A pipet allows you to transport exact measurements of liquids. You will need a volumetric pipet, which has one graduation meant to carry an exact volume, or a Mohr pipet, which has graduations for a number of volumes. You should also get a pipet filler, which is used to put liquids into a pipet.
A lab isn't complete without a proper selection of flasks and beakers. You should get an Erlenmeyer flask, which is used to contain chemical reactions and solutions, and a Volumetric flask, which will help you create solutions, according to the Tempe Union High School District. The Florance flask has a rounded bottom for boiling liquids. Beakers are necessary and you can use them for many tasks, although they will not provide exact measurements. A graduated cylinder is helpful for measuring the volume of liquid. A selection of smaller test tubes could come in handy, and you should get a test tube support rack and a test tube brush for cleaning.
Labs use a variety of dishes. An evaporating dish, for example, recovers dissolved solids after evaporation. You can also use a watch glass in a similar fashion for small amounts of liquid. A mortar and pestle are helpful for grinding up solids into powders. Use a dessicator to provide a dry environment after heating up a substance in a crucible.
Your lab will require other equipment, such as a ring stand and wire gauze to support glassware above a table, a utility clamp to hold test tubes or flasks, crucibles for heating materials and crucible tongs to handle the crucible. Use a filter funnel to filter solids from liquids, a wash bottle for rinsing solids out of a container, chemical spoons to transfer solids to a scale and hose clamps to close up hoses. You will also need a scoopula, a utensil for transferring solids.