Apr 14, 2026•2 min read
We designed the Tuck & Lock for food. Our customers had other plans.
It started with a photo someone sent us — a Tuck & Lock on their desk holding pens, binder clips, and sticky notes. Then another customer sent one from their bathroom — cotton pads, Q-tips, and travel bottles, all organized in a kraft container on the counter. Then we saw one in a kitchen drawer holding spice jars and tea packets.
We didn't plan this. But it makes perfect sense.
The Tuck & Lock is rigid. It holds its shape on a shelf, in a drawer, on a countertop. The lid tucks back and stays open so you can see everything inside. And that flat front panel? People started labeling them — "Art Supplies," "Tech Cables," "Vanity & Beauty Kit" — turning a food container into a modular storage system.
Here's what we've seen customers use them for so far: desk organizers for home offices, bathroom caddies, junk drawer dividers, craft supply bins, kids' activity kits, travel toiletry boxes, garage hardware sorters, spice drawer organizers, business card holders, and charging station trays.
At a few cents per container, you're getting an organizer that looks intentional, stacks clean, and costs less than any plastic bin at the store. And when you're done with it, it's recyclable. No guilt, no waste.
We made containers for food. You turned them into containers for life.