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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.
Blanks are chunks of the blue seats mixed with New York Giants colored resin.
Pen Blanks are a minimum of 3/4" x 3/4"
Bottle Stopper and Ring blanks are 1-1/2" round
Full blocks are 6" x 5.25" and a minimum of 3/4" thick
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. (Full Blocks come with 10 COAs.)
All blanks are cut as they are ordered.
Description coming soon
Watch Part Steampunk Jr Cap.
These blanks are 12.5mm tubes used with the common Jr Gent sized kits. These sports team blanks pair excellently with team specific stadium seat material found on the New York Giants' stadium pages.
The list below is not a complete list, but it is a great starting point list to find your desired kit.
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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The Polo Grounds was the name of three stadiums in Upper Manhattan, New York City, used mainly for professional baseball and American football from 1880 until 1963. As the name suggests, the original Polo Grounds, opened in 1876 and demolished in 1889, was built for the sport of polo. Bound on the south and north by 110th and 112th Streets and on the east and west by Fifth and Sixth (Lenox) Avenues, just north of Central Park, it was converted to a baseball stadium when leased by the New York Metropolitans in 1880. The third Polo Grounds, built in 1890 and renovated after a fire in 1911, is the one generally indicated when the Polo Grounds is referenced. It was located in Coogan's Hollow and was noted for its distinctive bathtub shape, very short distances to the left and right field walls, and an unusually deep center field.
In baseball, the original Polo Grounds was home to the New York Metropolitans from 1880 until 1885, and the New York Giants from 1883 until 1888. The Giants played in the second Polo Grounds for part of the 1889 season and all of the 1890 season, and at the third and fourth Polo Grounds from 1891 through 1957. The Polo Grounds was also the home field of the New York Yankees from 1913 until 1922 and the New York Mets in their first two seasons of 1962 and 1963. It hosted the 1934 and 1942 Major League Baseball All-Star Games.
In football, the third Polo Grounds was home to the New York Brickley Giants for one game in 1921 and the New York Giants from 1925 to 1955. The New York Jets of the American Football League played at the stadium from the league's inaugural season of 1960 through 1963.
Other sporting events held at the Polo Grounds included soccer, boxing, and Gaelic football. The last sporting event at the Polo Grounds was a football game between the New York Jets and the Buffalo Bills on December 14, 1963. Shea Stadium opened in 1964 and replaced the Polo Grounds as the home of the Mets and Jets. The Polo Grounds was demolished over a period of four months that year and a public housing complex, known as the Polo Grounds Towers, was built on the site.
Wooden seat pen blanks!
Pen Blanks are 3/4" x 3/4"
Ring Blanks are 1-1/2"
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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The Yale Bowl is a college football stadium in the northeast United States, located in New Haven, Connecticut, on the border of West Haven, about 1½ miles (2½ km) west of the main campus of Yale University. The home of the Yale Bulldogs of the Ivy League, it opened in 1914 with 70,896 seats; renovations have reduced its current capacity to 61,446.
The Yale Bowl inspired the design and naming of the Rose Bowl, from which is derived the name of college football's post-season games ("bowl games") and the NFL's "Super Bowl".
In 1973 and 1974, the stadium hosted the New York Giants of the National Football League, as Yankee Stadium was renovated into a baseball-only venue and Giants Stadium was still in the planning and construction stages; the team was able to move to Shea Stadium in 1975.
Original Dugout Bench removed in July 2009!
Only available in SHORT Pen Blanks at 2-1/2" x 3/4" square size. These blanks were cut from the original 2-12" squares sold as souvenir relics from the stadium.
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with foil embossed COA seal.
Some blanks are cut as they are ordered.
Yankee Stadium was a stadium located in the Bronx, a borough of New York City. It was the home ballpark of the New York Yankees, one of the city's Major League Baseball (MLB) franchises, from 1923 to 1973 and then from 1976 to 2008. The stadium hosted 6,581 Yankees regular season home games during its 85-year history. It was also the former home of the New York Giants football team from 1956 through the first part of the 1973-74 football season. The stadium's nickname, "The House That Ruth Built", is derived from Babe Ruth, the baseball superstar whose prime years coincided with the stadium's opening and the beginning of the Yankees' winning history. It has also been known as "The Big Ballpark in The Bronx", "The Stadium", and "The Cathedral of Baseball".
The stadium was built from 1922 to 1923 for $2.4 million ($33.9 million in 2016 dollars). The stadium's construction was paid for entirely by Yankees owner Jacob Ruppert, who was eager to have his own stadium after sharing the Polo Grounds with the New York Giants baseball team the previous 10 years. Yankee Stadium opened for the 1923 MLB season and at the time, it was hailed as a one-of-a-kind facility in the country for its size. Over the course of its history, it became one of the most famous venues in the United States, having hosted a variety of events and historic moments during its existence. While many of these moments were baseball-related—including World Series games, no-hitters, perfect games and historic home runs—the stadium also hosted boxing matches, the 1958 NFL Championship Game, concerts, Jehovah's Witnesses conventions (see record attendance) and three Papal Masses. The stadium went through many alterations and playing surface configurations over the years. The condition of the facility worsened in the 1960s and 1970s, prompting its closing for renovation from 1974 to 1975. The renovation significantly altered the appearance of the venue and reduced the distance of the outfield fences.
In 2006, the Yankees began building a new $2.3 billion stadium in public parkland adjacent to the stadium. The price included $1.2 billion in public subsidies. The design includes a replica of the frieze along the roof that was in Yankee Stadium. Monument Park, a Hall of Fame for prominent former Yankees, was relocated to the new stadium. Yankee Stadium closed following the 2008 baseball season and the new stadium opened in 2009, adopting the "Yankee Stadium" moniker. The original Yankee Stadium was demolished in 2010, two years after it closed, and the 8-acre site was converted into a park called Heritage Field.
Original 1923 Straight back and 1946 Curved back wooden seat hybrid resin pen blanks! These blanks are hybrid blanks using the cut-offs from Yankee Stadium wooden seats. These cut-offs are mixed with Alumilite resin dyed to match the New York Yankees team colors.
Pen Blanks are 3/4" x 3/4""
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with foil embossed COA seal.
Yankee 1926 and 1946 COAs are the exact same COA except for the seat pictured on the COA. The Giants COA features the Giants color theme and the 1946 seat.
Some blanks are cut as they are ordered.
Yankee Stadium was a stadium located in the Bronx, a borough of New York City. It was the home ballpark of the New York Yankees, one of the city's Major League Baseball (MLB) franchises, from 1923 to 1973 and then from 1976 to 2008. The stadium hosted 6,581 Yankees regular season home games during its 85-year history. It was also the former home of the New York Giants football team from 1956 through the first part of the 1973-74 football season. The stadium's nickname, "The House That Ruth Built", is derived from Babe Ruth, the baseball superstar whose prime years coincided with the stadium's opening and the beginning of the Yankees' winning history. It has also been known as "The Big Ballpark in The Bronx", "The Stadium", and "The Cathedral of Baseball".
The stadium was built from 1922 to 1923 for $2.4 million ($33.9 million in 2016 dollars). The stadium's construction was paid for entirely by Yankees owner Jacob Ruppert, who was eager to have his own stadium after sharing the Polo Grounds with the New York Giants baseball team the previous 10 years. Yankee Stadium opened for the 1923 MLB season and at the time, it was hailed as a one-of-a-kind facility in the country for its size. Over the course of its history, it became one of the most famous venues in the United States, having hosted a variety of events and historic moments during its existence. While many of these moments were baseball-related—including World Series games, no-hitters, perfect games and historic home runs—the stadium also hosted boxing matches, the 1958 NFL Championship Game, concerts, Jehovah's Witnesses conventions (see record attendance) and three Papal Masses. The stadium went through many alterations and playing surface configurations over the years. The condition of the facility worsened in the 1960s and 1970s, prompting its closing for renovation from 1974 to 1975. The renovation significantly altered the appearance of the venue and reduced the distance of the outfield fences.
In 2006, the Yankees began building a new $2.3 billion stadium in public parkland adjacent to the stadium. The price included $1.2 billion in public subsidies. The design includes a replica of the frieze along the roof that was in Yankee Stadium. Monument Park, a Hall of Fame for prominent former Yankees, was relocated to the new stadium. Yankee Stadium closed following the 2008 baseball season and the new stadium opened in 2009, adopting the "Yankee Stadium" moniker. The original Yankee Stadium was demolished in 2010, two years after it closed, and the 8-acre site was converted into a park called Heritage Field.
Original 1923 Straight back and 1946 Curved back wooden seat pen blanks!
Pen Blanks are 3/4" x 3/4"
Knife Scales are 5" x 1-1/2" x 3/4"
Ring Blanks are 1-1/2" sq x 3/4"
All blanks will come with one COA per blank. COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with foil embossed COA seal.
Yankee 1926 and 1946 COAs are the exact same COA except for the seat pictured on the COA. The Giants COA features the Giants color theme and the 1946 seat.
Some blanks are cut as they are ordered.
No finished pens are included with any purchase. Pen components are purchased separately from your favorite vendors.
Yankee Stadium was a stadium located in the Bronx, a borough of New York City. It was the home ballpark of the New York Yankees, one of the city's Major League Baseball (MLB) franchises, from 1923 to 1973 and then from 1976 to 2008. The stadium hosted 6,581 Yankees regular season home games during its 85-year history. It was also the former home of the New York Giants football team from 1956 through the first part of the 1973-74 football season. The stadium's nickname, "The House That Ruth Built", is derived from Babe Ruth, the baseball superstar whose prime years coincided with the stadium's opening and the beginning of the Yankees' winning history. It has also been known as "The Big Ballpark in The Bronx", "The Stadium", and "The Cathedral of Baseball".
The stadium was built from 1922 to 1923 for $2.4 million ($33.9 million in 2016 dollars). The stadium's construction was paid for entirely by Yankees owner Jacob Ruppert, who was eager to have his own stadium after sharing the Polo Grounds with the New York Giants baseball team the previous 10 years. Yankee Stadium opened for the 1923 MLB season and at the time, it was hailed as a one-of-a-kind facility in the country for its size. Over the course of its history, it became one of the most famous venues in the United States, having hosted a variety of events and historic moments during its existence. While many of these moments were baseball-related—including World Series games, no-hitters, perfect games and historic home runs—the stadium also hosted boxing matches, the 1958 NFL Championship Game, concerts, Jehovah's Witnesses conventions (see record attendance) and three Papal Masses. The stadium went through many alterations and playing surface configurations over the years. The condition of the facility worsened in the 1960s and 1970s, prompting its closing for renovation from 1974 to 1975. The renovation significantly altered the appearance of the venue and reduced the distance of the outfield fences.
In 2006, the Yankees began building a new $2.3 billion stadium in public parkland adjacent to the stadium. The price included $1.2 billion in public subsidies. The design includes a replica of the frieze along the roof that was in Yankee Stadium. Monument Park, a Hall of Fame for prominent former Yankees, was relocated to the new stadium. Yankee Stadium closed following the 2008 baseball season and the new stadium opened in 2009, adopting the "Yankee Stadium" moniker. The original Yankee Stadium was demolished in 2010, two years after it closed, and the 8-acre site was converted into a park called Heritage Field.
These blanks are made with game used jersey relics from Rogers Hornsby of the St. Louis Cardinals and paired with wood from a Sportsman's Park seat.
Rogers Hornsby Relic Blanks:
- Real MLB Game Played Jersey relic.
- These blanks sold in sierra clones, PSI Baseball, and Jr Sets
- Wood used is from an original Sportsman's Park Seat
- All blanks will come with one COA per blank.
- COAs are 4" x 6" card stock with foil embossed COA seal.
- Custom tube sizes available (two-three week delivery)
Hardin Penworks, LLC, certifies that material supplied to the artisan of the accompanying hand-crafted item was sourced from a game used jersey swatch of the St. Louis Cardinals’ Rogers Hornsby and wooden seat slats of Sportsman’s Park.
Rogers Hornsby Sr was baseball infielder, manager, and coach who played 23 MLB seasons. He played for the St. Louis Cardinals from 1915 to 1926, 1933 and the St. Louis Browns from 1933 to 1937. He also played New York Giants in 1927, Boston Braves in 1928, and Chicago Cubs from 1929 to 1932. He was was a World Series champion and the National League MVP twice. Throughout his career, Hornsby was intermittently his own manager, and after retiring as a player, he managed the Browns in 1952 and the Cincinnati Reds from 1952 to 1953.
Hornsby is regarded as one of the best hitters of all time. He had 2,930 hits and 301 home runs in his career. His career batting average of .358 is second only to Ty Cobb, at .366, in MLB history. He won two Triple Crowns and batted .400 or more three times during his career. He is the only player to hit 40 home runs and bat .400 in the same year, 1922. His batting average for the 1924 season was .424, a mark that no player has matched since. He was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1942.
This material is guaranteed to be 100% Authentic.
Feel free to message us for any questions.
facebook.com/StadiumPenBlanks/
Michael@StadiumPenBlanks.com
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.
Patriot Power Surge – Snag Your Foxboro Fortress Fury!
Picture storming the goal line with a pen forged from seats that rumbled with Patriots pride at Foxboro, or uncorking AFC anthems with a stopper surging in navy-red blaze. From end-zone rings reliving Grogan's grit to tailgate-tough knives carving post-game clam chowder feasts—each emblem is lathe-born from genuine stadium grit, blitzing Snow Bowl sagas into heirloom hits. Rally your row and unleash the Pats' relentless rampage in every revolution!
Foxboro Stadium: Patriots' Foxborough Fortress of Gridiron Grit
Foxboro Stadium anchored the suburban sprawl of Foxborough, Massachusetts—a no-frills bastion of New England football forged in the AFL-NFL merger's fire. After a decade of nomadic woes in Boston venues like Fenway Park and Harvard Stadium, groundbreaking sliced the turf on September 23, 1970, birthing a $7.1 million concrete colossus with no public dime—privately funded by a consortium led by William Sullivan. It roared open on August 15, 1971, with the newly rechristened New England Patriots topping the New York Giants 20-14 before over 60,000 fans, marking the franchise's bold leap from Boston blues to regional rebirth.
From its inaugural 60,764 seats swelling to 61,345 amid minimal expansions, Foxboro encircled a standard 120x53-yard gridiron on AstroTurf (swapped to grass in 1984 for the USFL's Patriots stint), fostering raw, rattling intimacy where chain-link fences hemmed the Dawg Pound precursors—dimensions a runner's delight under those utilitarian upper decks. Facelifts were few: 1983's Sullivan Stadium rebrand honoring the owners, 1989's return to Foxboro Stadium, and 1990s' $20 million turf-to-grass and lighting tweaks—blending budget bones with blue-collar brawn, all while battling bankruptcy and blackouts in its twilight.
Patriots' pounding ground for 31 seasons, Foxboro cradled the 1985 AFC Championship thriller (lost to Bears en route to Super XX), Grogan's grit-fueled 1980s surges, and Bledsoe's bombs amid 300+ home wins and sellout streaks. Record roars hit 61,345 for 1979's playoff pulse vs. Texans, pulsing with rivalry rumbles vs. Jets and Dolphins, the 1994 USFL experiment, and fan-fueled fortitude through lean years. Demolished in 2008 for Gillette's gleam, Foxboro endures as a testament to tenacity, triumphs, and timeless turf 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.
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.
Bay Bombers' Breeze – Nab Your Stick Slugger Souvenir!
Picture cracking a bay-side blast with a pen hewn from seats that whipped with Giants' gale-force glory at Candlestick, or toasting triple plays with a stopper beaming orange-black magic. From diamond dazzle rings reliving Mays' miracles to bleacher-tough knives slicing post-game garlic fries—each gem is lathe-launched from true Stick shards, sailing "The Catch" chills into eternal emblems. Rally your rally cap and let the Giants' windy wizardry illuminate every swing!
Candlestick Park: Giants' Foggy Field of Dreams
Candlestick Park, the bay-blasted beacon of Bay Area baseball, perches on the foggy fringes of San Francisco's southeast shore—a windswept wonderland born of mid-century migration dreams. Envisioned in 1957 to lure the New York Giants westward from the Polo Grounds' chill, groundbreaking pierced the tidal flats on June 20, 1958, dredging bay mud into a $24 million concrete cove by architect John Bolles. It cracked open on April 15, 1960, with the Giants topping the Dodgers 3-1 before 42,253 fans under Willie Mays' magnetic gaze—dubbing "The 'Stick" for its gusty quirks and seismic soul, instantly transplanting Gotham grit to Golden Gate glamour.
Encasing 58,000 diamond diehards in open-air ozone on AstroTurf (swapped to grass in 1976, then back for '90s), Candlestick conjured a pitcher's paradise amid jet-roar interruptions and fog-horn fanfare—dimensions a fly-ball fiend's foe: 335 feet to left, 402 to center, 335 to right with 25-foot walls taming those trademark tempests. Facelifts fogged forth: 1960's initial 23,000 swell, 1970s' upper decks to 58,000 for dual-sport digs with 49ers, 1986's $50 million quake-proof quake (post-'89 Loma Prieta tremor halting World Series Game 3), 1990s' luxury lofts and club seats—blending raw, rattling intimacy with retro charm till Oracle Park's 2000 call, leaving football echoes in its wake.
Sanctuary for the San Francisco Giants across four decades, Candlestick cradled the 1962 pennant pulse, 1989 World Series quake-quake (swept by A's at home), Mays' 660th homer (1973 farewell), Bonds' 73-blast barrage (1999 echoes), and All-Star spectacles in '62, '87, '93 amid 3,000+ home wins and sellout surges. Record roars hit 62,674 for 1993's NLDS, pulsing with "Beat L.A." chants, garlic fry frenzies, and fog-delay dramas. Beyond bases, it hosted Beatles '66, Grateful Dead '89, and papal visits, etching SF's eclectic edge into lore. Demolished in 2015 for a residential ripple, Candlestick endures as a foggy testament to tenacity, tempests, and timeless bay breeze in MLB'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.

