Prices doubled for material?

Am I seeing this right? Went to buy more GF plywood and draftboard and the prices soared. Draftboard went $4 to $9 a sheet. Plywood basswood $11 to $22 a sheet.

3 Likes

Supply chain disruptions have hit wood products hard.

5 Likes

Acrylic is also more expensive too. $21 a sheet now for acrylic.

1 Like

Now may be the time to talk about inexpensive sources of MDF, which is all that draftboard is:

And in general, check out #2 and #1A:

5 Likes

The cost of wood has soared due to the pandemic, adding $24,000 to the cost of building a house this year. :slightly_frowning_face:

4 Likes

Yup. I’m actually surprised that they were able to keep prices flat for the past year - they were the only supplier that I use to do so. Supply chain and raw material costs finally caught up to the them. Sad but inevitable.

7 Likes

It was announced ahead of time:

12 Likes

You may have noticed a lot of acrylic sneeze guards, well, everywhere since March 2020. Shortages have been rampant across acrylic suppliers, too. :man_shrugging:

5 Likes

Here’s a salient point for the TL;DR crowd:

So you’ll see prices for most things go way up, but we will start having monthly sale prices where we’ll sell selected products at the lowest price we can.

This is not a guarantee that there will always be something on sale, but it will be worth keeping an eye on the Shop. :wink:

8 Likes

humanfactors_line_of_sight

19 Likes

hey! no stalking!

15 Likes

I just placed an order on Thursday-just in time. I knew they were having to raise them so glad I got under the wire!

2 Likes

honestly, it just makes me glad i’m not beholden to PG and i use lots of other sources. they’ve gone up in price (although i haven’t bought a ton in the past year) but not nearly that much.

4 Likes

I am a buyer for manufacturing and it hit hard for everyone. I’m not familiar for wood but for plastics. Resin to make plastics are in short supply. I’m surprised that Glowforge were able to keep the same as low as it was. I’m in Canada but plastics here increased too

7 Likes

While I routinely use other materials most of the year, my holiday products are mostly PG to save on testing / adjusting time and waste. It really pays off to read the monthly announcements, too. As soon as I saw the announcement, I placed an order for my estimated holiday needs:


This stack of assorted PG just went from $340 to a street value of $750! Buying early will allow me to keep my prices lower, rather than passing along the increase to my customers. :sunglasses:

14 Likes

Great idea. I barely made it before it went up!!

1 Like

My current thinking is…never put off until tomorrow what you can purchase today. (Started that about a year ago. Can’t move in this blasted storage barn of a house now.) :grinning_face_with_smiling_eyes:

10 Likes

Actually I think in May when the softwoods futures hit their peak, it was 36K for the average new house.

Our house build has dropped 22K in the time it took the designer to get the first drawings done. Talking to the builder last week he expects it to drop another 20+ before he’s going to be ready to start framing and potentially another 30 or so before we’re done.

The latest prices are half the peak. Still twice what it was 2 years ago but demand just tanked after the runup. Lots of people now going on vacations vs staying home & remodeling and builders cutting back on spec houses because they don’t want to be stuck in an overprice situation where the house value doesn’t come up to what it cost them to build. It takes about 6 - 8 weeks for the futures prices to work their way into the stores but things appear to be settling down. Of course, it would be helpful if we killed the tariffs we imposed on Canadian lumber but that’s not showing any signs of happening.

4 Likes

last story i saw (last night) on a business site about lumber futures said we were looking at not much lower than current level for the next five years or so. that it wasn’t going to drop back the pre-pandemic pricing.

That’s true ($400/1000bdf) but most people in the industry (& traders) are figuring it’s got another couple hundred to drop before finding the new normal. The pre-pandemic price was depressed due to lower building starts from 2008. We won’t see $15 sheets of plywood but $20-25 is likely which is a far cry from the current $80 price at the big box stores. If the Canadian tariffs get repealed, it should drop some more due to the volume of wood (the bulk of softwoods used in the US actually come from the Canadian NW).

3 Likes