Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.Kerry
2025-08-24 15:04:20
I grow many types of berries and use these to collect and gift them. I also use them to store a myriad of things.
Marsha
2025-08-16 12:29:30
These pint sized berry baskets have a very nice appearance. The plastic material is thin and flexes easily, but you can press down on them as hard as you can, and the basket will pop back up to its full height and not be damaged at all. That's a great quality, especially for repeated use, and it's not like a pint of berries or other small produce weighs very much. The largest openings are in the top two rows of the basket design and are 1/2" wide. The lowest row of the design has 3/8" openings. The bottom openings are 1/4" wide.I purchased these to hold cherry tomatoes and raspberries when I harvest them from my garden. My neighbor has a self serve farm stand, and he lets me sell my excess garden produce, if it's not something he's growing or selling at the time. I also donate my organic garden produce to the local food pantry regularly and share with my neighbors as well. Putting in an extra heirloom cherry tomato plant or two is an easy way for me to make a few dollars for my garden fund and have plenty to share as well. In the past I saved any store clam packs I bought produce in and the fiber containers I got when buying from the farmer's market and other farm stands, but it's never enough to match the number of cherry tomatoes I harvest. Plus, they're not always the same size. Having plenty of equally sized containers that look nice will allow me to equally price my tomatoes and likely increase sales, it will save the food pantry time having to package the cherry tomatoes themselves, neighbors won't have to return any bowls, and they're going to hold the ones I keep nicely too. I've worked at a staffed farm stand in the past, and I know these would have worked well there too. As long as the hole sizes are small enough, anything displayed and sold in them would be a step up from the typically used fiber boxes.As for my raspberries, I think the holes in the upper two rows might be too large to contain them, but I won't know that until I start harvesting from my raspberry patch in July. I keep and preserve 95% of my raspberry harvest for my family, so if I put them in a cardboard flat it shouldn't be an issue.The one thing to think about is if the flexible sides will be an issue for what you are storing or selling. It's easy to squeeze the sides too tight when picking up a basket. That may or may not be an issue when they're filled. I'm stressing them on purpose to find their limits, so the average person might be more gentle. It's not like the fiber boxes can't be crushed easily too, but they are a bit more sturdy than these in the similar pint size, when it comes to squeezing the sides.Whether you're looking for convenient ways to store your own smaller sized produce harvests, or you sell your goods at a farmer's market or farm stand, these pint sized baskets should meet your needs quite nicely. And if you're not buying cases of 1,000 fiber boxes, you'll save some money too.
Sue
2025-08-03 17:17:55
Cleansing easily, keeps the fruit fresh and protected. Sturdy
Customer
2025-07-26 20:00:12
very pleased, will purchase again.
Wlfchic
2025-06-29 10:56:04
Product does what it says holds the veggies well made sturdy little plastic baskets that's like you find in the grocery store I thought I was going to have to recycle them but the amount I got for the price was well worth it will order again
Jane Beer
2025-02-01 12:57:47
Nice value and quality, item was just as I expected
Mark S.
2025-01-06 18:50:07
Wife got these for crafting and says they are perfect. Lots of quantity and made well enough to hold up to mid-light duty.
Recommended Products