Equipment: Containers of all kinds

Cloth bag



Rucksack







Fanny pack



Purse



Wallet




Shoulder bag




Hand bag



Sack




Basket




Box




Bottle



Test tube



Bucket



Barrel




Preserving jar



Plastic bowl


A big cloth in which to wrap various things. Or you tie it into a sack and hang in on to a stick.


Rucksacks are available in various forms and sizes, from the school kid's backpack for first graders to the big military rucksack in camouflage. They also come in all degrees of quality, from the cheapest ones that start to fall apart the moment you touch them to those that came with a life long guarantee before the Great War.
The materials in which they come range from all sorts of plastics over leather and cloth.


A small pack to hang around your belly. Big enough to stow some essentials. How cute.


A small leather or cloth sack to stow coins of all shapes, like NCR dollars or New Reno casino chips. Usually with a cord to close it.


A piece from before the war. Perfectly sized to carry around paper bills and a few coins. Usually made of leather or cloth. The versions produced after the Great War lack those useless slots for “credit cards”.


Shoulder bags come in the most different types of size, variation and quality. Some are made from leather, some from cloth. Some from the best designers and tailors, made in detailed hand work and to size.


Irreplaceable for the proper lady and other people, that lack bags in their clothing and feel the need to carry a ton of junk with them.


A simple sack, be it made of plastics, cloth or jute. Sacks come up in all sizes in the wasteland, starting with little plastic sacks to big shopping bags and even big potato sacks.


Weaved basket to transport of every possible ware. Again, those are available in all sizes, starting with tiny baskets for strawberries up to Grandma's giant shopping basket.


Boxes are available for any type of wares found in the wasteland. Starting with simple wood or metal boxes up to bulletproof, fireproof, waterproof and radiationproof Vault-Tec boxes that cost nearly 1000$ each.


Bottles, to transport water and other liquids, are made from glass, plastics and even metal. Pretty much all-purpose.


For the smallest doses of liquids. Or maybe metal or stone cuttings.



Buckets can be found in all sizes, from the one liter cleaning bucket up to the 20 liter bucket, from wood and plastic up to metal.


Barrels that store great amounts of liquids are available in great lots in the wasteland. From the old oil drum up to new (or nearly as good as new) stainless steel barrel that holds over 200 liters.


Preserving jars for Grandma's marmalade and anything else the
nice old lady produces in her kitchen.


Reclosable plastic bowls made by CanIt, a subsidiary of Watts Electronics, stormed the domain of the common housewife in a storm, back before the Great War.

Starting at 10 $

0.4 pounds


Starting at 50 $ (up to 500 $)

Starting at 5 pounds






Starting at 20 $

3 pounds


Starting at 25 $

1 pound


Starting at 30 $

1 pound



Starting at 20 $

Starting at 1 pound



Starting at 35 $

Starting at 1 pound


Starting at 5 $

Starting at 0.1 pounds



Starting at 40 $

Starting at 5 pounds



Starting at 40 $

Starting at 5 pounds



Starting at 10 $

Starting at 1 pound


Starting at 25 $

Starting at 0.1 pounds


Starting at 20 $

Starting at 2 pounds


Starting at 200 $

Starting at 20 pounds



Starting at 30 $

1 pound


Starting at 25 $

Starting at 1 pound

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