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United States Space Force
Sierra 27/64" tubed blanks
Bolt Action 3/8" tubed blanks
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As of 2019, one country has an independent space force. The Chinese People's Liberation Army Strategic Support Force was established in 2016 to consolidate Chinese space and cyber operations. The Russian Space Forces was an independent organization that existed from 1992 to 1997 and again from 2001 to 2011. It was reestablished in 2015 as a branch of the Russian Aerospace Forces.
In the United States, the U.S. Space Command was one of the unified combatant commands (UCC) from 1985 until it was merged into the U.S. Strategic Command (STRATCOM) in 2002, with its responsibilities primarily taken over by the U.S. Air Force's Space Command, a subordinate command of STRATCOM. It was announced in August 2018 that U.S. Space Command would be re-established as an UCC.
On June 18, 2018, the United States announced a proposal to create the United States Space Force as a new branch of the United States Armed Forces, and on August 9, 2018, further announced a plan to have the new service established by 2020.
Sierra embedded blanks with original aluminum frame fragments of the Hindenburg Luftschiff Zeppelin #129.
All blanks will come with one COA per blank.
COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with foil COA seal.
Here is a macro-specimen of duralum (aircraft grade aluminum) cut from the wreckage of the famous LZ-129 Zeppelin der Hindenburg! This is NEWLY FOUND MATERIAL just released from the Frazier Collection! Acquired at an estate sale in Germany a few years ago. We know of its tragic loss in 1937 at Lakehurst, New Jersey. What we don't know is why! And most likely never will... This specimen is a small world-class piece embedded in Royal Palm.
LZ 129 Hindenburg (Luftschiff Zeppelin #129; Registration: D-LZ 129) was a large German commercial passenger-carrying rigid airship, the lead ship of the Hindenburg class, the longest class of flying machine and the largest airship by envelope volume. It was designed and built by the Zeppelin Company (Luftschiffbau Zeppelin GmbH) on the shores of Lake Constance in Friedrichshafen and was operated by the German Zeppelin Airline Company (Deutsche Zeppelin-Reederei). The airship flew from March 1936 until it was destroyed by fire 14 months later on May 6, 1937 while attempting to land at Lakehurst Naval Air Station in Manchester Township, New Jersey, at the end of the first North American transatlantic journey of its second season of service with the loss of 36 lives.
Pen turned by Tim Boddy
Generic Parker Style Ink - Black
Parker Style Ball Point Refill: Black
Qty: dozen per pack
Wooden Bourbon Barrel Stave Blanks!
Blanks are 3/4" x 3/4" minimum
Oversized Blanks are 7/8” x 7/8"
Ring Blanks are 1-1/4"sq by 3/4"
Knife Scales Pair 1-1/4" x 7/8 x 5"
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.
In 1893, an 18-year-old Julian "Pappy" Van Winkle Sr. began working as a salesman for the liquor wholesaler, W.L. Weller & Sons. Fifteen years later, he and another Weller salesman bought the firm. In 1910 they acquired the Stitzel Distillery in Louisville, KY, a sour mash whiskey distillery since 1872.
The Stitzel Distillery supplied much of the whiskey sold by the Weller wholesale firm. The consolidation coincided with prohibition, during which time the Stitzel-Weller firm was licensed by the government to produce whiskey for medicinal purposes. One of their labels that was introduced on the market just before prohibition was Old Rip Van Winkle. After prohibition, the brand was not reintroduced until after 1972 when the Stitzel-Weller distillery and its current brand names W. L. Weller, Old Fitzgerald, Rebel Yell, and Cabin Still were sold to other companies. The only brand name the Van Winkle family had kept the rights to is the pre-prohibition brand Old Rip Van Winkle.
Since 2002, the Van Winkle brands have been distilled and bottled by the Sazerac Company at the Buffalo Trace Distillery as a joint venture with the Old Rip Van Winkle Distillery company.
Like all modern bourbons, Van Winkle bourbons are made primarily from corn and aged in charred new American oak barrels. A distinguishing feature of Van Winkle bourbons is their use of wheat as the secondary ingredient instead of the usual rye, and their additional inclusion of barley malt. Pappy Van Winkle bourbons are aged for 15, 20, or 23 years, which is considerably longer than the aging period for most bourbons.
This certificate does not imply any affiliation or association with the trademarked Pappy Van Winkle, Sazerac Company, or Buffalo Trace Distillery companies as they are not involved with the distribution of this material or the production of the finished item.
Plastic 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.
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Hardin Penworks, LLC, certifies that material supplied to the artisan of the accompanying hand-crafted item was sourced from the plastic seats of Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. The hall is a 17,222-seat arena on the campus of Indiana University in Bloomington, IN.
It is the home of the Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball and women's basketball teams. It opened in 1971, replacing the current Gladstein Fieldhouse. The court is named after Branch McCracken, the men's basketball coach who led the school to its first two NCAA National Championships in 1940 and 1953. Basketball sportscaster Gus Johnson called the Assembly Hall "the Carnegie Hall of basketball."
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.
Tar Heel Tip-Off Triumph – Snag Your Dean Dome Dynasty!
Envision sinking a game-winning jumper with a pen forged from seats that thundered with Tar Heel tenacity at the Dean Dome, or uncorking Final Four toasts with a stopper surging in Carolina blue blaze. From hardwood rings reliving Hansbrough's heroics to sideline-sharp knives carving post-bracket feasts—each emblem is lathe-born from genuine coliseum grit, swishing March Madness magic into heirloom hoops. Rally your rim and unleash the Heels' relentless rebound in every spin!
Dean E. Smith Center: Tar Heels' Carolina Court of Hoops Heritage
Dean E. Smith Center, affectionately dubbed "The Dean Dome," looms large on the University of North Carolina's Chapel Hill campus—a blue-blooded bastion of ACC basketball supremacy since its grand unveiling. Conceived in the early 1980s to accommodate Dean Smith's rising dynasty amid sold-out Carmichael Auditorium crushes, the $34.9 million marvel broke ground in January 1984 and soared open on January 18, 1986, with the Tar Heels edging Duke 75-73 in a classic rivalry thriller before 21,000-plus fans—heralding a new era of Tar Heel dominance and instantly etching Chapel Hill into hoops hallowed ground, named for the legendary coach who amassed 879 wins and two national titles.
Boasting a thunderous 21,750 capacity on polished hardwood (standard 94x50-foot NCAA court), the Dean Dome brews bone-chilling intimacy where "Go Heels" echoes like artillery under its soaring 120-foot arched roof—fostering fast-break frenzy with premium sightlines and those iconic blue rafters. Expansions echoed: 1986's initial 24,000 swell (later trimmed for acoustics), 1990s' luxury suites and club seating, 2003's $10 million concourse upgrades, 2015's $3.5 million videoboard vault, and 2020s' tech tweaks like LED lighting and app integrations—blending classic Carolina charm with cutting-edge court craft, all fueled by private booster bonds.
Fortress for the UNC Tar Heels men's basketball since tip-off, the Dean Dome has cradled six national championships (1982 pre-dome echoes in 1993, 2005, 2009, 2017, 2022), 20 ACC titles, and Final Four feasts including 1993's home-hosted run and 2017's title tilt amid 1,200+ home wins and sellout streaks since 1986. Stars like Michael Jordan's freshman flair (1982), Hansbrough's record points (2009), and Paige's buzzer-beater (2016) pulse with Duke derbies, bracket-busting upsets, and "Carolina First" chants. Beyond b-ball, it hosts women's hoops, volleyball, and concerts, etching Chapel Hill's heel-stomping soul into lore. As Tar Heels chase more banners, Dean E. Smith Center endures as a blue testament to tenacity, triumphs, and timeless hardwood hustle in college hoops' heartland.
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.
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.
Bull City Blast – Nab Your DBAP Diamond Dash!
Picture cracking a walk-off double with a pen hewn from seats that buzzed with Bulls bravado at DBAP, or uncorking Governors' Cup toasts with a stopper surging in red-blue blaze. From diamond dazzle rings reliving no-hitter nights to bleacher-tough knives slicing post-game crab cake feasts—each gem is lathe-launched from authentic park plastic, launching Triple-A thunder into heirloom homers. Rally your row and let the Durham Bulls' gritty grind electrify every swing!
Durham Bulls Athletic Park: Bulls' Riverfront Realm of Minor League Magic
Durham Bulls Athletic Park (DBAP) graces the vibrant downtown of Durham, North Carolina—a riverfront jewel blending minor-league charm with Triple-A tenacity since its splashy debut. Conceived in the early 1990s to revive the storied Durham Bulls franchise after decades in exile, the $16 million brick beauty—funded by city bonds and private partnerships—broke ground in 1992 and flung open on April 6, 1995, with the Bulls topping the Kinston Indians 3-2 before 10,886 fans—heralding a new era of Bull City baseball and instantly etching its Snorting Bull sign into MiLB mythology, inspired by the 1988 film "Bull Durham."
Encasing a cozy 10,000 diamond devotees (expanded from 6,404 in 1998 for Triple-A), DBAP fosters intimate intensity on lush natural grass (standard minor-league dimensions: 325 feet to left, 400 to center, 325 to right) amid those quirky scoreboard sails and river-view rockpile. Renovations roared: 2007's $1.5 million Judy Johnson Field tribute honoring Negro Leagues legend, 2010s' turf-to-grass swap and LED lighting, 2020s' $9 million city-Bulls overhaul adding umpire lockers and eco-upgrades—blending retro riverfront soul with modern mojo via public-private pacts.
Riverfront rookery for the Durham Bulls since revival, DBAP has cradled four Governors' Cup titles (2009, 2017, 2021, 2022), Rays affiliate glory including 2003 and 2007 league conquests, no-hitters like Mike MacDougal's 1999 gem, and All-Star Games in 1995, 2005, 2015 amid 2,000+ home wins and sellout surges. Pulsing with "Charge!" chants, crab fry frenzies, and fireworks over the Christina, it hosts indie concerts and community carnivals too. As Bulls bull toward majors, Durham Bulls Athletic Park endures as a waterfront testament to tenacity, triumphs, and timeless minor-league mirth in MiLB's maritime 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.
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.
Plastic 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.
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Hardin Penworks, LLC, certifies that material supplied to the artisan of the accompanying hand-crafted item was sourced from the plastic stadium seats of Veterans Stadium.
Veterans Stadium, commonly known as the Vet, was a multi-purpose stadium located at the northeast corner of Broad Street and Pattison Avenue, as part of the South Philadelphia Sports Complex.
The Vet hosted the MLB Philadelphia Phillies and the NFL Philadelphia Eagles from 1971 to 2003. The Vet also hosted the annual Army-Navy game 17 times between 1980 and 2001. It was demolished 2004 after being replaced by the Citizens Bank Park and Lincoln Financial Field.
This material is guaranteed to be 100% Authentic.
Plastic 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.
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Hardin Penworks, LLC, certifies that material supplied to the artisan of the accompanying hand-crafted item was sourced from the plastic seats of Soldier Field.
Soldier Field is an American football stadium located in the Near South Side of Chicago, IL. It opened in 1924 and is the home field of the NFL Chicago Bears. With a football capacity of 61,500, it is the 3rd smallest stadium in the NFL. In 2016, Soldier Field is the 2nd oldest stadium in the NFL as Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum opened a year earlier than Soldier Field.
This material is guaranteed to be 100% Authentic.
Plastic 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.
Hardin Penworks, LLC, certifies that material supplied to the artisan of the accompanying hand-crafted item was sourced from the plastic seat bottoms from the RCA Dome.
The stadium was originally named the Hoosier Dome until 1994 when RCA paid for the naming rights for 10 years, with two 5-year options. It was the home of the NFL Indianapolis Colts franchise for 24 seasons from 1984 to 2007. The dome was made up of 233 tons of Teflon-coated fiberglass held up by the air pressure inside the building. Lucas Oil Stadium replaced the RCA Dome in 2008 when the RCA Dome was demolished.
This material is guaranteed to be 100% Authentic.
Pen turned by Steve Baker
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.
Big Blue Blitz into Meadowlands Mayhem – Snag Your Giants Glory!
Picture storming the end zone with a pen carved from seats that thundered with Giants grit at the Meadowlands, or uncorking Super Bowl toasts with a stopper surging in royal blue-red blaze. From Lombardi rings reliving LT's sacks to tailgate-tough knives carving post-game pastrami feasts—each powerhouse is lathe-forged from authentic stadium shards, blitzing playoff pandemonium into heirloom hits. Rally your row and unleash the G-Men's relentless rampage in every revolution!
Giants Stadium: Giants' Meadowlands Monument of Gridiron Greatness
Giants Stadium towered over the New Jersey Turnpike in East Rutherford, a concrete colossus of Big Blue bravado since its groundbreaking genesis. Conceived in the early 1970s to replace the creaky Yankee Stadium and Polo Grounds, the $78 million marvel—funded by New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority bonds—broke ground in 1972 and roared open on October 10, 1976, with the Giants edging the Dallas Cowboys 14-10 before 76,042 fans—heralding a new era of Meadowlands might and instantly etching its dual-sport destiny into NFL lore.
Ballooning from 76,891 seats to a raucous 78,741 capacity on AstroTurf (swapped to grass in 2003), Giants Stadium encircled a standard 120x53-yard battlefield—fostering fender-banging frenzy with those iconic upper decks and end-zone scoreboards. Facelifts flared: 1984's $10 million lighting upgrades, 1994's $30 million club seating surge, 2000s' $100 million video board and suite expansions—blending raw, rattling intimacy with fan-favorite fury, all while sharing turf with the Jets until MetLife's 2010 call.
Giants' gridiron ground for 34 seasons, the stadium cradled two Super Bowl triumphs (1986 XX, 1990 XXV—both home-fueled feasts), LT's sack supremacy, Eli's heroics, and NFC East crowns amid 400+ home wins. Record roars hit 79,310 for 1981's playoff pulse vs. Eagles, pulsing with "New York, New York" anthems and tailgate traditions. Demolished in 2010 for parking paradise, Giants Stadium endures as a Meadowlands testament to tenacity, triumphs, and timeless Big Blue in NFL's northeast.
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.
Plastic 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.
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Hardin Penworks, LLC, certifies that material supplied to the artisan of the accompanying hand-crafted item was sourced from the plastic stadium seats of Veterans Stadium.
Veterans Stadium, commonly known as the Vet, was a multi-purpose stadium located at the northeast corner of Broad Street and Pattison Avenue, as part of the South Philadelphia Sports Complex.
The Vet hosted the MLB Philadelphia Phillies and the NFL Philadelphia Eagles from 1971 to 2003. The Vet also hosted the annual Army-Navy game 17 times between 1980 and 2001. It was demolished 2004 after being replaced by the Citizens Bank Park and Lincoln Financial Field.
This material is guaranteed to be 100% Authentic.
Plastic 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.
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Hardin Penworks, LLC, certifies that material supplied to the artisan of the accompanying hand-crafted item was sourced from the plastic seat bottoms of Texas Stadium.
Opened in October 1971, it was known for its distinctive "hole in the roof", after plans to construct a retractable roof were abandoned. Located in Irving, TX, stadium was the home field of the NFL Dallas Cowboys for 38 seasons, until 2008 and had a seating capacity of 65,675. In 2009, the Cowboys moved to the AT&T Stadium. Texas Stadium was demolished on April 11, 2010 by a controlled implosion.
This material is guaranteed to be 100% Authentic.
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.
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Shibe Park, known later as Connie Mack Stadium, was the home of the Philadelphia Athletics and the Philadelphia Phillies. When it opened April 12, 1909, it became baseball's first steel-and-concrete stadium. The venue's two home teams won both the first and last games at the stadium: the Athletics beat the Boston Red Sox 8-1 on opening day 1909, while the Phillies beat the Montreal Expos 2-1 on October 1, 1970, in the park's final contest.
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.
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Moody Coliseum is a 7,000-seat multi-purpose arena in University Park, Texas (an inner suburb of Dallas). The arena opened in 1956. It is home to the Southern Methodist University Mustangs basketball teams and volleyball team. It was also home to the Dallas Chaparrals and Texas Chaparrals of the American Basketball Association before they moved to San Antonio, Texas, as the San Antonio Spurs. It was also later a temporary home for the San Antonio Spurs.
Moody Coliseum has been the home of SMU basketball since December 3, 1956, when the Mustangs defeated McMurry, 113-36. Moody has hosted Mustang Volleyball since the program's inception in 1996.
It was also home to the Dallas Mavericks on April 26, 1984, for Game 5 of their Western Conference Quarterfinal series against the Seattle SuperSonics, locally referred to as "Moody Madness". The Mavericks won the game in overtime, 105-104. Less than 48 hours later, the Mavs lost Game 1 of the Western Conference Semifinals to the Los Angeles Lakers by 43 points en route to a 4-1 series loss.
The Coliseum has undergone several changes in the past few years to modernize the facility. In 1980-81, the newly remodeled E. O. ("Doc") Hayes Memorial Dressing Room was opened. In 1984, a new scoreboard was installed over the center circle and new chairback seats were built at floor level on the north side. In 1985, more chairback seats were added, this time in the west end. The original wood floor of Moody Coliseum was replaced with a new wood surface and new lighting was installed in August 1986. In 1996, the court was redesigned to mark SMU's entry into one of the premier basketball leagues in America, the Western Athletic Conference.
In December 2006, a brand new $1 million jumbotron was installed. In addition, in the summer of 2007, the hardwood court was redesigned, with a new color scheme and midcourt logo for the Mustangs. In 2013 major renovations were made for the upcoming 2014 season, their first in the newly formed American Conference and with their new coach, legend Larry Brown. Renovations include: new concourses, lighting, seats, luxury boxes, Wi-Fi capability, floor color scheme and an LED scoreboard with LED signage around the arena. Cost of renovations this time topped the $40 million range.
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.
Spread Your Wings with Halo Heritage – Nab Your Diamond Darling!
Envision cracking a cold one with a stopper sculpted from seats that haloed with Angels' roars at the Big A, or inking rally cries with a pen beaming red-hot rally magic. From dazzling rings recapturing grand-slam glory to dugout-durable knives slicing post-game feasts—each treasure is spun from genuine stadium shards, soaring seventh-inning stretches into eternal emblems. Rally your realm and let the Halos' heavenly swing illuminate every lathe whirl!
Angel Stadium of Anaheim: Celestial Citadel of Halos Glory
Angel Stadium of Anaheim gleams in the heart of Orange County, a sun-drenched beacon of Los Angeles Angels baseball since its grand unveiling. Construction broke ground on August 31, 1964, transforming a humble cornfield into a $24 million marvel modeled after Dodger Stadium. It burst open on April 19, 1966, with the California Angels edging the Chicago White Sox 3-1 in their inaugural MLB game before 37,511 ecstatic fans—capping a journey from Wrigley Field (1961) and Chavez Ravine (1962-65). Originally Anaheim Stadium, it earned its angelic moniker in 2003, honoring the franchise's winged legacy and Gene Autry's cowboy crooner vision.
Boasting a cozy 45,517 capacity on FieldTurf (since 2019), the park serves up intimate vistas with hitter-friendly dimensions: 330 feet to left and right, 387 to the alleys, and a breezy 400 to center—perfect for Big A blasts aided by the marine layer. Dual-sport roots faded with a seismic $100 million 1996-98 rebirth by Disney owners, stripping football bones for pure baseball bliss, boosting seats to 45,050 with lush lawns, luxury suites, and the iconic rock pile waterfall in left-center. Later glow-ups—like 2009 LED lights, massive outfield video walls, and 2021 shade sails—keep it fresh, blending retro charm with modern mojo for fan-favorite vibes.
Home turf for the Los Angeles Angels since kickoff, Angel Stadium has haloed 2002 World Series magic (Halos' lone crown, clinched at home), 1982 and 1986 AL pennants, no-hitters galore (Nolan Ryan's five here), and epic comebacks like the 2014 AL West wire-to-wire romp. Hosting All-Star Games in 1967, 1989, 1999, and 2010, plus record crowds (48,827 vs. Rangers in 2023), it thrums with 58+ seasons of AL West wars, rally monkey mayhem, and Trout-tastic triumphs. Beyond diamonds, it's concert central and community crown—fostering Anaheim's sunny soul. As the Angels chase eternal flight, their stadium soars as a shrine to splendor, surprises, and celestial sports splendor.
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.
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.
Dawg Pound Dash – Snag Your FirstEnergy Fury!
Imagine spiking a game-winning field goal with a pen carved from seats that thundered with Browns battles at FirstEnergy, or uncorking Dawg Pound roars with a stopper surging in orange-brown blaze. From end-zone rings reliving playoff plunges to sideline-tough knives carving post-game pierogi feasts—each powerhouse is lathe-forged from authentic stadium shards, blitzing Lake Erie lore into heirloom hits. Rally your row and let the Browns' unbreakable grit electrify every carve!
FirstEnergy Stadium: Browns' Lakeside Citadel of Gridiron Grit
FirstEnergy Stadium, perched on the shores of Lake Erie in Cleveland's North Coast Harbor, stands as a rust-belt fortress for the Cleveland Browns since its triumphant return. Born from the ashes of the team's 1996 relocation heartbreak, the $285 million marvel—funded by a 1990s public-private pact—broke ground on May 15, 1997, and roared open on September 12, 1999, with the expansion Browns falling 43-0 to the Pittsburgh Steelers before 71,398 fervent fans—heralding Cleveland's football revival and instantly dubbing it the "Dawg Pound" den for its rowdy, chain-rattling faithful.
From its inaugural 73,200 seats reduced to a thunderous 67,431 capacity on FieldTurf (standard 120x53.3-yard NFL battlefield), FirstEnergy brews bone-crushing intimacy where Lake winds whip and seagulls soar—dimensions a runner's dream amid those iconic end-zone scoreboards. Renovations revved in 2014-2015 with a $120 million two-phase overhaul: Phase 1 unveiled massive HD video boards (40x192 feet), ribbon displays, and upgraded audio; Phase 2 transformed concourses, suites, and concessions with modern branding—blending industrial edge with fan-favorite fury via Browns ownership infusions.
Browns' bedrock since rebirth, FirstEnergy has cradled playoff pulses like the 2020 wild-card thriller vs. Steelers (48-37 upset) and 2023's divisional dreams, Jim Brown's mythic runs echoes, and Baker Mayfield's miracles amid 300+ home wins and sellout streaks. Record roars hit 73,200 for 1999's opener, pulsing with "Dawg Pound" chains, pierogi races, and "O-H-I-O" chants. Beyond gridiron gold, it hosts concerts and community carnivals, etching Cleveland's resilient roar into lore. As Browns hunt Lombardi legacy, FirstEnergy Stadium endures as a lakeside testament to tenacity, triumphs, and timeless Dawg spirit in NFL's north.
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.
Plastic 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.
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Miami Orange Bowl is located in Miami, Fl.
Originally known as Burdine Stadium when opened in 1937, it was renamed in 1959 for the Orange Bowl college football bowl game which was played at the venue following every season from 1938 to 1996. The Miami Orange Bowl was an outdoor athletic stadium. It hosted the home the NCAA Miami Hurricanes football team 1937-2007, and the NFL's Miami Dolphins 1966-1986 until the opening of Joe Robbie Stadium.
This material is unconditionally guaranteed to be 100% Authentic.
Plastic 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.
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These pen blanks are sourced from the red plastic seats of Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh, PA. Three Rivers Stadium was a multi-purpose stadium home to the MLB's Pittsburgh Pirates and the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers from 1970-2000. Built as a replacement for Forbes Field, ground was broken in April 1968. The stadium opened on July 16, 1970, when the Pirates played their first game there. In the 1971 World Series, Three Rivers Stadium hosted the first World Series game played at night. The final game in the stadium was won by the Steelers on December 16, 2000. After its closing, Three Rivers Stadium was demolished in 2001, and the Pittsburgh Pirates and Pittsburgh Steelers moved into PNC Park and Heinz Field, respectively.

