If you can adjust temp and humidity in your garage the sweet spot is 60F and 60% humidity. If not it is what it is, like mine. Once you can snap small stems it's time to start curing. Jars, buckets and even large bags will work.
Remove the large fan leaves. Remove the flowers from stems and place them in your curing containers. You don’t need to manicure the flowers at this stage but large fan leaves need to go.
Depending on the moisture still in the flowers the containers will notmally build up some condensation and the reason the containers need to be "burped." It’s an industry term

We burp the jars, buckets bags etc by opening and allowing some fresh air in for 5-10 minutes depending on the moisture in the flowers, gently shake up the flowers to reposition them then seal them back up and check again in a few hours.
The first couple days are the most difficult because you don't want them to start molding and why they need to be checked often. Check them often and burp them as needed.
After a couple days you'll only have to do this once a day and then less often as they begin to cure. A couple weeks or a month or 6 months are the normal cure times. The longer the cure the smother the smoke.
This is a learning process. Once you do this a few times you'll learn how the process works and it will become easier, promise.
The idea is to slowly dry the flowers without them becoming moldy or dry and brittle.
Then there's long term storage. I give away a lot and process a lot making hash or coconut oil extract and still dump some in the composter. I've found some that was 1 or 2 years old and no longer tasty even though the clear jars were kept in the garage. Light, heat and air all break down organic matter so try to avoid clear containers.
There are bags on the market that work real well for curing but I don’t have much experience with them as long term storage as the ones I bought will only hold about an ounce. Far too small for my needs but they do work great for smaller amounts.
I'm sure I'm missing a few things and hopefully a few others will chime in. Most of us learned the hard way on curing with moldy buds.