CW

Chris W <[email protected]>

14/12/2004 6:44 PM

Where to buy wood online

I have been thinking about making a set of wood building blocks for my
nephew because they want too much money for them in the stores but I
need to find a good deal on some wood. Most of them seem to use Hard
Maple or Rubberwood. The blocks are 1.5" thick and 2.75 wide. I found
some Maple that is 1.75 x 3 for $.25 an inch. I think the Rubberwood
should be cheaper but I can't find a source for it online. If any one
has a suggestion for some other type of wood that would cost less and
still be durable with out any finish I would love to hear an argument
for it.

--
Chris W

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This topic has 3 replies

ma

max

in reply to Chris W <[email protected]> on 14/12/2004 6:44 PM

15/12/2004 2:47 PM

Chris
When I was building furniture we used to give away small chunks. Why don't
you find some cabinet/furniture shops in your area and see if they have
hardwood scraps. I can give you some maple chunks if you want them. I have
also shipped over 300 pounds of exotic scraps to pipe makers around the
country.
max

> I have been thinking about making a set of wood building blocks for my
> nephew because they want too much money for them in the stores but I
> need to find a good deal on some wood. Most of them seem to use Hard
> Maple or Rubberwood. The blocks are 1.5" thick and 2.75 wide. I found
> some Maple that is 1.75 x 3 for $.25 an inch. I think the Rubberwood
> should be cheaper but I can't find a source for it online. If any one
> has a suggestion for some other type of wood that would cost less and
> still be durable with out any finish I would love to hear an argument
> for it.

pc

"patrick conroy"

in reply to Chris W <[email protected]> on 14/12/2004 6:44 PM

15/12/2004 7:55 PM


"Chris W" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:rOLvd.77$zp.16@lakeread07...

> I have been thinking about making a set of wood building blocks for my
> nephew because they want too much money for them in the stores but I

Ditto. I'm pretty much set on Hard Maple. I can get it locally, but in your
shows, I'd be tempted to consider a "UPS Bundle" from Wall Lumber.
www.walllumber.com. 20BF of 8/4 hard maple for $104 to your door.

sD

[email protected] (Doug Miller)

in reply to Chris W <[email protected]> on 14/12/2004 6:44 PM

15/12/2004 12:58 AM

In article <rOLvd.77$zp.16@lakeread07>, Chris W <[email protected]> wrote:
>I have been thinking about making a set of wood building blocks for my
>nephew because they want too much money for them in the stores but I
>need to find a good deal on some wood. Most of them seem to use Hard
>Maple or Rubberwood. The blocks are 1.5" thick and 2.75 wide. I found
>some Maple that is 1.75 x 3 for $.25 an inch. I think the Rubberwood
>should be cheaper but I can't find a source for it online. If any one
>has a suggestion for some other type of wood that would cost less and
>still be durable with out any finish I would love to hear an argument
>for it.
>
When I was a kid, I had a whole box full of wooden blocks that I know now were
cut from 1x2 Douglas fir, and 2x2 sugar pine. No finish on any of them, and
none needed: skin oil takes care of that. I played with them for years. Then
my brother played with them for years. When they were young my boys played
with those blocks too, every time we visited Grandma and Grandpa. Sure, the
corners are worn down a bit, but they're still perfectly serviceable. Little
boys don't care what the blocks are made of, or if the corners aren't quite
sharp. They just want to build bridges and castles and forts.

--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek-at-milmac-dot-com)

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