Easter

On this Easter category page, most people narrow results by format first: single items versus multipacks, then by use (gifting, table dressing, or activities) and by size notes such as 100g–500g packs or A4/A5 craft sets. The range spans chocolate eggs, themed gifts, hampers, decorations, and craft kits, pulled from multiple partner retailers for side-by-side browsing. Some partners publish colour variants (pastel, bright, metallic finish) as separate entries, while others group them under one product with dropdown shades. It feels seasonal and a bit uneven. Stock and options rotate as partners update their listings, so the same item can appear in a different bundle size or with a new design a week later.

Read on for how Easter listings are grouped, what varies by retailer, and what to check before choosing.

Primary item types you’ll run into

Chocolate products, giftable keepsakes, and activity items dominate the mix. You’ll notice easter chocolate eggs shown as single 100g–200g eggs, boxed duos, and mixed multipacks, with flavour notes like milk, dark, or filled centres sometimes placed in the title. Some listings present the same design as separate entries for each box size, while others keep one entry and switch sizes in a selector. Novelty gifts also appear as mugs, plush toys, and small gadgets with 10–25cm dimensions. It’s busy at times. Ebay entries can be especially varied, with personalised options and bundle counts changing between similar-looking listings.

Bundles, sets, and “gift-ready” formats

Partners publish bundles in noticeably different ways. A set of easter hampers might be a single pre-packed basket with a stated weight (for example 1kg total contents) and a fixed contents list, while another partner lists the same theme as separate add-ons—chocolate, a mug, and a soft toy—sold as individual lines. Watch the packaging format. Some hampers arrive in a wicker-style basket or cardboard gift box, and others are “bagged” bundles with cellophane wrap and ribbon. Into The Blue listings sometimes lean toward experience-style gifting, where the “format” is a voucher pack or themed presentation rather than a physical basket.

Sizing, pack counts, and spec differences

Size information is not always presented the same way across retailers. For easter egg hunt kit listings, one partner states “24 clues + 12 signs” and gives card dimensions like A6, while another only shows a total piece count and relies on photos for scale. Keep it concrete. For chocolate, pack size might be shown as grams, number of eggs, or “servings”, and the same product can appear as a 3-pack versus a 6-pack in separate entries. Personalised items add another layer, with character limits such as 10–15 letters on tags or print areas sized in centimetres.

Materials, build details, and functional features

Materials drive the practical differences, especially for décor and re-usable gifts. With easter decorations, look for paper bunting versus felt garlands, plastic eggs versus wooden eggs, and LED string lights that specify battery type (AA or CR2032) and cable length such as 1.5m–3m. Small details matter. Some items use adhesive pads, others use jute twine or suction hooks, which changes where they’ll sit (painted walls, glass, or outdoor fences). Light in the Box product copy often includes finish notes like matte pastel or metallic sheen, plus closure details on gift bags such as drawstring versus zip.

Practical checks people make before choosing

Confirm what’s included in the box: piece counts for craft sets, number of eggs in multipacks, and whether a hamper is pre-filled or assembled from separate items. For easter craft kits, check material call-outs like foam stickers, felt shapes, pipe cleaners, and PVA glue, plus age guidance and whether scissors are required. Photos can mislead. Also scan for delivery format details such as flat-packed cardboard boxes versus rigid tins, and whether personalisation is printed, engraved, or supplied as letter stickers. If a listing has multiple shades, verify the selected colour name matches the picture.

How Discount Promo Codes Can Reduce the Cost of Easter Shopping

Discount codes relate to lowering the overall cost when buying seasonal items like easter bunny gifts in specific sizes (for example a 20cm plush versus a 30cm plush) or bundles (single item versus 2-pack). The platform provides access to discount codes for partner retailers, and retailer code-page links may appear alongside product listings. Some listings sit next to code information while others don’t—placement depends on the retailer connection rather than the product type. It’s not a straight line. Separately, 20% of profits are donated to charity each month, and that donation is supported by how the platform operates when shoppers use retailer links and code pages.