Write your store's popup content
245 products
Sort by:
245 products
Basketball floor
Pen Blanks are a minimum of 3/4" x 3/4"
Bottle Stopper and Ring blanks are 1/2" x 1-1/4" square
Knife Scales are 1-3/8" x 5" x 3/8" minimum
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
Hardin Penworks, LLC, certifies that material supplied to the artisan of the accompanying hand-crafted item was sourced from the original basketball floor of the Carmichael Arena.
Built in 1965 to replace the smaller Woollen Gymnasium, Carmichael Arena is a multi-purpose arena on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in Chapel Hill, NC. It was initially the home of the men’s basketball and wrestling teams. The men’s basketball team moved to their current home at the Dean Smith Center. Coach Dean Smith was the men’s coach for their entire tenure in Carmichael Arena.
The arena is currently the Tar Heels’ home court for women's basketball, women's volleyball, women's gymnastics, and wrestling teams.
Original to 1965, these wooden basketball floor slats were removed during the 1998 renovation.
This material is guaranteed to be 100% Authentic.
Wooden Stadium Seat Slats
Pen Blanks are a minimum of 3/4" x 3/4"
Bottle Stopper and Ring blanks are 1/2" x 1-1/4" square
Knife Scales are 1-3/8" x 5" x 3/8" minimum
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
Hardin Penworks, LLC, certifies that material supplied to the artisan of the accompanying hand-crafted item was sourced from the original wooden seats of the Carmichael Arena.
Built in 1965 to replace the smaller Woollen Gymnasium, Carmichael Arena is a multi-purpose arena on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in Chapel Hill, NC. It was initially the home of the men’s basketball and wrestling teams. The men’s basketball team moved to their current home at the Dean Smith Center. Coach Dean Smith was the men’s coach for their entire tenure in Carmichael Arena.
The arena is currently the Tar Heels’ home court for women's basketball, women's volleyball, women's gymnastics, and wrestling teams.
This material is guaranteed to be 100% Authentic.
Wooden basketball floor pen blanks!
Blanks are 23/32"x23/32"
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with silver foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
------------------------------------------------------------
Carrier Dome is a 49,250-seat domed sports stadium located on the campus of Syracuse University in the University Hill neighborhood of Syracuse, New York. It is home to the Syracuse Orange football, basketball, and lacrosse teams. The Syracuse Orange men's basketball team drew the highest average home attendance in college basketball in 2015-16, with an average of 26,253. In 2006-07, the women's basketball team began playing home games in the Dome. New York high school football state championships as well as the annual New York State Field Band Conference championships are held in the stadium, as are occasional concerts.
The Carrier Dome is the largest domed stadium of any college campus, and the largest domed stadium in the Northeastern United States. It is also the largest on-campus basketball arena in the nation, with a listed capacity of 33,000. However, that number has been exceeded on many occasions with a record attendance of 35,446.
Blanks are from original wooden stadium seats of Cassel Coliseum.
Pen Blanks are a minimum of 3/4" x 3/4"
Ring blanks are 1-1/2" square
Knife Scales are 3/4" x 1-1/2" x 5"
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with foil embossed COA seal. (Full Blocks come with 10 COAs.)
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
Cassell Coliseum is a 10,052-seat multi-purpose arena in Blacksburg, Virginia, United States, that opened in 1962. It is home to the Virginia Tech Hokies men's and women's basketball teams.
Built as a replacement for the much smaller War Memorial Gymnasium, the Coliseum's construction began in 1961. It was fully completed in December 1964 at a cost of $2.7 million.[3] It was designed by Carneal and Johnston (now Ballou Justice Upton Architects, Richmond, Va) and built by T.C. Brittain and Company of Decatur, Georgia. Originally just referred to as "the Coliseum," it was dedicated on September 17, 1977 to the late Stuart K. Cassell, former school business manager, first Vice President of Administration, and major supporter of the building of the arena.
The first game was on January 3, 1962 when the Hokies played Alabama. The Hokies won 91-67. Unfortunately, the crowd sat on the bare concrete risers to watch the game because the seats had not arrived.
In the early years of the Coliseum, the Hokies frequently saw capacity crowds pack the venue. However, student and alumni interest in basketball decreased in the 1990s due to the Hokies' lack of a stable basketball conference home (the Hokies were in three different conferences in nine seasons) and due to the success of the football team. Fan support has begun to gain momentum under coach Seth Greenberg and the school's recent move to the ACC. A raucous student section, nicknamed the "Cassell Guard," has helped transform the Coliseum into a difficult venue for opposing teams in an athletic conference ripe with intimidating basketball arenas.
Blanks are from original wooden stadium seats of Charlotte Coliseum.
Pen Blanks are a minimum of 3/4" x 3/4"
Ring blanks are 1-1/2" square
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
____________________________________________________________________________________________
Charlotte Coliseum was a multi-purpose sports and entertainment arena located in Charlotte, NC. It is best known as the home of the NBA Charlotte Hornets from 1988 to 2002, and the Charlotte Bobcats from 2004 to 2005.
The Coliseum hosted 371 consecutive NBA sell-outs from December 1988 to November 1997, which includes seven playoff games. It hosted its final NBA basketball game on October 26, 2005, a preseason game between the Charlotte Bobcats and the Indiana Pacers.
Charlotte Coliseum was demolished via implosion on June 3, 2007.
Blanks are shredded bits of the plastic stadium seats mixed with complementary team-colored resin.
Available Sizes:
- Pen Blanks: Minimum 3/4" x 3/4" square
- Bottle Stopper and Ring Blanks: 1-1/2" round
- Full Pen Blocks: 6" x 5" and a minimum of 7/8" thick
- Knife Scale Pair: 2@ 5" x 1-1/2" x 3/8" minimum
All blanks include one Certificate of Authenticity (COA) per blank—a 4" x 6" card stock with foil-embossed seal, protected in a hard-shell plastic sleeve. Full Pen Blocks come with 10 COAs.
Most blanks are cut to order for freshness. Pen Blocks require a 2-3 week turnaround.
Cactus League Crush – Nab Your Chase Diamond Dash!
Envision rattling a rally with a pen slashed from seats that sizzled under Chase's desert dome, or uncorking World Series toasts with a stopper surging in purple-teal blaze. From poolside rings reliving Randy's rocket to dugout-durable knives carving post-game prickly pear feasts—each gem is lathe-launched from authentic stadium shards, striking Schilling strikes into heirloom heat. Rally your row and let the D-backs' diamondback dash electrify every swing!
Chase Field: D-backs' Desert Dome of Diamond Domination
Chase Field gleams in the sun-baked sprawl of downtown Phoenix, a retractable-roof marvel anchoring Arizona's MLB dreams since its groundbreaking genesis. Conceived amid 1990s expansion fever to lure a franchise from the desert's dust, the $354 million behemoth—funded by a controversial 0.25% sales tax hike in 1994—broke ground on November 16, 1995, and soared open as Bank One Ballpark on March 31, 1998, with the expansion Arizona Diamondbacks blanking the New York Mets 2-0 before 50,179 fans under a partly cloudy sky—heralding Phoenix as a big-league oasis and the D-backs' inaugural roar.
Enveloping 48,686 diamond diehards in climate-controlled comfort on FieldTurf (natural grass since 2023), Chase brews hitter-friendly heat with dimensions a slugger's delight: 330 feet to left and right, 407 to center amid those iconic cacti silhouettes—pioneering the U.S.'s first retractable roof (Fredric C. Hamilton-designed, spanning 320 feet) to tame 110-degree temps. Facelifts flared: 2005's Chase rebrand, 2006's $6 million pool upgrades in right field (MLB's first), 2012's $5 million LED videoboard, 2018's $15 million concourse expansions, and 2023's turf-to-grass swap—blending retro charm with modern mojo via Maricopa County stewardship and D-backs' private infusions.
Sanctuary for the Arizona Diamondbacks since day one, Chase has cradled the 2001 World Series miracle (7-game thriller over Yankees, sealed by Luis Gonzalez's bloop), three NL West crowns (1998, 2001, 2007), Randy Johnson's five Cy Youngs (four here), and All-Star Games in 2011 amid 2,000+ home wins and record roars (49,180 vs. Dodgers in 2023). Pulsing with "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" echoes, swimming pool splashes, and desert night magic, it hosts concerts and conventions too. As D-backs chase more rings, Chase Field endures as a sun-soaked testament to tenacity, triumphs, and timeless desert diamond in MLB's sunbelt.
Pro Turning Tips & FAQ: Master Your Stadium Seat Creations
Transform your blanks into showstoppers with these pro-level insights. Our upgraded V2 blanks boast finer shredded plastic for ultra-smooth turning and minimal chip-out— a game-changer over V1. Dial in sharp carbide or HSS tools, crank speeds to 2,000–3,000 RPM, and take feather-light cuts (0.005–0.015 inches) to dodge melting or gummy buildup. Wet-sand from 220 to 2,000 grit, zap pin-holes with thin CA glue, and crown it with Magic Juice polish for that mirror-finish glow. Dive deeper with our guides:
Quick Q&A
-
What's the secret sauce in these blanks?
Authentic shredded stadium seat plastic fused with vibrant team-colored resin—tough, one-of-a-kind material built for the lathe. -
Sizes and perks?
- Pen Blank: 3/4" x 3/4" square
- Bottle Stopper/Ring: 1-1/2" round
- Full Pen Block: 6" x 5" x 7/8" min (10 COAs included!)
- Knife Scale Pair: 2@ 5" x 1-1/2" x 3/8" min
-
Shipping scoop?
2-5 business days standard; Full Blocks take 2-3 weeks. Free Ground Shipping on $200+ orders—otherwise calculated at checkout. Unopened returns? 30 days, no sweat. -
Authenticity locked in?
100%—sourced straight from historic seat removals. Limited edition vibes: Once they're gone from this batch, they're history.
Wooden floor pen blanks!
Blanks are 23/32" x 23/32"
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with silver foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
These blanks are from the basketball flooring of Chicago Stadium where the Chicago Bulls won their first three NBA Championship. Michael Jordan played in these three championship seasons at Chicago.
Chicago Stadium was an indoor arena located in Chicago, Illinois that opened in 1929 and closed in 1994. It was the home of the National Hockey League's Chicago Blackhawks and the National Basketball Association's Chicago Bulls.
In addition to the close-quartered, triple-tiered, boxy layout of the building, much of the loud, ringing noise of the fans could be attributed to the fabled 3,663-pipe Barton organ, boasting the world's largest theater organ console with 6 manuals (keyboards) and over 800 stops, and played by Al Melgard. Melgard played for decades during hockey games there, earning the Stadium the moniker "The Madhouse on Madison". For years, it was also known as "The Loudest Arena in the NBA", due to its barn-shaped features.
In the Stanley Cup semifinals of 1971, when the Blackhawks scored a series-clinching empty-net goal in Game 7 against the New York Rangers, CBS announcer Dan Kelly reported, "I can feel our broadcast booth shaking! That's the kind of place Chicago Stadium is right now!" The dressing rooms at the Stadium were placed underneath the seats, and the cramped corridor that led to the ice, with its twenty-two steps, became the stuff of legend. Legend has it a German Shepherd wandered the bowels at night as "the security team."
In the 1973 Stanley Cup Final against Montreal, Chicago owner Bill Wirtz had the NHL's first goal horn installed in the building, reportedly because he liked the sound of the horn on his yacht. This practice would, in the ensuing years, become almost commonplace in professional hockey.
Nancy Faust, organist for 40 years at Chicago White Sox games, also played indoors at the Stadium, at courtside for Chicago Bulls home games from 1976-84, and on the pipe organ for Chicago Blackhawks hockey there from 1985-89.
It also became traditional for Blackhawk fans to cheer loudly throughout the singing of the national anthems, especially when sung by Chicago favorite Wayne Messmer. Denizens of the second balcony often added sparklers and flags to the occasion. Arguably, the most memorable of these was the singing before the 1991 NHL All-Star Game, which took place during the Gulf War. This tradition has continued at the United Center. Longtime PA announcer Harvey Wittenberg had a unique monotone style: "Blackhawk goal scored by #9, Bobby Hull, unassisted, at 6:13."
In 1992, both the Blackhawks and the Bulls reached the finals in their respective leagues. The Blackhawks were swept in their finals by the Pittsburgh Penguins, losing at Chicago Stadium, while the Bulls won the second of their first of three straight NBA titles on their home floor against the Portland Trail Blazers. The next time the Bulls clinched the championship at home, was in the newly built United Center in 1996 (when they did so against the Seattle SuperSonics), their second season at the new arena, and the Blackhawks would not reach the Stanley Cup Finals again until 2010 (in which they defeated the Philadelphia Flyers in six games), their 16th season in the new building, although they won their first championship since 1961 in Philadelphia. The Blackhawks last won the Stanley Cup at the Stadium in 1938; they did not win the Cup again at home until 2015 at the United Center.
Pen turned by Steve Reinker.
Wooden seat pen blanks!
Blanks are 3/4" x 3/4"
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with silver foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
------------------------------------------------------------
Chicago Stadium was an indoor arena located in Chicago, Illinois that opened in 1929 and closed in 1994. It was the home of the National Hockey League's Chicago Blackhawks and the National Basketball Association's Chicago Bulls.
In addition to the close-quartered, triple-tiered, boxy layout of the building, much of the loud, ringing noise of the fans could be attributed to the fabled 3,663-pipe Barton organ, boasting the world's largest theater organ console with 6 manuals (keyboards) and over 800 stops, and played by Al Melgard. Melgard played for decades during hockey games there, earning the Stadium the moniker "The Madhouse on Madison". For years, it was also known as "The Loudest Arena in the NBA", due to its barn-shaped features.
In the Stanley Cup semifinals of 1971, when the Blackhawks scored a series-clinching empty-net goal in Game 7 against the New York Rangers, CBS announcer Dan Kelly reported, "I can feel our broadcast booth shaking! That's the kind of place Chicago Stadium is right now!" The dressing rooms at the Stadium were placed underneath the seats, and the cramped corridor that led to the ice, with its twenty-two steps, became the stuff of legend. Legend has it a German Shepherd wandered the bowels at night as "the security team."
In the 1973 Stanley Cup Final against Montreal, Chicago owner Bill Wirtz had the NHL's first goal horn installed in the building, reportedly because he liked the sound of the horn on his yacht. This practice would, in the ensuing years, become almost commonplace in professional hockey.
Nancy Faust, organist for 40 years at Chicago White Sox games, also played indoors at the Stadium, at courtside for Chicago Bulls home games from 1976-84, and on the pipe organ for Chicago Blackhawks hockey there from 1985-89.
It also became traditional for Blackhawk fans to cheer loudly throughout the singing of the national anthems, especially when sung by Chicago favorite Wayne Messmer. Denizens of the second balcony often added sparklers and flags to the occasion. Arguably, the most memorable of these was the singing before the 1991 NHL All-Star Game, which took place during the Gulf War. This tradition has continued at the United Center. Longtime PA announcer Harvey Wittenberg had a unique monotone style: "Blackhawk goal scored by #9, Bobby Hull, unassisted, at 6:13."
In 1992, both the Blackhawks and the Bulls reached the finals in their respective leagues. The Blackhawks were swept in their finals by the Pittsburgh Penguins, losing at Chicago Stadium, while the Bulls won the second of their first of three straight NBA titles on their home floor against the Portland Trail Blazers. The next time the Bulls clinched the championship at home, was in the newly built United Center in 1996 (when they did so against the Seattle SuperSonics), their second season at the new arena, and the Blackhawks would not reach the Stanley Cup Finals again until 2010 (in which they defeated the Philadelphia Flyers in six games), their 16th season in the new building, although they won their first championship since 1961 in Philadelphia. The Blackhawks last won the Stanley Cup at the Stadium in 1938; they did not win the Cup again at home until 2015 at the United Center.
Wooden floor pen blanks! These blanks are hybrid blanks using the cut-off tongue and groove pieces of basketball flooring from Chicago Stadium. These cut-offs are mixed with Alumilite resin dyed to match the Chicago Bulls team colors.
Blanks are 3/4" x 3/4"
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with silver foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
These blanks are from the basketball flooring of Chicago Stadium where the Chicago Bulls won their first three NBA Championship. Michael Jordan played in these three championship seasons at Chicago.
Chicago Stadium was an indoor arena located in Chicago, Illinois that opened in 1929 and closed in 1994. It was the home of the National Hockey League's Chicago Blackhawks and the National Basketball Association's Chicago Bulls.
In addition to the close-quartered, triple-tiered, boxy layout of the building, much of the loud, ringing noise of the fans could be attributed to the fabled 3,663-pipe Barton organ, boasting the world's largest theater organ console with 6 manuals (keyboards) and over 800 stops, and played by Al Melgard. Melgard played for decades during hockey games there, earning the Stadium the moniker "The Madhouse on Madison". For years, it was also known as "The Loudest Arena in the NBA", due to its barn-shaped features.
In the Stanley Cup semifinals of 1971, when the Blackhawks scored a series-clinching empty-net goal in Game 7 against the New York Rangers, CBS announcer Dan Kelly reported, "I can feel our broadcast booth shaking! That's the kind of place Chicago Stadium is right now!" The dressing rooms at the Stadium were placed underneath the seats, and the cramped corridor that led to the ice, with its twenty-two steps, became the stuff of legend. Legend has it a German Shepherd wandered the bowels at night as "the security team."
In the 1973 Stanley Cup Final against Montreal, Chicago owner Bill Wirtz had the NHL's first goal horn installed in the building, reportedly because he liked the sound of the horn on his yacht. This practice would, in the ensuing years, become almost commonplace in professional hockey.
Nancy Faust, organist for 40 years at Chicago White Sox games, also played indoors at the Stadium, at courtside for Chicago Bulls home games from 1976-84, and on the pipe organ for Chicago Blackhawks hockey there from 1985-89.
It also became traditional for Blackhawk fans to cheer loudly throughout the singing of the national anthems, especially when sung by Chicago favorite Wayne Messmer. Denizens of the second balcony often added sparklers and flags to the occasion. Arguably, the most memorable of these was the singing before the 1991 NHL All-Star Game, which took place during the Gulf War. This tradition has continued at the United Center. Longtime PA announcer Harvey Wittenberg had a unique monotone style: "Blackhawk goal scored by #9, Bobby Hull, unassisted, at 6:13."
In 1992, both the Blackhawks and the Bulls reached the finals in their respective leagues. The Blackhawks were swept in their finals by the Pittsburgh Penguins, losing at Chicago Stadium, while the Bulls won the second of their first of three straight NBA titles on their home floor against the Portland Trail Blazers. The next time the Bulls clinched the championship at home, was in the newly built United Center in 1996 (when they did so against the Seattle SuperSonics), their second season at the new arena, and the Blackhawks would not reach the Stanley Cup Finals again until 2010 (in which they defeated the Philadelphia Flyers in six games), their 16th season in the new building, although they won their first championship since 1961 in Philadelphia. The Blackhawks last won the Stanley Cup at the Stadium in 1938; they did not win the Cup again at home until 2015 at the United Center.
Blanks are shredded bits of the plastic stadium seats mixed with complementary team-colored resin.
Available Sizes:
- Pen Blanks: Minimum 3/4" x 3/4" square
- Bottle Stopper and Ring Blanks: 1-1/2" round
- Full Pen Blocks: 6" x 5" and a minimum of 7/8" thick
- Knife Scale Pair: 2@ 5" x 1-1/2" x 3/8" minimum
All blanks include one Certificate of Authenticity (COA) per blank—a 4" x 6" card stock with foil-embossed seal, protected in a hard-shell plastic sleeve. Full Pen Blocks come with 10 COAs.
Most blanks are cut to order for freshness. Pen Blocks require a 2-3 week turnaround.
Boot Up for Blue Brigade Glory – Score Your Mercy Park Magic!
Envision curling a corner kick with a pen forged from seats that thundered with SKC surges at Children's Mercy, or uncorking MLS Cup toasts with a stopper surging in red-blue blaze. From penalty-kick rings reliving playoff penalties to sideline-sharp knives carving post-match feasts—each talisman is lathe-born from genuine stadium grit, crossing Cauldron chants into heirloom hat tricks. Rally your row and unleash the Sporting's relentless rush in every revolution!
Children's Mercy Park: Sporting KC's Soccer Sanctuary of Heartland Hustle
Children's Mercy Park anchors the bustling Village at Sports Park in Kansas City, Kansas, a soccer-specific shrine elevating Sporting Kansas City from shared-field nomads to MLS mainstays since its groundbreaking genesis. Conceived in 2007 amid the club's quest for a dedicated home after decades at Arrowhead Stadium and CommunityAmerica Ballpark, the $200+ million marvel—funded by private equity and public bonds—broke ground on January 20, 2010, under Populous architects aiming for urban modernism with fluid motion motifs. It ignited on June 9, 2011, with Sporting KC drawing 0-0 against the Chicago Fire before 18,467 fervent fans—christened Livestrong Sporting Park for Lance Armstrong's cancer-fighting foundation, evolving to Sporting Park (2013–2015) and Children's Mercy Park in 2016 via a $100 million, 10-year pediatric hospital pact, symbolizing KC's kick toward Soccer Capital status.
Encircling a compact 18,467 soccer souls on hybrid natural-synthetic turf (standard 120x75-yard MLS pitch), the venue brews bone-rattling intimacy with steep stands just 15 feet from touchlines—fostering fabled "Cauldron" chants amid those sweeping steel canopies and 360-degree concourses. Evolutions echoed: 2011's initial 18,500 swell, 2013's MLS Cup upgrades with premium suites and videoboards, 2017's $10 million sound system surge for US Open Cup glory, and 2020s' tech tweaks like LED lighting and app integrations—blending heartland hospitality with high-octane hustle, all while hosting 200+ events yearly in a 300-acre district laced with training grounds, youth academies, and tailgate zones.
Soccer-specific stronghold for Sporting Kansas City since inception, Children's Mercy has cradled two MLS Cup triumphs (2000 pre-park echoes in 2013's PK penalty over Real Salt Lake at home), the 2017 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup conquest (2-1 vs. New York Red Bulls), Eastern Conference finals in 2011 and 2012, and record roars like 21,650 for the 2011 playoff upset of Houston—pulsing with 500+ home wins, sellout streaks since 2011, and stars like Peter Vermes' vision and Johnny Russell's rockets. Beyond boots, it hosts USWNT friendlies, international qualifiers, and concerts, etching KC's cross-state camaraderie into lore. As Sporting chase more silverware, Children's Mercy Park endures as a testament to tenacity, triumphs, and timeless turf in MLS's midwestern marquee.
Pro Turning Tips & FAQ: Master Your Stadium Seat Creations
Transform your blanks into showstoppers with these pro-level insights. Our upgraded V2 blanks boast finer shredded plastic for ultra-smooth turning and minimal chip-out— a game-changer over V1. Dial in sharp carbide or HSS tools, crank speeds to 2,000–3,000 RPM, and take feather-light cuts (0.005–0.015 inches) to dodge melting or gummy buildup. Wet-sand from 220 to 2,000 grit, zap pin-holes with thin CA glue, and crown it with Magic Juice polish for that mirror-finish glow. Dive deeper with our guides:
Quick Q&A
-
What's the secret sauce in these blanks?
Authentic shredded stadium seat plastic fused with vibrant team-colored resin—tough, one-of-a-kind material built for the lathe. -
Sizes and perks?
- Pen Blank: 3/4" x 3/4" square
- Bottle Stopper/Ring: 1-1/2" round
- Full Pen Block: 6" x 5" x 7/8" min (10 COAs included!)
- Knife Scale Pair: 2@ 5" x 1-1/2" x 3/8" min
-
Shipping scoop?
2-5 business days standard; Full Blocks take 2-3 weeks. Free Ground Shipping on $200+ orders—otherwise calculated at checkout. Unopened returns? 30 days, no sweat. -
Authenticity locked in?
100%—sourced straight from historic seat removals. Limited edition vibes: Once they're gone from this batch, they're history.
Wooden Stadium Seat Slats
Pen Blanks are a minimum of 3/4" x 3/4"
Ring blanks are 3/4" x 1-1/4" square
Curved Knife Scales are 1-1/2" x 5" x 3/4" minimum
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
Hardin Penworks, LLC, certifies that material supplied to the artisan of the accompanying hand-crafted item was sourced from the wooden stadium seat backs of Cincinnati Gardens.
Cincinnati Gardens was an indoor arena located in Cincinnati, Ohio, that opened in 1949. The Cincinnati Gardens' first event was an exhibition hockey game. It has been the home of six league championship hockey teams.
The Gardens was home to the NBA Cincinnati Royals (now the Sacramento Kings) from 1957 through 1972. College basketball, including 42 "Crosstown Shootout" games between the University of Cincinnati and Xavier University, has been played at the Gardens since its first week in 1949. The arena has served as the home court for both schools at various times, lastly for Xavier from 1983 until their move to the on-campus Cintas Center in 2000.
Cincinnati Gardens was closed in July 2016 and later demolished in March of 2018.
This material is guaranteed to be 100% Authentic.
Blanks are shredded bits of the plastic stadium seats mixed with complementary team-colored resin.
Available Sizes:
- Pen Blanks: Minimum 3/4" x 3/4" square
- Bottle Stopper and Ring Blanks: 1-1/2" round
- Full Pen Blocks: 6" x 5" and a minimum of 7/8" thick
- Knife Scale Pair: 2@ 5" x 1-1/2" x 3/8" minimum
All blanks include one Certificate of Authenticity (COA) per blank—a 4" x 6" card stock with foil-embossed seal, protected in a hard-shell plastic sleeve. Full Pen Blocks come with 10 COAs.
Most blanks are cut to order for freshness. Pen Blocks require a 2-3 week turnaround.
Philly Phaithful Frenzy – Nab Your Citizens Slugger Souvenir!
Picture belting a Broad Street bomb with a pen hewn from seats that boomed with Phillies passion at Citizens Bank, or uncorking WS parade toasts with a stopper surging in red-hot liberty. From Ashburn Alley rings reliving Utley's uprisings to bleacher-tough knives carving cheesesteak feasts—each heirloom is lathe-launched from authentic park plastic, ringing "High Hopes" harmonies into eternal emblems. Rally your row and let the Phils' gritty grind electrify every swing!
Citizens Bank Park: Phillies' South Philly Shrine of Slugger Supremacy
Citizens Bank Park crackles in the heart of Philadelphia's South Philly neighborhood, a modern mecca of MLB might replacing the multi-sport mire of Veterans Stadium. Conceived in the late 1990s amid fan fervor for a baseball-only bastion, the $458 million marvel—funded by a 1996 public referendum and private partnerships—broke ground on January 28, 2001, under HOK Sport (now Populous) architects evoking classic ballpark charm with red brick and iron accents. It burst open on April 12, 2004, with the Phillies topping the Reds 13-5 before 41,626 ecstatic fans under a sunny sky—heralding a new era of Phils pride and instantly dubbing CBP the "House That Chase Utley Built" for its hitter-happy confines.
Boasting a cozy 43,651 capacity on lush natural grass (standard 325-foot foul lines, 330 left, 330 right, 401 center alleys, 409 deep center), Citizens brews bone-rattling intimacy with the shortest right-field porch in MLB (330 feet, 21-foot walls) priming power alleys amid those iconic liberty bell scoreboards and Ashburn Alley eateries. Evolutions echoed: 2004's initial 43,500 swell, 2006's $10 million outfield seating surge, 2011's $12 million HD videoboard, 2018's $50 million concourse expansions with craft beer havens, and 2023's turf-to-grass revival—blending retro soul with state-of-the-art swing via Phillies' private infusions and city bonds.
Sanctuary for the Philadelphia Phillies since inaugural pitch, Citizens has cradled two World Series crowns (2008 home-clinched over Rays, echoes of 1980's parade), five NL East titles (2007-2011), Chase Utley's MVP magic, Bryce Harper's 2019 NL MVP, and All-Star Games in 2006 and 2023 amid 1,500+ home wins and sellout streaks. Record roars hit 45,839 for 2008's NLCS clinch, pulsing with "Sweet Caroline" singalongs, cheesesteak lines, and fireworks frenzies. Beyond bases, it hosts concerts and conventions, etching Philly's fighting spirit into lore. As Phils chase more rings, Citizens Bank Park endures as a red-brick testament to tenacity, triumphs, and timeless tailgating in MLB's marquee.
Pro Turning Tips & FAQ: Master Your Stadium Seat Creations
Transform your blanks into showstoppers with these pro-level insights. Our upgraded V2 blanks boast finer shredded plastic for ultra-smooth turning and minimal chip-out— a game-changer over V1. Dial in sharp carbide or HSS tools, crank speeds to 2,000–3,000 RPM, and take feather-light cuts (0.005–0.015 inches) to dodge melting or gummy buildup. Wet-sand from 220 to 2,000 grit, zap pin-holes with thin CA glue, and crown it with Magic Juice polish for that mirror-finish glow. Dive deeper with our guides:
Quick Q&A
-
What's the secret sauce in these blanks?
Authentic shredded stadium seat plastic fused with vibrant team-colored resin—tough, one-of-a-kind material built for the lathe. -
Sizes and perks?
- Pen Blank: 3/4" x 3/4" square
- Bottle Stopper/Ring: 1-1/2" round
- Full Pen Block: 6" x 5" x 7/8" min (10 COAs included!)
- Knife Scale Pair: 2@ 5" x 1-1/2" x 3/8" min
-
Shipping scoop?
2-5 business days standard; Full Blocks take 2-3 weeks. Free Ground Shipping on $200+ orders—otherwise calculated at checkout. Unopened returns? 30 days, no sweat. -
Authenticity locked in?
100%—sourced straight from historic seat removals. Limited edition vibes: Once they're gone from this batch, they're history.
These blanks are made from the wooden barstools and club seats of Citizens Bank Park, home of the Philadelphia Phillies.
Wooden Club Seat Pen Blanks!
Pen Blanks are 3/4" x 3/4"
Stopper Blanks are 1 1/2" round
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with silver foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
------------------------------------------------------------
With a seating capacity of 42,792, the ballpark is located on the northeast corner of the Sports Complex within the city's South Philadelphia Sports Complex of Philadelphia, PA. Citizens Bank Park is the home of the MLB Philadelphia Phillies. It opened April 3, 2004 and hosted its first regular-season baseball game on April 12, 2004. The ballpark was built to replace the 33-year-old, now-demolished Veterans Stadium.
This material is guaranteed to be 100% Authentic.
Blanks are from the original wood bleacher boards of Clemson University's Clemson Memorial Stadium.
VERY Limited number of blanks. Only 20 total blanks these.
Blanks are a minimum of 3/4" x 3/4"
All blanks will come with one COA per blank.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
Hardin Penworks, LLC, certifies that material supplied to the artisan of the accompanying hand-crafted item was sourced from the wooden seat bleachers of Frank Howard Field at Clemson Memorial Stadium.
Originally built in 1941-42, Clemson Memorial Stadium is popularly referred to as "Death Valley". The stadium is home to the Clemson University football program known traditionally as the "Clemson University Fighting Tigers."
In 1948 the late Lonnie McMillian, former football coach at Presbyterian College, said that he had "to take his team up to Clemson and play in Death Valley" where they rarely scored or gained a victory. Clemson Head Coach Frank Howard began using the nickname "Death Valley" for the stadium in the 1950s.
Currently, Death Valley is the largest stadium among all other schools in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
This material is guaranteed to be 100% Authentic.
Blanks are from original wooden stadium seats of Cleveland Arena.
Pen Blanks are a minimum of 3/4" x 3/4"
Ring blanks are 1-1/2" square
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
Cleveland Arena was an arena in Cleveland, Ohio. It was built and privately financed by local businessman Albert C. Sutphin during the height of the Great Depression in 1937 as a playing site for Sutphin's AHL team, the Cleveland Barons. The arena was at 3717 Euclid Avenue, and seated 9,900 in the stands and 12,500+ for events such as boxing where floor seating was available.
In addition to the Barons, the arena was home to the Cleveland Rebels of the Basketball Association of America, also owned by Sutphin, for the 1946–47 season, and hosted several games for the Cincinnati Royals of the National Basketball Association (NBA), who played more than 35 of their home games there from 1966–1970. The arena and the Barons were purchased by Nick Mileti in 1968. In 1970, the expansion Cleveland Cavaliers of the NBA moved into the arena and played there for their first four seasons, from 1970–1974. The Cleveland Crusaders of the new World Hockey Association began play in 1972, hosting games there until 1974.
Cleveland Arena was also a regular concert and boxing venue and 6 Day bicycle races were held there between 1939 and 1958, moved there from Public Hall. On March 21, 1952 it was the site of the Moondog Coronation Ball, considered the first rock and roll concert, organized by Alan Freed. The concert was shut down after the first song by fire authorities due to overcrowding. It was estimated 20,000 people were in the arena or trying to enter it, when the capacity was roughly half that.
While the arena was a showpiece when it opened, by the time it closed in 1974 it had become decrepit and lacked adequate parking. It was replaced for sports and entertainment use by the Richfield Coliseum that year and demolished in 1977. The headquarters of the Cleveland Chapter of the American Red Cross now occupies the site.
Wooden seat pen blanks! Solid wood blanks and hybrid team color resin blanks available.
Pen Blanks are 3/4" x 3/4"
Ring Blanks are 1-1/2" x 1-1/2" x 3/4"
Knife Scale is 5" x 1-1/2" x 3/4"
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with silver foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
Cleveland Stadium, commonly known as Municipal Stadium or Lakefront Stadium, was a multi-purpose stadium located in Cleveland, Ohio. It was one of the early multi-purpose stadiums, built to accommodate both baseball and football. The stadium opened in 1931 and is best known as the long-time home of the Cleveland Indians of Major League Baseball, from 1932 to 1993, and the Cleveland Browns of the National Football League (NFL), from 1946 to 1995, in addition to hosting other teams, sports, and being a regular concert venue. The stadium was a four-time host of the Major League Baseball All-Star Game, one of the host venues of the 1948 and 1954 World Series, and the site of the original Dawg Pound, Red Right 88, and The Drive.
Through most of its tenure as a baseball facility, the stadium was the largest in Major League Baseball by seating capacity, seating over 78,000 initially and over 74,000 in its final years. It was superseded only by the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum from 1958 to 1961, while it was the temporary home of the Los Angeles Dodgers, and by Mile High Stadium in 1993, the temporary home of the expansion Colorado Rockies. For football, the stadium seated approximately 80,000 people, ranking as one of the larger seating capacities in the NFL.
Former Browns owner Art Modell took over control of the stadium from the city in the 1970s and while his organization made improvements to the facility, it continued to decline. The Indians played their final game at the stadium in October 1993 and moved to Jacobs Field the following season. Although plans were announced to renovate the stadium for use by the Browns, in 1995 Modell announced his intentions to move the team to Baltimore citing the state of Cleveland Stadium as a major factor. The Browns played their final game at the stadium in December 1995. As part of an agreement between Modell, the city of Cleveland, and the NFL, the Browns were officially deactivated for three seasons and the city was required to construct a new stadium on the Cleveland Stadium site. Cleveland Stadium was demolished in 1996 to make way for First Energy Stadium, which opened in 1999. Much of the debris from the demolition was placed in Lake Erie to create an artificial reef.
Wooden seat pen blanks!
Blanks are 3/4" x 3/4"
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with silver foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
------------------------------------------------------------
The William P. Cole, Jr. Student Activities Building, commonly known as Cole Field House, is an indoor collegiate sports training complex located on 14.5 acres (5.9 ha) of land on the campus of the University of Maryland in College Park, a suburb north of Washington, D.C. Cole Field House is situated in the center of the campus, adjacent to Capital One Field at Maryland Stadium, near Stamp Student Union and McKeldin Library. The building was constructed between 1952 and 1955 at a cost of $3.3 million ($30.2 million in 2018 ) and served for nearly 50 years as the home court of the Maryland Terrapins men's and women's basketball teams. A multi-phase, $196 million renovation commenced in 2015 to transform the 14,956-seat basketball arena into a 356,000-square-foot (33,100 m2) sports and academic complex that includes an indoor practice facility and operations center for the university's football program, a sports science and sports medical research center, and an incubator for entrepreneurs.
Cole Field House Performance Center, the indoor practice facility and operations center for the Maryland Terrapins football team (Big Ten Conference), opened in 2017. Though the facility is primarily used for football, it also used for training by the school's men's and women's lacrosse teams. The second phase of renovation, which began in late-2017, includes the construction of a 196,000-square-foot (18,200 m2) addition to the complex and is expected to be completed in 2019. This new structure will also include a space for the school's Academy for Innovation and Entrepreneurship and the Center for Sports Medicine, Health and Human Performance, a sports medicine education, investigation and clinical care center operated in partnership with the University of Maryland, Baltimore.
Wooden seat pen blanks!
Blanks are 3/4" x 3/4"
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with silver foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
------------------------------------------------------------
Comerica Park is a baseball stadium located in Downtown Detroit. It has been the home of Major League Baseball's Detroit Tigers since 2000, when the team left Tiger Stadium.
TFounded in 1894, the Tigers had played at the corner of Michigan and Trumbull Avenues in Detroit's Corktown neighborhood since 1896, when Bennett Park opened. In 1911, new Tigers owner Frank Navin ordered the construction of a new ballpark to be built on the same site. Opening in 1912, the ballpark, which eventually became known as Tiger Stadium, served as the Tigers' home for the next 88 seasons. By the mid-1990s, it had become apparent that the much-beloved ballpark had become obsolete and could not be renovated any further.
Comerica Park sits on the original site of the Detroit College of Law. Groundbreaking for the new stadium was held on October 29, 1997. At the time of construction, the scoreboard in left field was the largest in Major League Baseball. It was part of a downtown revitalization plan for the city of Detroit, which included the construction of Ford Field, adjacent to the ballpark. The first game was held on April 11, 2000, against the Seattle Mariners.
Pens turned by Steve Reinker
Wooden seat pen blanks!
Blanks are 3/4" x 3/4"
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with silver foil embossed COA seal.
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
------------------------------------------------------------
Comiskey Park was a baseball park in Chicago, Illinois, located in the Armour Square community on the near-southwest side of the city. The stadium served as the home of the Chicago White Sox of the American Leaguefrom 1910 through 1990. Built by White Sox owner Charles Comiskey and designed by Zachary Taylor Davis, Comiskey Park hosted four World Series and more than six thousand Major League Baseball games. Also, in one of the most famous boxing matches in history, the field was the site of the 1937 heavyweight title match in which Joe Louis defeated then champion James J. Braddock in eight rounds that launched Louis' unprecedented 11-plus year run as the heavyweight champion of the world.[8][9]
The Chicago Cardinals of the National Football League also called Comiskey Park home when they weren't playing at Normal Park or Soldier Field. They won the 1947 NFL Championship Game over the Philadelphia Eaglesat Comiskey Park. Much less popular than the Bears, the Cardinals' last season at Comiskey was 1958, and they left for St. Louis in March 1960. The Chicago American Giants of the Negro American League called Comiskey Park home from 1941-1950.[10]
Adjacent to the south (across 35th Street), a new ballpark opened in 1991, and Comiskey Park was demolished the same year. Originally also called Comiskey Park, it was renamed U.S. Cellular Field in 2003 and Guaranteed Rate Field in 2016.
Blanks are shredded bits of the plastic stadium seats mixed with complementary team-colored resin.
Available Sizes:
- Pen Blanks: Minimum 3/4" x 3/4" square
- Bottle Stopper and Ring Blanks: 1-1/2" round
- Full Pen Blocks: 6" x 5" and a minimum of 7/8" thick
- Knife Scale Pair: 2@ 5" x 1-1/2" x 3/8" minimum
All blanks include one Certificate of Authenticity (COA) per blank—a 4" x 6" card stock with foil-embossed seal, protected in a hard-shell plastic sleeve. Full Pen Blocks come with 10 COAs.
Most blanks are cut to order for freshness. Pen Blocks require a 2-3 week turnaround.
Rocky Mountain Rally – Nab Your Coors High-Altitude Hit!
Envision launching a mile-high moonshot with a pen carved from seats that hummed with Rockies roars at Coors, or uncorking Coors Banquet brews with a stopper surging in purple fury. From rockpile rings reliving Tulo's tape-measure tapes to bleacher-tough knives slicing post-game green chili feasts—each powerhouse is lathe-launched from authentic field fragments, blasting Blake Street blasts into heirloom home runs. Rally your row and let the Rox's thin-air thunder electrify every swing!
Coors Field: Rockies' Mile-High Mecca of Baseball Bliss
Coors Field towers in the shadow of the Rockies in Denver's LoDo district, a retro-modern marvel birthed for the National League's 1993 expansion Rockies as Denver's diamond destiny. Conceived amid Colorado's baseball boom to replace the aging Mile High Stadium's multi-sport muddle, the $215 million showpiece—funded by a 1990 public vote and private bonds—broke ground on October 16, 1992, under HOK Sport architects channeling Ebbets Field elegance with red brick and wrought iron. It cracked open on April 26, 1995, with the Rockies edging the Mets 10-0 before 48,000 fans under a brilliant blue sky—heralding the "Mile High Magic" and instantly etching LoDo lore with its high-altitude heartbeat.
Encasing 50,398 diamond diehards on FieldTurf (lush natural grass since 2002), Coors conjures a hitter's heaven at 5,280 feet elevation where balls fly farther—dimensions a slugger's siren: 347 feet to left, 415 to center (deepest in MLB), 350 to right with 50-foot rockpile fountains in right-center spraying on homers. Facelifts flared: 1995's initial 42,000 swell, 1997's upper deck to 50,000, 2001's $10 million scoreboard surge, 2007's $6 million outfield seating, 2012's $3 million HD videoboard, and 2023's turf-to-grass revival with enhanced drainage—blending classic charm with modern mojo via Rockies' private infusions and city stewardship.
Sanctuary for the Colorado Rockies since inaugural at-bat, Coors has cradled three NL West crowns (2007, 2009, 2017), the 2007 NL pennant and World Series sprint (swept by Red Sox), Todd Helton's Hall of Fame hauls, and All-Star Games in 1998 and 2021 amid 2,000+ home wins and record roars (49,862 vs. Dodgers in 2023). Pulsing with "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" echoes, rooftop party pandemonium, and purple rowdyism, it hosts concerts and conventions too. As Rox chase corral crowns, Coors Field endures as a mile-high testament to tenacity, triumphs, and timeless thin air in MLB's mountain marquee.
Pro Turning Tips & FAQ: Master Your Stadium Seat Creations
Transform your blanks into showstoppers with these pro-level insights. Our upgraded V2 blanks boast finer shredded plastic for ultra-smooth turning and minimal chip-out— a game-changer over V1. Dial in sharp carbide or HSS tools, crank speeds to 2,000–3,000 RPM, and take feather-light cuts (0.005–0.015 inches) to dodge melting or gummy buildup. Wet-sand from 220 to 2,000 grit, zap pin-holes with thin CA glue, and crown it with Magic Juice polish for that mirror-finish glow. Dive deeper with our guides:
Quick Q&A
-
What's the secret sauce in these blanks?
Authentic shredded stadium seat plastic fused with vibrant team-colored resin—tough, one-of-a-kind material built for the lathe. -
Sizes and perks?
- Pen Blank: 3/4" x 3/4" square
- Bottle Stopper/Ring: 1-1/2" round
- Full Pen Block: 6" x 5" x 7/8" min (10 COAs included!)
- Knife Scale Pair: 2@ 5" x 1-1/2" x 3/8" min
-
Shipping scoop?
2-5 business days standard; Full Blocks take 2-3 weeks. Free Ground Shipping on $200+ orders—otherwise calculated at checkout. Unopened returns? 30 days, no sweat. -
Authenticity locked in?
100%—sourced straight from historic seat removals. Limited edition vibes: Once they're gone from this batch, they're history.

