Every crafter has a version of this drawer: partial sheets of specialty paper in sizes that do not fit a standard folder, an odd bag of beads in colors that do not match anything else in their collection, the end of a paint tube they keep because it still has something in it. These are the supplies that end up in the trash because they seem too awkward to keep and too awkward to sell.
On BATCH, awkward is the sweet spot. These five categories of supplies are in persistent demand for trading — even in small quantities, even in odd sizes, even without original packaging.
Partial sheets of specialty paper
Watercolor paper, cardstock, vellum, Japanese papers — anything that comes in large sheets and gets cut down for a project. The leftover piece that is "too small to frame but too good to throw away" is exactly what someone else is looking for. Crafters doing small work (card-making, journal covers, collage) specifically seek out these odd-size pieces.
Odd-lot beads and jewelry findings
Tohoku and Miyuki seed beads in bulk packs often leave you with half-bags of odd colors after a project. Chain snippets, clasps, earwire pairs in small quantities, spacer beads in mixed lots — all of it is fair game. Jewelry makers buy findings in bulk and end up with leftovers in quantities that are too small to sell but too useful to discard.
Leftover yarn in non-standard weights and fibers
Yarn becomes trade-canonical on BATCH very quickly because it is genuinely hard to throw away and genuinely useful in small amounts. Partial skeins of fingering weight, leftover mill-ends in unusual colorways, single balls of a discontinued colorway — all trade. The projects that use leftover yarn (scrappy blankets, stripe patterns, small accessories) are well-documented and popular.
Paint and ink in opened-but-unused quantities
Artist-grade supplies are expensive, and buying a color you end up not using is a specific kind of waste that crafters learn to avoid. Opened but barely touched tubes of gouache, pans of watercolor from a half-used palette, jars of ink that were bought for a project and never opened — these are the supplies most likely to be sitting in a drawer right now.
Sewing patterns and fabric remnants
Commercial sewing patterns retain value remarkably well — a $2 vintage McCall's pattern in good condition is worth $8-12 to the right buyer. Fabric remnants (the piece left after you cut a garment) in interesting fabrics are actively sought by quilters, crafters doing small projects, and people who make their own quilt binding. Do not throw away the selvage edges from interesting fabrics — they trade.
The common thread
All five of these categories share a structural feature: they are supplies that the original owner could not use at the quantity or size they were bought in, but which are large enough or complete enough to be genuinely useful to someone else starting a project of a different scale.
The market that handles these supplies formally (retail, resale shops) is optimized for complete, standardized inventory. BATCH is optimized for the opposite — the partial, the odd-lot, the non-standard. That is the gap trading on BATCH fills.
Before you throw anything away: is there a chance someone else has the specific project this piece was cut for? If yes, it is worth listing.
What are you about to throw away?
Open the drawer. Look at the odd-lot supplies. That is your trading inventory.
List Your Supplies →