes up less space in a car boot than the wet towel it replaces. That is what the patent-pending spring mechanism delivers: a 14-inch dish rack that becomes a 1.2-inch object in under a second, and snaps back to full drying surface with the same speed in reverse.
We ran the rack through a week of use – counter, campsite, and cabin – and the spring action is more satisfying than any mechanism this utilitarian has any right to be. It snaps open with authority. It folds shut with the quiet certainty of something engineered to repeat this motion a thousand times without softening. There are no hinges to align, no prongs to press down individually, no two-handed wrestling match that most folding racks silently require. One motion open. One motion flat. The whole operation takes less time than shaking out a tea towel.
The 14-inch surface, once open, handles a full camp dinner’s worth of dishes, including the plates, mugs, bowls, the cooking pot you rinsed, without asking you to queue anything or balance a bowl at a precarious angle on a folding table. It works on any flat surface. Picnic table, tailgate, kitchen counter, cabin sideboard – the rack makes no distinction. It simply opens, does its job, and folds away when the job is done.
Built for the Kitchen That Goes With You
The carrying case option is the detail that separates this from every other space-saving dish rack on the market. A dish rack that folds flat is a home upgrade. A dish rack that folds flat and comes with a carrying case is a piece of camp kit – and at $90 for the case option, it is the most considered piece of camp kitchen equipment most people have never thought to own.
This is the rack for the campsite where everyone eats well but nobody thought to bring anything to dry on. For the cabin weekend where the kitchen is functional but the counter is already full. For the Airbnb where the host’s fixed rack is occupied and the tea towel is the backup plan. For anyone who has driven four hours to a national park, cooked a proper meal at the campsite, and then stared at a pile of wet dishes with nowhere to put them.
At $75 for the base model and $90 with the case, the Slim Fold sits above the budget collapsible rack market – where $15 buys a plastic accordion that folds halfway and still takes up counter space – and below the premium European designs. Only five units remain in current stock, which is not an artificial scarcity note. It is a factual one. If it is available when you are reading this, that is the signal.
What We Like
Folds from 14 inches to 1.2 inches (3cm) in under a second via patent-pending spring mechanism – not a partial collapse, a genuine flat profile thin enough to pack in a camping bag alongside kit that has never shared space with a dish rack before
Opens to a full 14-inch (36cm) drying surface with the same single motion in reverse, handling a complete camp dinner’s worth of dishes on any flat outdoor surface without compromise
Optional carrying case at $90 makes this the only dish rack in the comparable price range with a credible outdoor and travel use case – campsite, cabin, Airbnb, van, tailgate
Works indoors and outdoors equally – the spring mechanism performs the same on a picnic table at altitude as it does on a kitchen counter in a New York apartment
Spring action is consistent and repeatable – not the flimsy fold of budget plastic collapsibles, but a mechanism engineered to load and release with the same clean resistance across hundreds of cycles
What We Dislike
The base $75 model ships without the carrying case, which is the feature that makes helps the outdoor use case become a complete package
Folded dimensions are confirmed at 1.2 inches but full packed dimensions (length and width when flat) are not published, which makes it harder to confirm specific bag or drawer fit before purchasing
The Dish Rack That Finally Goes Where You Go
The Slim Fold Dish Rack does not fix a problem most campers knew they had. It reveals one. Once you have dried a full camp dinner’s worth of dishes on a 14-inch rack that then disappears into 1.2 inches of flat profile and slides into your bag, the damp tea towel on the folding table feels exactly like what it is – a workaround you were never given a reason to stop using.
For the camp kitchen-minded, it is the one piece of kit that serious outdoor cooks somehow overlooked, designed with a spring mechanism precise enough to earn a patent and a form factor disciplined enough to go anywhere. For everyone else, the Slim Fold Dish Rack is a $75 object that earns its place in the camping bag all summer and earns it again on the kitchen counter every other month of the year.
Either way, once it comes on one trip, it does not stay home again.
The post Your Dish Rack Stays Home When You Go Camping. This $75 One Doesn’t. first appeared on Yanko Design.