Summary
What this review covers
This review focuses on the 50 piece count, plastic grip shape, tie hole, and use with shade cloth, garden netting, and greenhouse film.
Pros
The upside
- The 50 piece count gives a cover kit many clip points for shade cloth, netting, and greenhouse film.
- The plastic clip shape adds a tie hole to mesh and fabric edges.
- The compact pieces store neatly with folded shade cloth, twine, and row-cover supplies.
Cons
The tradeoffs
- Clip grip depends on the fabric mesh and edge thickness.
- A quick fit check helps each clip seat cleanly before the full cover is tied.
Who it is for
Fit and feel
Good match:
This set suits gardeners fastening shade cloth, bird netting, greenhouse film, patio plant covers, and mesh panels that need small tie points along the edge.
What to know:
Store clips, cord, and fabric in the same bin. A matched storage habit keeps seasonal shade and cover work ready for the next warm afternoon or cool evening check.
Where to check it
Check Mity Rain 50 Pcs Shade Cloth Clips
Open the current merchant listing if the buyer fit and tradeoffs still line up.
- Amazon opens the Mity Rain 50 piece shade cloth clips product page.
Breakdown
Full review
Clip points for mesh and cover fabric
Mity Rain 50 Pcs Shade Cloth Clips are small plastic fasteners for creating tie points on shade cloth, garden netting, greenhouse film, and anti-bird mesh. Each clip grips the fabric and leaves a hole for twine, cord, or a light bungee.
That tie point helps a cover connect to hoops, posts, wire, fence lines, greenhouse frames, or patio rails. It turns a plain fabric edge into a managed edge with places to guide tension.
A 50 piece set for seasonal cover bins
The 50 piece count suits a cover bin that serves several small jobs. A gardener can keep clips with shade cloth, mesh netting, row cover, and twine so the parts stay together during setup and cleanup.
The clips are compact, so they fit well in a small lidded container. That makes them simple to carry to a bed, bench, or greenhouse shelf.
Fit-check the fabric first
Shade cloth and garden netting come in many textures. Before clipping a full panel, test one piece at the corner. The clip should close with the fabric seated in the grip area and the tie hole facing the anchor direction.
Once the first clip feels settled, spacing the remaining clips becomes a calm layout task. Even clip spacing helps the cover sit neatly over the plants.
Good match
This set suits gardeners fastening shade cloth, bird netting, greenhouse film, patio plant covers, and mesh panels that need small tie points along the edge.
What to know
Store clips, cord, and fabric in the same bin. A matched storage habit keeps seasonal shade and cover work ready for the next warm afternoon or cool evening check.