I’m too young to remember cracker barrels, but I do remember bulk packing in hinged tins about 1’ square. We kept them for storage, but shops that sold loose <cookies> returned the boxes for re-use.
*** Flash of ancient memories go by. ***
Oh, yeah. Wax paper.
Kind of before my time; but I expect that people who bought things in barrels very often found the barrels useful (for storing various things in, and/or for shipping things to other people); and, if not or if they wound up with too many, I suspect they broke them down and used them for firewood. The staves wouldn’t be good for a long-holding fire like you’d want last thing at night to still be decent coals in the morning, but they’d be great for quick cookfires or for getting larger wood going.
Small things wouldn’t be packed in barrels, unless you were buying a whole barrel’s worth of small things.
I wasn’t around in the “olden days”, but I think I can say for a certainty that things were wrapped in such a way that you could unwrap them without a struggle and actually re-wrap them the same way because they were wrapped by human beings in the first place.
Now, we have the terrifying, “Factory Packaged”. For example, when I order a new set of bed sheets for my queen sized bed, it arrives as a rectangular block containing the mattress sheet, two pillow cases, and the main sheet. I have never, no matter how hard I’ve tried, been able to smoothly fold all of that up and get the components back in the same plastic zip bag. It appears not to be humanly possible!
This thread is about goods being packaged for sale, but your post seems to be about people sending packages in the mail, right?
It’d be an interesting reply if you are actually talking about shipping items from a store to a customer (like from a catalog) but I don’t think you are…?
Otherwise, this is literally still how stuff is shipped between people in the mail today. I have newspaper and stacks of little boxes too.
They don’t do that anymore? We did that when I was in school- they even handed out free pre-printed book covers for that very purpose- they usually had folding instructions on one side, and a combination of PSAs and advertisements on the other side (I distinctly recall that in about 1984-ish (5th grade), the book covers were warning about the perils of mosquito-borne disease like dengue fever, yellow fever, etc… which seemed both pertinent (Houston has a lot of mosquitoes), and fantastic (how many people got dengue fever in the US in 1984?)
I eventually figured out that the best way to cover books was to use brown paper grocery bags turned inside out, with duct-tape reinforcement along the edges, spine and corners.
I don’t know if people still do it, but we did both the Grocery-Bag-cut-open-and-spread-out as a book cover and using book covers provided by the school.
Of course, you could also provide your own. Topps bubble gum in the 1960s had a series of “Batty Book Covers”, some of them depicted here:
https://www.collectors.com/trading-card/1968-batty-book-covers-wrapper-topps/-5172482021613460017