Overview

Manfrotto Pro Light Cineloader Drawer

The Pro Light Cineloader Drawer from Manfrotto provides an easy solution for seamlessly transferring your camera gear from a studio drawer to your Manfrotto Cineloader medium or large bag. Protected by Manfrotto M-Guard thermoformed EVA material, this drawer keeps your equipment consistently organised and easily accessible thanks to a detachable, hinged lid secured by integrated elastic loops.

SKU: GC40-MF-MB PL-CL-D

Manfrotto Pro Light Cineloader Drawer

Manfrotto Pro Light Cineloader Drawer

The Pro Light Cineloader Drawer from Manfrotto provides an easy solution for seamlessly transferring your camera gear from a studio drawer to your Manfrotto Cineloader medium or large bag. Protected by Manfrotto M-Guard thermoformed EVA material, this drawer keeps your equipment consistently organised and easily accessible thanks to a detachable, hinged lid secured by integrated elastic loops.

Easily Transfer Gear

Keep your gear organised and with you at all times by transferring the drawer from your studio storage to your Cineloader medium or large camera set bag.

Impact Resistant

Manrfrotto's M-Guard technology uses high-density foam to protect your gear components.

Dedicated Design

This drawer organiser is specifically designed to fit inside Cineloader medium and large camera bags. Its semirigid design allows you to stack multiple drawers within a bag.

Key Features:

For Cineloader Medium & Large Bags

Transfer Gear from Studio Drawer to Bag

Semirigid Design, Impact Protection

Stackable Design with Divided Interior

Hinged, Detachable Lid, Elastic Fastener

Brushed Fleece Interior, Lift Loops

Shock-Absorbing M-Guard Protection

What's in the Box:

Manfrotto Pro Light Cineloader Drawer

Hinged Lid

Regular price $47.96
Sale price $47.96 Regular price $50.00 Save 4%
Pay with
Pay with
Found a better price? Request a price match

Price Match

Fill out the price match form below, and we will be in touch shortly.

Price Match Request For:
Manfrotto Pro Light Cineloader Drawer
Manfrotto Pro Light Cineloader Drawer
Our Price: $47.96

Price Match

Fill out the price match form below, and we will be in touch shortly.

Competitor Information:
Your Details:
In Stock

Checking availability...

$47.96

Product Overview

Manfrotto Pro Light Cineloader Drawer

The Pro Light Cineloader Drawer from Manfrotto provides an easy solution for seamlessly transferring your camera gear from a studio drawer to your Manfrotto Cineloader medium or large bag. Protected by Manfrotto M-Guard thermoformed EVA material, this drawer keeps your equipment consistently organised and easily accessible thanks to a detachable, hinged lid secured by integrated elastic loops.

Need advice?

Speak to one of our dedicated Australian-based sales team members.

Call us

Product Reviews

Panel Discussion at Lunar Studios

Everyone Can Take a Picture. Not Everyone Can Hold the Room

What an agent, a Vogue visuals producer and a brand-side creative lead really look for in photographers now. There is a point in almost every creative career where the work alone stops...

View post
Beauty Photography Tips: Three Things I Wish I Knew Earlier

Beauty Photography Tips: Three Things I Wish I Knew Earlier

Beauty photography tips from Oliver Minnett’s Georges workshop, covering lighting, direction, working with a creative team, and using Sony and Profoto gear.

View post
Models on stage at Karla Spetics show

How We Lit Karla Spetic's Australian Fashion Week Show with P...

We were invited by Karla Spetic to help light her runway, we chose Profoto's new LED lights for the job!

View post
Ricardo sits with Ollie and discusses mobile podcasting setups

Sony A7R VI First Thoughts: A Portrait Photographer’s Take on...

Sony has just launched the new Sony A7R VI, the latest camera in its high-resolution Alpha line, and I was lucky enough to spend some time with it earlier this week. I...

View post
Ricardo sits with Ollie and discusses mobile podcasting setups

Mobile Podcasting Setups Explained: From First Rig to Full Pr...

Mobile podcasting isn’t about shortcuts. It’s about picking gear that actually works, in the places podcasts actually happen. I used to chase the “best” setup. Turns out, the best setup is the...

View post
Tilta Sony FX Rigging

Rigging Up Your Sony Cinema Camera

Rigging gets a bad rap because a lot of rigs are built backwards. People buy parts first, bolt everything on, and end up with a camera that looks serious but shoots worse....

View post
Gracaie Stendl Portfolio Images

What Makes a Good Photographer? A Portfolio Deconstruction

Clyde Vaughan Guest post by Clyde Vaughan — ahead of  Clyde's talk on January 22: “How to create incredible images: A talk by Clyde Vaughan”. If you ask “what makes a good...

View post
Ollie Jones holds the 22 kg DJI Power 2000

The End of the Generator? Hands-on with the DJI Power 2000

We’ve all been there: you’re on a remote shoot, beautiful location, but you’re either scrambling to find a power outlet or lugging a massive, noisy petrol generator through the bush. We’ve been...

View post
Oliver Minnett teaching a photography workshop

Why 2026 Might be the year to change from DSLR to Mirrorless

Alright—let’s do the DSLR vs mirrorless thing properly. Not “on paper”, not “in theory”, but head-to-head on the stuff that actually matters when you’re out shooting. My name's Oliver Minnett, I'm Georges...

View post
Two Leica M11P's on a desk

Leica is now at Georges Cameras

Some cameras don’t just document your life; they become part of it. I bought a Leica M6 in 2012. Photography had always been a part of my life; my dad had run...

View post