Features
- CEILING HOOKS KIT: 90 Pack 6 sizes white screw-in ceiling hooks. 20Pcs 1/2 inch, 20Pcs 5/8 inch, 20Pcs 3/4 inch, 10Pcs 7/8 inch, 10Pcs 1 inch, 10Pcs 1 - 1/4 inches. Enough quantity to meet your use and replacement needs.
- HIGH-QUALITY: Our ceiling hooks adopt a good coating soft and smooth vinyl rubber and stainless steel, beautiful and durable appearance, not afraid of rust. Stainless steel sharp and strong, high corrosion resistance.
- EASY TO USE: The screw end design makes the cup hooks very easy to install, sharp eye tips are easy to install on the ceiling, wood, wall, can be reused many times.
- WIDELY USED: Our ceiling hooks perfect for indoor and outdoor use. You can install under the cupboard to hang beautiful coffee cups or hang string lights and holiday decorations. It can also be widely used in the kitchen, laundry, garage, office and other places hanging kitchen utensils, towels, baskets, keys, hats and other daily necessities.
- WHAT YOU GET: 90 Pcs white ceiling hooks kit, our 7*24 friendly customer service for peace of mind.
Specifications
Color | White |
Related Tools
A 90-piece kit of white vinyl-coated screw-in ceiling hooks in six sizes (1/2", 5/8", 3/4", 7/8", 1", 1-1/4") for hanging items from ceilings, walls, or wood. The hooks have stainless-steel cores with a smooth vinyl coating for corrosion resistance; sharp screw ends allow easy manual installation and removal for indoor or outdoor use such as cups, plants, lights, and utensils.
Romeda 90 Pcs White Ceiling Hooks kit, 6 Sizes Vinyl Coated Screw-in Plant, Kitchen, Cup, Ceiling Hooks for Hanging Review
Why I reached for this hook kit
I keep a small bin of fasteners and hooks in my workshop, and over time it had become a mismatched collection of whatever I’d grabbed at the hardware store in a pinch. I wanted a single, tidy set that could cover most household hanging tasks—cups in the kitchen, string lights on the patio, a projector screen in the den, even a stuffed animal net in a kid’s room. That’s what led me to Romeda’s vinyl‑coated screw‑in hook kit. After several weeks of putting them to work around the house and outside, I’m confident calling this my new default for light to medium-duty hanging.
What’s in the box
The kit includes 90 white hooks in six sizes: 1/2", 5/8", 3/4", 7/8", 1", and 1‑1/4". There are more of the smaller sizes and fewer of the largest, which matches how I tend to use hooks in real life. They arrive in a compact, flat, transparent organizer that actually holds up—no flimsy hinges that crack the first week. The case makes it easy to toss into a drawer or toolbox and find the size you need without rummaging.
Each hook has a stainless‑steel core with a smooth white vinyl coating, and a self-tapping screw end. The coating is even and doesn’t have the rough seams or flashing you sometimes see on bargain hooks. More importantly, it’s thick enough to protect delicate items (mugs, utensils, cables) from scratches.
Materials and build quality
The core material matters. These aren’t mild steel; they’re stainless, which has two practical advantages: better corrosion resistance and a bit more strength at the threads. I installed several outdoors under a soffit and on a pergola beam, and after a month in wet weather, I’m not seeing orange stains or pitting. The vinyl coating also cleans up with a wipe—dust and spiderwebs don’t cling.
The screw tips are sharp and centered, which makes starting them easier and reduces wandering when you press into wood. Threads are crisp and bite well into soft and hardwoods. In soft pine and MDF, I could drive the smaller sizes by hand; the larger ones benefited from a pilot hole and a little leverage with pliers.
Installation experience
- Wood studs/joists: These excel here. I used a 1/16"–3/32" pilot hole for the smaller hooks and 7/64"–1/8" for the larger ones. With a pilot, the vinyl coating stays intact and the hook seats flush without splitting the wood.
- Drywall: You can’t treat these like toggle hooks. For anything more than very light items (keys, a hat), pair them with a plastic anchor or, better, land them in a stud. For a projector screen, I found a joist and used the 1‑1/4" size—rock solid.
- MDF and particleboard: They work, but pilot holes are non-negotiable to avoid blowing out the substrate. Don’t over‑torque; MDF threads strip quickly.
- Outdoor wood: Pre-drill and use a dab of exterior sealant in the hole if you want to be fussy. The stainless core and coating hold up well, but the wood around them still needs care.
A small installation tip: to get that last quarter‑turn without marring the coating, wrap plier jaws with electrical tape or use a short length of rubber tubing over the hook. Alternatively, chuck a scrap of hardwood with a drilled hole into a cordless drill as a “driver” for quicker installs.
Real‑world uses and performance
- Kitchen storage: The 1/2" and 5/8" sizes under a shelf hold measuring spoons and mug handles without looking bulky. The white coating blends into painted cabinets better than brass or bare steel. No scraping or squeaking when you lift a mug off the hook.
- Closet organization: A row of 3/4" hooks creates an easy grab‑and‑go line for hats and small bags. They keep a low profile and don’t jut out awkwardly.
- Projector screen and light décor: The 1" and 1‑1/4" hooks handled a retractable screen and seasonal string lights. For the screen, mounting into a joist made the difference; into drywall alone would have been asking too much of any screw‑hook.
- Kids’ room: A pair of larger hooks with a net supported a mountain of plush toys just fine. Even with frequent tugs, nothing loosened after several weeks.
- Patio: String lights have stayed up through wind and rain. The coating prevented any abrasion on the cable jacket.
Across all these tasks, I never dealt with flaking vinyl or bent hooks. The limiting factor was always the substrate, not the hardware.
Weight capacity and limits
There’s no posted load rating, which is common for generic screw hooks. Practically speaking, these are for light to medium loads: kitchenware, plants, lights, small tools, small shelves, and organizers. A potted plant is fine if you’re into a joist; a heavy hanging chair is not. If you need to support serious weight, step up to lag eye screws and proper hangers.
I pushed a pair of 1‑1/4" hooks into a ceiling joist to try a heavier fern basket. The hooks were unbothered; the joist and my caution were the constraints. If you feel a hook turning too easily or not biting, back out, increase your pilot size slightly, and try again—or find solid backing.
Durability and finish
The vinyl coating is the quiet hero here. It:
- Protects items from scratches and rattles
- Adds a bit of grip so items don’t slide off at a small angle
- Masks small installation scuffs and blends into white paint
After outdoor exposure, the coating stayed put and didn’t chalk. Indoors, the white finish hides well under shelves and against trim. If you prefer a different aesthetic, you’ll need paint‑able hooks or a different colorway; this kit is white only.
What could be better
- Color options: White suits most interiors, but a neutral gray, tan, or black set would open more use cases without standing out.
- Load guidance: Even a simple chart for recommended substrates and pilot sizes would help DIYers avoid over‑ or under‑drilling.
- Anchor inclusion: A handful of matching drywall anchors would make this kit truly grab‑and‑go for apartments where stud access is hit or miss.
None of these are deal‑breakers, but they’re worth knowing before you start a project.
Practical tips for best results
- Always pre‑drill in hardwoods and MDF. It preserves the coating and gives a cleaner seat.
- For drywall, use anchors unless the load is trivial. Better yet, map your studs/joists with a reliable stud finder.
- Don’t over‑torque. If the coating starts to twist, stop and use pliers with padded jaws for controlled turns.
- Mix sizes thoughtfully. Smaller hooks look cleaner for keys and utensils; step up for odd handles or thick ropes so items don’t bind.
Value and who it’s for
Individually, hooks can be surprisingly expensive. Getting 90 pieces across six sizes in a slim organizer is both economical and practical. For anyone setting up a kitchen, craft room, garage wall, or patio lights, having the variety on hand saves trips to the store and keeps your installs consistent. If you routinely need heavy-duty hardware, this won’t replace lag hooks and anchors, but it fills 90% of day‑to‑day hanging needs with a cleaner finish.
Bottom line
Romeda’s vinyl‑coated screw‑in hooks have earned a permanent spot in my kit. The stainless core, clean coating, sharp threads, and genuinely useful size spread make them reliable and pleasant to use. They install easily, hold well when used appropriately, and look tidy doing it.
Recommendation: I recommend this kit for anyone needing a versatile, household‑ready assortment of screw hooks for light to medium loads in wood or anchored drywall. It’s especially good if you value a protective, low‑profile finish and want one organized box that covers most hanging tasks. If your projects lean heavily toward concrete, metal, or very high loads, pair this with appropriate anchors and heavy hardware—or choose a different solution. For everyday organizing and décor, though, these hooks strike the right balance of ease, durability, and value.
Project Ideas
Business
Event Micro-Decor Package
Offer a turnkey small-event décor service (backyard parties, pop-ups, micro-weddings) that uses ceiling-hook-mounted installations: string-light canopies, hanging florals, and suspended signage. Package includes hooks, lights/greenery rental, setup and takedown. Charge per linear foot or per installation plus materials markup; hooks keep setups quick and repeatable.
Hanging-Garden Subscription Kit
Sell monthly or seasonal kits containing pre-potted herbs/succulents, a selection of the correct-size hooks, mounting instructions and care tips. Customers receive new plants and replacement hooks as needed — good recurring revenue. Upsell with custom wood hangers or branded drip trays and offer tiered plans (starter, entertainer, chef).
DIY Workshop & Kit Sales
Host in-person or virtual workshops teaching participants how to build mug racks, plant mobiles, and light canopies using the hook kit. Include a kit fee that covers the hooks and basic hardware; sell premium kits (decorative chains, handmade pots) afterward. Workshops build community, generate immediate product sales and create social-media marketing content.
Airbnb & Short-Term-Rental Optimization Service
Offer a service to outfit short-term rentals with space-saving hanging solutions: under-cabinet mug hooks, entryway key/hat hooks, and hanging storage for utensils. Supply the hook kits and perform quick installs between bookings. Promote as a low-cost way for hosts to increase guest convenience and perceived value — charge per-room or per-property.
Creative
Vertical Herb & Succulent Mobile
Build a tiered hanging herb garden by mounting a wooden plank or metal ring to the ceiling and suspending small pots at staggered heights using the various hook sizes. Use the smaller 1/2"–5/8" hooks for tiny pots and the 1"–1-1/4" hooks for heavier planters. Great for kitchens or balconies — add a drip tray and rotate plants for sunlight. Tip: pre-drill pilot holes in wood or use anchors in drywall for weight-bearing reliability.
Under-Shelf Mug Rack
Create a neat coffee station by screwing the 3/4" or 7/8" hooks under open shelving to hang mugs by their handles. Arrange hooks in pairs for larger mugs or stagger rows to display sets. The white vinyl finish keeps a clean look; this project is fast (a few minutes per hook) and frees counter/cabinet space.
String Light Canopy
Make a cozy indoor/outdoor canopy by installing hooks around a patio perimeter or in a ceiling grid, then draping string lights or festoon bulbs between them. Use the longer hooks where lines cross or tie-off points are heavier. The corrosion-resistant core and vinyl coating are suited to semi-outdoor spaces — combine with weatherproof bulbs for summer evenings.
Hanging Gallery & Macrame Display
Design a floating gallery by suspending lightweight frames, macrame wall-hangings, and small baskets from ceiling hooks at varying heights. Use shorter hooks for flush hanging near the ceiling and longer ones when you want art to hang lower. This creates depth in a room and is perfect for rental-friendly displays because hooks are easy to remove and replace.