I would say that with generics there should rarely ever be a reason to create a custom collection type. But if you must I would say that ProductCollection would best fit the naming conventions of the framework.
Still, consider using a List<Product> or Collection<Product> or better yet IList<Product> or ICollection<Product>.
Edit: This is in response to MrEdmundo's comments below.
In your case you have two choices. The most obvious choice would be to use inheritance like this:
class Ball { }
class BallCollection : List<Ball>
{
public String Color { get; set; }
public String Material { get; set; }
}
I say obvious because it seems like the best idea at first glance but after a bit of thought it becomes clear that this is not the best choice. What if you or Microsoft creates a new SuperAwesomeList<T> and you want to use that to improve the performance of your BallCollection class? It would be difficult because you are tied to the List<T> class through inheritance and changing the base class would potentially break any code that uses BallCollection as a List<T>.
So what is the better solution? I would recommend that in this case you would be better off to favor composition over inheritance. So what would a composition-based solution look like?
class Ball { }
class BallCollection
{
public String Color { get; set; }
public String Material { get; set; }
public IList<Ball> Balls { get; set; }
}
Notice that I have declared the Balls property to be of type IList<T>. This means that you are free to implement the property using whatever type you wish as long as that type implements IList<T>. This means that you can freely use a SuperAwesomeList<T> at any point which makes this type significantly more scalable and much less painful to maintain.