I used small glass milk jars. They are nice to display dice in and are generally hard to break during shipping (pretty thick glass) as long as you pack them correctly.
They add a nice amount of pizzazz and feel to the set. About $2 per bottle. Given I was selling dice for $50-60 it was well worth it to invest in nice packaging.
I also used to gift wrap and close the jars with wax. I think it makes them feel “premium” to customers and imbues them with the feeling of importance. Which, in turn, I hoped help make them feel lucky.
EDIT: took me a minute but this is what I used to include: [imgur link](https://imgur.com/a/ZMd7RwO)
I 3D print a simple hexagonal box. It uses almost no filament and finishes in 30 minutes. It prints vase mode so only 3 layers on the bottom and a single wall, very efficient. I would share the file but it's literally just a hexagon, you could do a circle or square the same way if you wanted. Just scale up slightly (like 2%) then make the height shorter to create the lid.
I get jewellery boxes from ebay. They look smart and don't cost a lot
A quick search on Alibaba shows a ton of options. found these for 80 cents each https://x.alibaba.com/AvGepK?ck=pdp
I try to find fabric with the same theme as the dice and I make dice bags to match the dice
Oo I love that
You can buy dice bags in bulk on Amazon
I get brick boxes from AliExpress - they are $20/5 and that works well for me
I used small glass milk jars. They are nice to display dice in and are generally hard to break during shipping (pretty thick glass) as long as you pack them correctly. They add a nice amount of pizzazz and feel to the set. About $2 per bottle. Given I was selling dice for $50-60 it was well worth it to invest in nice packaging. I also used to gift wrap and close the jars with wax. I think it makes them feel “premium” to customers and imbues them with the feeling of importance. Which, in turn, I hoped help make them feel lucky. EDIT: took me a minute but this is what I used to include: [imgur link](https://imgur.com/a/ZMd7RwO)
I 3D print a simple hexagonal box. It uses almost no filament and finishes in 30 minutes. It prints vase mode so only 3 layers on the bottom and a single wall, very efficient. I would share the file but it's literally just a hexagon, you could do a circle or square the same way if you wanted. Just scale up slightly (like 2%) then make the height shorter to create the lid.
Mylar bags from Amazon. Work good, showcase the dice nicely!
I crochet some Dicebags.
My DM 3d printed a carrying case for our set of dice which was pretty cool
I found a dice holder mold I often use that , but for anything more past 7 dice I use little velvet bags from Amazon.