Best unfinished wood according to redditors

We found 146 Reddit comments discussing the best unfinished wood. We ranked the 88 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Unfinished Wood:

u/pmmenakedscience · 89 pointsr/dndnext

Edit 2: The guide is available here

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I made these token mini's as an alternative to buying miniatures. They're significantly cheaper and can be made in 0.5", 1", 2", 3" sizes and cost very little (1" and 2" shown).

If enough people are interested, I'd be happy to create a DIY post or video.

Edit: I created a MS Word template (link) for 1", 2", 3", and 4" tokens for anyone that doesn't want to wait until I post my guide.

  • Find a picture of the creature you're interested in using and import into word.
  • When you select the picture, the top-right should have a layout option - click on it.
  • Select the "Behind Text" option beneath With Text Wrapping and select the radio button next to "Fix Position on Page".
  • Resize your image using a corner handle and position it within the appropriate sized circle.
  • Repeat for additional images.
  • Save the pages you want to print as a PDF and have them printed on cardstock.

    I use wooden circles as the base - they're available on Amazon in 1", 2" and 3" sizes; /u/ScoutManDan suggested MDF discs.

    The tops are epoxy stickers - they're also available on Amazon in various sizes.

    When it comes to assembly, this is the order I use:

  • Apply epoxy sticker
  • Cut out token (I use Fiskars RazorEdge MicroTip Shears but you can also use a circular paper punch)
  • Apply KrazyGlue to back of token and press to wooden disk
u/notanotherpyr0 · 14 pointsr/dndnext

You don't even need to buy them in bulk. Most stores will have a bunch of free commons from players who are playing draft or sealed in a big box. Just grab whatever you want from there, most sets are going to have at least a few goblins, undead, and beasts.

But yeah buy a 1" hole puncher, some 1" washers from a hardware store or a 1" wooden dowel cut into smaller pieces. Or here 100 1" wooden circles. Get that, a 1 inch hole punch, and some glue.

u/peoplebuttspongecake · 11 pointsr/rpg


This is a great idea!

To make it even easier:


1 inch Felt Pads

I inch printable labels

1 inch wooden disks

No cutting required.

u/Microtiger · 10 pointsr/DnD

I'm about to make a post about how I built a fully functional DM screen from scratch for about $14, but as far as original content that's it for me. However, here's some links that caught my interest or inspired me if it helps any.

Tips

ProJared: How to be a good DM

DM Support Group

Content Generation

DonJon Inn Generator

[World Gen] (http://rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/14706/rules-for-generating-a-game-world-as-you-go)

Map making

Podcasts

For inspiration

Adventure Zone - A real play podcast with a group of seasoned improvisational comedians. The perfect, I think, blend of fun, fantasy, and storytelling. Certainly not serious, but still has really great storytelling and roleplaying. Griffin is an amazing DM and has really inspired me to create like he does.

Hello from the Magic Tavern - Doesn't play DnD, but lots of lore inspiration...for better or worse.

Dungeon Master's Block - Lots of good idea and discussions.

Materials

[Role 4 Initiative dry erase tiles] (http://www.amazon.com/Dry-Erase-inch-Dungeon-Tiles/dp/B016H1B0RW) - My dungeon master uses these, it is SO much easier than using one giant dry erase playmat. We used to totally cheese things in dungeons because we knew the action must be in the direction of the rest of the empty squares. With the tiles, it's not obvious anymore which doors to take and which direction to go.

[Color coded ball pawns] (http://www.amazon.com/Ball-Pawns-Accessories-Assorted-Colors/dp/B00JOPU3UY?ie=UTF8&psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o01_s01) - I haven't gotten these in the mail yet, but I think they'll work great for marking the player characters. If I even run a longer campaign, I think it would be fun to use wooden peg dolls, painted with paint pens, as player characters, NPCs, most humanoid monsters...and other various wooden things for the bigger and weirder.

[1 inch wooden squares] (http://www.amazon.com/Package-Round-Disc-Unfinished-Cutouts/dp/B00CA1Y878?ie=UTF8&psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o01_s00) - cheap way to make markers for enemies, can write on with sharpie or use a 1 inch circle cutter to use your own color. See the really good guide here.

DM cheat sheets

Ozuro

Ronny Hart

I don't think either of these are perfect; nobody else's DM screens will ever be perfect for how you run a game. I combined these two and added my own notes for my own screen.

Reddit threads I've saved

Overland travel

Sandbox play

Terrain features for encounters

Software

DM Minion - Seems like it would help a lot with organization, certainly not required for success. Can't get it to work with my PC.

u/benacalypse · 8 pointsr/DungeonsAndDragons

Maybe a hardware store, or any sort of craft store. They are on Amazon too, but it’s for a pack of 50. There is even a comment about DnD in the reviews. lol

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01CSV14JE/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_m5HKBbGA9YAEM

u/5outh · 6 pointsr/boardgames

You can definitely consolidate; I saw something about fitting all the expansions into the Dominion "Big Box" at one point, but can't find it now.

I use these tabs as dividers: http://domtabs.sandflea.org/

and an approximation of this organizational strategy: http://www.theboardgameblog.com/2010/02/step-by-step-fit-dominion-and-its-expansions-in-one-box/

and the original box fits the base game, prosperity and seaside comfortably. Wooden artist boxes like this are also popular: https://www.amazon.com/Walnut-Hollow-Classic-Unfinished-Hobbies/dp/B004I9SLEG.

u/Plain_Squiffy · 5 pointsr/DnDIY

I found the dolls on Amazon here. A little over $12 for 50 of them and pretty good quality.

u/TheSheDM · 4 pointsr/minipainting

1" Wood discs + Black Primer = instant bases in bulk.

Use painter's tape and put it sticky side up on a cardboard mount - an easy way to do this is wrap painters tape sticky side out around an empty box so it also sticks to itself and stays on the box. Stick rows of wood discs on the tape, spray black. Let dry, flip discs, spray again, let dry. Remove discs, throw box away.

Glue Minis to bases with a couple small drops of crazy glue. Really simple, really fast, nice and neat looking.

u/pmjohnst · 4 pointsr/DnDIY

If what you're looking for is something to put under the character, instead of on:

I've read of people using wooden discs to stack under characters, and gluing labels like these to the disks.

While mine aren't meant for this, I'm sure with minimal changes, you could get it to work. What I would do is cut out each marker with as much extra color as possible, glue the marker to the wooden disk, and then trim the marker to the disk.

The links disks say that they are actually the same thickness as the size of my markers, so you should be good.

u/onewayout · 3 pointsr/tabletopgamedesign

If heft is an issue, you can swap out uncut white dice for wooden cubes. I imagine you could apply the same process OP did - painting and mod-podging - and get results that feel more like a regular die.

They're cheap, too. You can get 50 blank white 16mm dice on Amazon for under $8, which works out to about sixteen cents a die.

u/MaximumColor · 3 pointsr/pokemonduel

Get some wooden disc's from Amazon or a craft store.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01CSV14JE/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_p-XVDbR27GSP7

Also get a circle punch of the same size: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B013NESBKK/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_vaYVDbEGWXAV3

You can either print out artwork on cardstock or even use common pokemon cards to punch out the art.

Take a tiny bit of Elmer's glue, wood glue or some sticky tack, and glue the art to the wooden discs. Boom. High-quality tokens.

This is a trick used in the Roleplaying community to make tokens for their characters and NPCs without breaking the bank. ~15 dollar investment gets you like 100 tokens.

I reccomend between 1 inch and 1 1/2 inch for the size. Depends on your purposes.

Have fun!

u/compier · 3 pointsr/Woodcarving

I ordered the basswood grab box and this is what came in it pretty satisfied with it. Maybe some of you without a local wood supplier find this useful

u/dkdance100 · 3 pointsr/giantbomb

Sorry, I missed your post before making mine, wasn't trying to steal any thunder. I'd never collected any pins before, but I found this display case after the first pins came out. It was really satisfying to finish putting together.

u/WaltZunder · 3 pointsr/gamecollecting

The case is actually acrylic not glass, and is just a custom built retail display case from ebay. The red box is a pin case from amazon.

Here's the pin case:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01J6AR2RI/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_nKjJDbPVX4N6M

u/discosanta · 3 pointsr/cigars

I ordered some Spanish Cedar pen blanks off Amazon, they are very nice.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00BYGL0F8

u/Arailah · 3 pointsr/cigars

I use these. You might want to consider them as well. Inexpensive and don't take up too much room. And certainly don't smell like stale smoke :)

u/ScrabbleTank · 3 pointsr/DnD

To add to this, if you have some time for arts and crafts you can make some pretty legit looking tokens for ~20-30 cents per token.

I bought 1 inch wooden discs similar to these. You can find them at arts and crafts stores, but are usually a little more expensive and come in smaller packs. Either make your own or grab the sweet tokens WordUpGangster made and print them out. If you don't have a printer (like me) I just used a copy shop and printed them on either cardstock or medium thickness paper. A single sheet of paper can fit like 80 tokens and costs anywhere from 10-50 cents depending on the quality of paper.

Next, I bought a 10$ 1 hole punch to save time on cutting all the tokens out. Get some glue, almost any gluestick will do, and glue the tokens to the wooden discs. They look pretty sweet and I've made literally hundreds for ~50$ all said and done.

The only issue is making tokens for anything bigger than 1 inch can be a problem. I haven't found any wood discs that are reliably 2x2 inches (or bigger for that matter). For 2x2 creatures I've used metal washers to give them some weight, but that can go upwards of 1$ per token, and can be hard to find anything above 2x2.

Anyway, I hope this helps!

u/MiOdd · 3 pointsr/boardgames

For the domes, I used generic bingo chips I already had. The blocks are these blank dice and these are the pawns. The board is just a 5x5 grid I printed and laminated. It all fit snuggly in a small dice bag too. It does require a little finesse to play, since the pieces are so small, but its not so bad, we never accidentally knocked anything over but I can see that easily happening if playing with kids.

u/RedS5 · 3 pointsr/DnD

Take a look at Heroclix miniatures. The Heroclix game has fallen out of fashion so there are a lot of minis available for $1-2 US, which is pretty cheap. You want to search in the Hobbit and Lord of the Rings sections (in the
others" section), mostly - but you can get creative.

Then get yourself some little wooden craft discs, clip the Heroclix minis off at the feet using a wire snip, and glue them to the wooden discs. Congrats, you have a bunch of cheap minis now.

u/NonLinearResonance · 3 pointsr/Gifts

I like to give fountain pens as gifts. They are uncommon enough to be novel, but interesting enough to show value beyond what they actually cost. Bonus if you get a vintage pen, since the associated history adds an extra bit of interest. Italic or flexible nibs are great for writing chinese characters, from what I understand. If you can find an american made vintage pen, that is even better as a cultural gift. Also, you can easily find a nice one within your budget.

One good resource for buying professionally restored vintage pens is Pen Agora. The owner, Will does great work and is super friendly and helpful.

If you want to buy ink/paper to go with it, or would rather buy a modern pen Goulet Pens is a great vendor. Excellent customer service and product selection.

Lastly, if I am giving a special gift and want to add to the presentation, sometimes I buy an inexpensive wooden box off of amazon to package it in (something like this). If you are feeling crafty, you can even stain it or finish it with supplies from a hardware store like home depot. I usually shred some brown butcher's paper as filler.

Hopefully that helps, feel free to PM me if you need advice or suggestions :)

u/doublesoup · 2 pointsr/dndnext

One of the better purchases I've made was round wooden tokens. I've bought two sizes, 1.5" and 1". These get used all the time for monster tokens, NPC tokens, to mark important map items, etc. Whatever we want to write on them. I also made a bunch of spell tokens so my younger players could track their spell usage easier. This has been a huge improvement.

u/bdavis706 · 2 pointsr/cricut

I got them on Amazon 😊

Natural Wood Slices 2.4-2.8 inches 50 PCS Drilled Hole Unfinished Log Wooden Circles for DIY Crafts Wedding Decorations Christmas Ornaments https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07XR1GJQ2/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_V.62DbF4K2CMS

u/---YNWA--- · 2 pointsr/cigars

I have some of these I use in mine, work well.

u/Vexithan · 2 pointsr/DMAcademy

I got some wooden tokens on Amazon and then made a template in Photoshop to drop artwork into. Then I print off a full sheet on card stock, punch them out, and glue them onto the tokens. They're relatively cheap and thick enough that I can easily pick them up without them sliding around. All of the tokens also have a number on them which helps me keep track of health and when my players tell me which they're attacking.

1" Tokens here for Small/Medium Monsters

2" Tokens for Large Monsters

I haven't had my party fight anything larger yet but I like the idea of butter/yogurt tubs for the larger enemies.

u/penguin_gunner · 2 pointsr/Indiemakeupandmore

I have full size bottles lined up on a shelf I have just for bath and body products. For samples, I get small unfinished wooden boxes (something like this) and decorate them.

...To be honest, I didn't need a storage solution as much as I needed an excuse to buy little boxes to paint. It's so much fun.

u/dancemonkey · 2 pointsr/tabletopgamedesign

$10 for 50 blank dice, draw on them with Sharpie or wet-erase?

Nakimo 16MM Blank White Dice for Board Games, DIY, Fun, and Teaching, Pack of 50 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00BAKWKP2/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_RLMXCb45Q39TJ

u/Dresdom · 2 pointsr/DnD

1- Get a bag or two of these guys.

2- Age the wood. It's cheap and easy.

3- Paint or carve different cool designs. You know the stuff. Make them look like game pieces from a board game inside dungeons and dragons. Have some distinct to any other and a couple of groupings. You can use desaturated or dark colors in the aging and colorcode creatures. Use colors that let the good grain visible for better effect.

3.2- You can have some of them color coded or personalized for your party. You can tie stuff to them: a leather stripe, wire, glue glass beads for the sorcerer, a feather for the druid. You can carve or paint symbols: a holy symbol for the cleric, something runic for the dwarf, the dragonborn's initials in draconic, whatever.

3.3- You also have different sizes for bigger or smaller creatures.

4- Profit. Now you have a varied, abstract, easy to follow, customized set of pawns for all your needs, dirt cheap and that doubles as props because they look medieval fantasy AF.

4.2- Extra points if you get a parchment battle mat. Double that if you get those dice that look like bone, gems or any other cool medieval fantasy look.

5- Send pictures to r/DnDIY

u/CitizenKazr · 2 pointsr/DMAcademy
u/MsZombiePuncher · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

/u/AuntChiladas of course!

You should get her these, because I'm so damn curious what these are for.

Plus she's lovely <3

u/the_real_hamm · 2 pointsr/DnD

Miniatures can get expensive, you'll only be able to get a few dozen high-quality minis in your budget.

I use peg people for my monsters

https://www.amazon.com/Hygloss-Assorted-Decorated-Wooden-People/dp/B0044S1CRE/ref=sr_1_3?s=toys-and-games&ie=UTF8&qid=1473240398&sr=1-3

In my opinion, the only important miniatures are the ones for your players, otherwise you'll be buying dozens of goblins and skeletons and who knows what. I leave it up to them to acquire minis for their characters, and be sure to warn them that they might die, especially at low level (I wouldnt recommend a player buying a mini until at least level 3, then even if they die later at least it will be a keepsake for the memories. a level 1 death doesn't create many memories)

Another budget idea is to use binder clips and print out pictures of your monsters, like in this picture I found off google http://imgur.com/gallery/gLF1m


I would recommend an erasable battle-grid like

https://www.amazon.com/Chessex-96246-Reversible-Battlemat-1/dp/B00IVF4W0U

for your maps, then you can use wet-erase markers to draw your maps.

I'm not sure amazon is available in your area, but if not hopefully you can find some sort of vynl or plastic mat that you can draw on and make your own grid with a permanent marker.

You mentioned you bought books - that's good, but don't forget about dice! Ideally you want at least one set per player and the DM.

u/Max290 · 2 pointsr/BDSMAdvice

I have heard bamboo are the best. This might fit the bill for $19.95

www.amazon.com/BamPaddle-Bamboo-Spanking-Paddle-Beautiful/dp/B075WFC9MR/

u/MuricanPie · 2 pointsr/DnD

Wooden Clothespins are a great thing you can use. Super cheap, disposable, easy to mark with pens/markers. Take an afternoon to draw characters on them, monsters, important NPC's. Even if you just use a simple Minimalist style like this you can easily tell characters apart.

You can get about 100 of em for $15 or so. Its what one of my old DM's used, and they worked pretty fine. These were also in the related items, and could work just as well, though they are clearly less disposable, being almost 50% more expensive.

u/MrMLB · 1 pointr/TerraformingMarsGame

I cheated and bought them off Amazon. They have some that fit the board perfectly and are very good quality. From there I printed icons and then mod-podged them on and stained the tiles to create the various resources and types.

https://www.amazon.com/Hexagon-Cutout-Shapes-Unfinished-Mosaic/dp/B071QXYRFL/ref=mp_s_a_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1550466489&sr=8-4&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_QL65&keywords=hexagon+wood+tiles&dpPl=1&dpID=51IwUQFeqTL&ref=plSrch

u/chaoticgeek · 1 pointr/DungeonsAndDragons

I use a wooden disc like this for monster tokens and put letters on them so I can easily remember them in the fights. Not as much heft as a metal washer but works the same way and you can glue pictures to them for custom PCs/NPCs.

u/Galyndean · 1 pointr/dndnext

I think my DM would prefer more theatre of the mind, but I am absolutely bollux with it and my group is very tactically minded. So we use a mat + minis the vast majority of the time.

This mat is our go-to for pretty much every encounter. It's easy to use, easy to store, and reusable by anyone in anything we're running, from one-shots to our major campaign.

If we want to work up a dungeon in advance, then there's something more like this. I've used both ways. They're both great.

Minis, you can do in several ways.

Here are 5,000 translucent round tokens that are smaller than an inch. You can use your wet erase marker from your battle map to write numbers on them. You can also use them to denote status effects. There are tons of different colors that you can get them in and in smaller batches than this one, but this will give you an idea of what to look for.

Here are 1" wooden circles. They also come in 2" and 3" varieties. That gives you Small/medium, Large, and Huge creatures.

Oh, and here's a tutorial on how to make paper circle tokens. You can print these out on cardstock, cut them out, and use a glue stick to stick them to your wooden tokens.

And! If you don't want to cut out a shit ton of little paper tokens, you can buy paper punches that will cut them for you. I have them in 1", 2" and 3" size.

I also have Paizo minis, but the circle tokens get used a lot more because they're much more versatile. And players love being able to have their own token for their character.

u/PigeonInACrown · 1 pointr/waiting_to_try

I maybe sort of purchased the first thing for my future children today? I was looking at Grimm's peg dolls the other day on Amazon because they're so cute, they remind me of these little wooden peg dolls I played with at my grandparents house as a child and it just gave me the fuzzies. Then in the recommended products thing, I saw these: https://www.amazon.com/Koalabu-Natural-Unfinished-Wooden-Bodies/dp/B0189Y8W44/ref=mp_s_a_1_5?keywords=peg+dolls+unfinished&qid=1562985142&s=gateway&sprefix=peg+do&sr=8-5 and thought they were boring until I saw how people had painted them. I haven't stopped thinking about how I wanted to do that so today I bought them. I'm going to paint them and then save them for my future kids. And maybe one day my kids will think back on them and have the fuzzies, too.

u/rossumcapek · 1 pointr/tabletopgamedesign

Blank dice and stickers. You're going to change things.

Here's 50 blank dice for nine bucks:

https://www.amazon.com/Nakimo-Blank-White-Board-Teaching/dp/B00BAKWKP2

Here's a thousand half-inch round stickers you can print on for six bucks:

https://www.amazon.com/Round-Circle-Labels-White-Printer/dp/B0731Q24NT/

​

Fifteen bucks and you've got perfect tools for prototyping. Bonus: use colored pencils and you can revise as you playtest.

u/OTraize · 1 pointr/battletech

Thanks for the feedback!

So, it feels to me (I may be wrong) like we're thinking of different types of CNC. I'm talking Flat Bed, vertical tooling, to cut a single shape, punch a hole or router out a surface to a given depth. It feels to me like you're thinking of full 3D CNC, which in this application just isn't necessary for the design I've been working on. That said, if I'm mistaken, apologies!

The reason I'm looking at CNC is because I can easily do the Toolpathing myself in Vetric or V-Carve or similar & provide a local company with that & a sheet of Ply & let them at it. Sure, I'll have to pay for that, but the cost should be fairly minimal (I'm in the UK, perhaps its different elsewhere?), but the key thing is that, despite the relatively flexible tolerancing on most CNC beds, what I get out should be sufficiently accurate to ensure that the hexes tessellate sufficiently tightly.

The Hexes mind you are potentially another kettle of fish. I'm looking at a yield per 1220x2400 board of around 2000 hexes. Which is a lot of CNC time. I can mitigate some of that by adjusting my approach to the holes (6mm for a more standard tool so it can just punch right through etc), but the shapes need to be pretty tight (could I make them myself? Sure, but... man. We invented mass production for a reason, I'm gonna use it if I can!). As you've said, there exists the possibility of buying them, but so far I've had no luck sourcing the right thing. I've got close, but the work required is significant (they're not suitable just as they are, though these guys would just about do it, if I could get a few thou...), combined with fairly high costs, makes it a bit non viable.

Alternatively, I do have a few contacts for machining the Hexes & this is something I'm also looking at, those guys love turning out a few thousand of anything!

Anyway, diversion aside, I'm talking local CNC companies here for the benefit of others who don't have the access I do, in my case, I'm going to speak very nicely to my MD & hope they're cool with me buying the materials, doing the programming & pushing the go button. Total cost to me; time + materials = not too shabby.

For others without that, obviously the CNC will cost more, but I don't think it need be prohibitive. Will let you know as I've put feelers out to a few companies I deal with regularly, just to see.

As for the dowel, my plan was always to buy existing & just cut it to length, reckon I need about 4-6 lengths based on my estimates (including saw thickness loss), I'm just not relishing cutting several thousand of the pegs! Can you tell I'm all about automation over here?

But we'll see, I'll get my quotes back from the local CNC firms & Engineering companies & make my call. As long as I can, I'll be using the tools I have access to, but if I can't, I can't!

u/clanboru15 · 1 pointr/Woodcarving

Things like this are your best bet. I purchased a grab box for around $30 and I'm still carving with it all a year later.

u/J-Falco · 1 pointr/DnD

I use these, and print off pictures of goblins/orcs/whatever and paste them on. Its cheap and easy!

u/baileybriggs · 1 pointr/BDSMcommunity

This is a great wooden paddle from Amazon for $10.

This crop from Amazon for about $6. Absolutely not something that will last forever, but it's been working great on my ass after a little bit of leather moisturizer (one of the things that came in my Doc Martens care kit). I've had it for 3 months, and IMO it's already paid for itself. Works just fine till I can get a "good" one. :-)

u/shark2000br · 1 pointr/StarWarsArmada

VELCRO Brand - Sticky Back - 5/8" Coins, 75 Sets - Clear https://www.amazon.com/dp/B001ASD850/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apap_k8TPBquZeKOKP

Axe Sickle 1 inches (50-pcs / 100-pcs / 200-pcs) Natural Schima superba unfinished round wood,These round wood coins The limitations are endless!(50-p https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01CSV14JE/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apap_YA9H1Csn8ANJA

u/makinglistsandshit · 1 pointr/bdsmSFW

I use a wooden paddle with holes like this on myself. Great for creating more impact at an an awkward angle. I'm sure it would be even more fun with a partner.

u/jakkarth · 1 pointr/woodworking

Amazon actually has wooden boxes for sale that may be appropriate for your purposes. Good luck!

u/musicallucidity · 1 pointr/Woodcarving

https://www.amazon.com/Cleveland-Carpenters-Basswood-Carving-Whittling/dp/B07PFMQJ3K/ plenty of other options this was a random first choice off amazon

u/R_X_R · 1 pointr/cigars

So, I was in the same boat not long ago.I only had a small assortment of cigars and threw a boveda in a tupperdore. My readings were all over the place and I was distraught.

First things first. Calibrate your Hygrometer, MAKE SURE it is where it should be. Give this a try

Also, Get some cedar in there. Cedar is great at many things including soaking up some of that humidity and helping keep a nice steady environment. There is a reason real humidors are made of it. I used a couple of these blanks from Amazon

Now, After all this is done, GIVE IT TIME! It will take at least a week or so to settle down to a normal RH. Don't panic and just trust in the Boveda pack.

u/Zepheus · 1 pointr/tabletopgamedesign

I used these and they work well but the other posted Amazon link looks a few dollars cheaper.

u/[deleted] · 1 pointr/trees

Here's the box. Prime dat shit, boiiiiiii



Walnut Hollow Unfinished Wood Box, Classic

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B004I9SLEG/ref=cm_sw_r_awd_pGCOub1CKYXAP

u/Ianoren · 1 pointr/DnD

I didn't have a good printer so I actually ordered it online to be printed on color photo paper. I also ordered these:

https://www.amazon.com/Package-Round-Disc-Unfinished-Cutouts/dp/B00CA1Y878

I used a glue stick and scissors to put these on the discs. Though cutting circles with scissors takes a while so if you want, order a 1 inch hole puncher.

Guess you can ask your players to send you pics of what they want to look like and resize the image into these circles, I have not done this but photoshop should make this easy.

u/ch0pp3r · 1 pointr/crafts

Here are some 1.5" ones from Amazon. The same company also makes 1" ones too.