The quality of plant-based preparations depends on more than just the raw ingredient — the storage vessel is equally important. Green glass filters UV radiation and the shortest blue-light wavelengths of the visible spectrum, the very same range that breaks down the volatile components of essential oils. This pack of 88 50 ml bottles ships without caps, so you can freely choose aluminium, child-resistant or pipette closures — particularly useful for small businesses that want a single uniform bottle across multiple product lines.
What is included in this pack of 88
The pack contains 88 empty 50 ml green glass dropper bottles with no caps. Each bottle is approximately 100 mm tall, 42 mm in diameter and weighs about 70 g net. Gross pack weight is around 6.78 kg. The neck is standard GL18 threaded, so it accepts most off-the-shelf closures on the market.
Green glass and its light-filtering benefit
Green-tinted glass reflects a meaningful portion of the UV and blue-light spectrum, slowing down the photochemical processes that lead to oxidation in essential oils, herbal extracts and cosmetic carrier oils. Glass itself is chemically inert: it releases no plasticisers, BPA or other migratable substances into the contents — unlike plastic vessels, which over time can soften when exposed to citrus-based essential oils.
Why a cap-less option is useful
Many makers prefer to choose the closure based on the application: aromatherapy blends usually call for a pipette dropper, products intended for households with children require a child-resistant cap, and welcome gifts often look best with an aluminium cap. This version offers exactly that flexibility, and the per-unit price is lower if you source closures through a separate channel.
Areas of use
- Bottling essential oil blends and perfume bases under your own label
- Storing facial serums, skincare oils and body oils
- Filling botanical tinctures, hydrosols and flower essences
- Massage oil recipes for small-business packaging
- DIY and artisan brand building with a uniform bottle shape
Cleaning and recycling
Wash empty bottles with warm water and a mild dish soap, then rinse with 70% isopropyl alcohol to remove any residual essential oil scent. Avoid the dishwasher, as high temperatures and strong detergents may fade printed labels. Once fully dry, the bottle can be refilled or placed in glass recycling — glass is endlessly remeltable.