V·H·S VINTAGE HARDWARE STORE
The Definitive List

100 Items for Life.

10 kits. 100 items. Everything a life requires and nothing it doesn't. Cast iron, forged steel, full-grain leather, and the tools that build a life from the ground up.

No technology. No clothing. No climate dependency. Every consumable on this list can be acquired, built, or made from raw materials. The total cost is less than a used car. The total lifespan is longer than yours.

100 Items
10 Kits
$3,891 Total
$258 To Start
If you buy nothing else

Start Here: The First 10

These 10 items cost $258 and unlock everything else. A blade, fire, cordage, and a skillet give you the ability to cook, build, and repair. A sharpening stone keeps every edge on the list working. Start here. Build outward.

Marked with starStart Here throughout the article.

The Pack

A Fixed Blade

Mora Companion HD

The knife that goes everywhere.

$20
The Kitchen

A Cast Iron Skillet

Lodge 12-Inch Skillet

Cook anything on any heat source.

$35
The Blade

A Chef's Knife

Victorinox Fibrox Pro 8"

Prep every ingredient.

$35
The Pack

A Fire Starter

Light My Fire Swedish FireSteel

12,000 strikes. Works wet.

$18
The Blade

A Sharpening Stone

Norton Combination Waterstone

Keeps every edge on this list sharp.

$30
The Workshop

A Hammer

Estwing 16oz Claw Hammer

Build anything. Pull any nail.

$30
The Mend Kit

A Sewing Awl

Speedy Stitcher Sewing Awl

Repair anything soft.

$15
The Pack

Cordage

Mil-Spec 550 Paracord, 100ft

550lb strength. Seven inner strands.

$10
The Body

Soap

Tallow Bar Soap

Clean everything. Makeable from fat and lye.

$5
The Garden

A Spading Fork

Forged Steel Spading Fork

The tool that starts the food supply.

$60
Mountain trail disappearing into morning fog
Kit 01 of 10

The Pack

Carry, Navigate, Survive on Foot

Everything here fits on your back. If you walked out the door with one bag, this is what goes in it. Every item serves at least two purposes. Nothing requires electricity. Nothing expires.

10 Items $495
01
Buy EarlyThe Pack

A Pack

Duluth Pack #4 Monarch · $185

Hand-built in Duluth, Minnesota since 1882. Waxed canvas body, solid brass hardware, leather straps. No zippers to jam. No plastic buckles to snap. The canvas re-waxes with beeswax from The Mend Kit when it wears. This pack has gone on canoe portages and come home from wars.

02
starStart HereThe Pack

A Fixed Blade

Mora Companion HD · $20

Carbon steel blade holds an edge and sharpens on any flat stone. The scandi grind is the easiest geometry to maintain in the field. Twenty dollars. It will outwork knives that cost ten times as much and it will do it for decades.

03
starStart HereThe Pack

A Fire Starter

Light My Fire Swedish FireSteel 2.0 · $18

Twelve thousand strikes. Works when wet. Works in wind. Works at altitude. Outlasts every match and every lighter ever made. Paired with dry tinder and the fixed blade above, this is fire on demand for the rest of your life.

04
The Pack

A Compass

Silva Ranger 2.0 · $45

Baseplate compass with a sighting mirror, declination adjustment, and luminous bezel. No batteries. No signal required. Works everywhere on earth. The mirror doubles as a signal device and the baseplate works as a straight edge.

05
The Pack

A Vacuum Bottle

Stanley Classic 1.5qt · $45

Double-wall vacuum insulation in a steel shell. Keeps water hot for 24 hours, cold for longer. The same design since 1913. The lid is a pour-through stopper and a cup. Stanley still warranties it for life.

06
starStart HereThe Pack

Cordage

Mil-Spec 550 Paracord, 100ft · $10

550-pound test strength. Seven inner strands that separate into fishing line, sewing thread, snare cord, and dental floss. The outer sheath is a smaller rope on its own. Pound for pound, the most versatile item on this entire list.

07
The Pack

A Canteen Cup

GI Stainless Steel Canteen Cup · $12

Boil water over open flame. Cook a meal. Drink from it. Nest it inside the vacuum bottle for packing. Stainless steel, no coating to flake, nothing to break. This is the kitchen you carry.

08
The Pack

A Signal Mirror

UST StarFlash Micro · $10

Polished glass with an aiming reticle. Visible for 10+ miles in sunlight. Weighs one ounce. Never runs out of charge. The simplest, most reliable rescue device ever made.

09
Buy EarlyThe Pack

A Wool Blanket

Pendleton Eco-Wise Washable · $100

Wool regulates temperature in every climate. It insulates when wet. It breathes in humidity. Bedouin use it in the Sahara. Scandinavians use it in snow. Not clothing. Not sized to a body. A thermal regulation tool that works everywhere on earth.

10
The Pack

A Canvas Tarp

Heavy Canvas Tarp, 10x10ft · $50

Shelter, ground cover, rain catch, shade, wind break, gear wrap. Paired with paracord, it becomes a ridge tent, a lean-to, or a hammock. Canvas breathes where plastic suffocates and it holds up to UV for years. The original multi-tool.

Victorinox Swiss Army knife resting on a tree stump
Kit 02 of 10

The Blade

Every Edge and the System That Keeps Them Sharp

Every edge a life requires: kitchen, forest, pocket, garden, fabric, grooming. Plus the two-step maintenance system that keeps all of them sharp forever. The straight razor replaces the safety razor because razor blades cannot be made. A straight razor sharpens on the strop indefinitely.

10 Items $488
01
starStart HereThe Blade

A Chef's Knife

Victorinox Fibrox Pro 8-Inch · $35

Ice-tempered high-carbon stainless steel. NSF certified. The knife that culinary schools issue to first-year students because nothing in its price range touches it. Prep every vegetable, break down every protein, mince every herb. Sharpens on the Norton waterstone below.

02
Buy EarlyThe Blade

An Axe

Gransfors Bruks Small Forest Axe · $130

Hand-forged in Gransfors, Sweden since 1902. Each head stamped with the initials of the smith who made it. Splits kindling, fells small timber, limbs branches, shapes wood. The hickory handle replaces. The head never will. If you own one axe, this is the one.

03
The Blade

A Folding Saw

Silky Pocketboy 170 · $40

Japanese impulse-hardened teeth cut on the pull stroke. Folds to pocket size. Cuts green wood and dry wood and bone and PVC. The blade outlasts any Western-style saw blade and the replacement is still cheaper than most saws.

04
Buy EarlyThe Blade

A Pocket Multi-Tool

Victorinox Swiss Army Farmer · $35

Blade, saw, reamer, can opener, bottle opener, screwdriver. Alox scales that do not crack. The Farmer has the wood saw that the Classic and Spartan lack. That saw turns it from a convenience into a tool. Victorinox guarantees it forever.

05
Buy EarlyThe Blade

A Folding Knife

Opinel No. 8 Carbon Steel · $18

The most copied knife design in the world and still the best at its job. Carbon steel blade, beechwood handle, Virobloc locking ring. Made in Savoie, France since 1890. It is the knife you lend, the knife you teach with, and the knife you always have on you.

06
Buy EarlyThe Blade

Pruning Shears

Felco #2 · $65

Every part is individually replaceable: blade, spring, anvil, handle. That means this is the last pair you buy. Hardened steel blade, forged aluminum handles. The industry standard for vineyards, orchards, and every serious garden on earth.

07
The Blade

Fabric Shears

Gingher 8-Inch Dressmaker Shears · $30

Knife-edge blade cuts fabric without pushing it. Forged from a single piece of steel in Solingen, Germany. These are the shears that cut canvas for The Pack, patches for The Mend Kit, and cloth for anything that needs sewing. Lifetime warranty.

08
The Blade

A Straight Razor

Dovo Best Quality 5/8-Inch · $80

Carbon steel blade honed on the strop below. No cartridges. No blades to buy. No blades to throw away. Sharpens on the same waterstone as every other blade on this list. One razor, one strop, one lifetime. Solingen, Germany.

09
starStart HereThe Blade

A Sharpening Stone

Norton Combination Waterstone · $30

Coarse side sets the edge. Fine side polishes it. Uses water, not oil you have to buy. This single stone maintains every blade on this list: chef's knife, axe, folding knife, razor, shears. The most important item in The Blade kit. Without it, everything else goes dull.

10
Buy EarlyThe Blade

A Leather Strop

Hand-Cut Leather Strop · $25

The final step after the waterstone. Aligns the edge without removing metal. A stropped blade cuts cleaner, lasts longer between sharpenings, and feels different in the hand. Plain leather works on its own. Pair it with beeswax from The Mend Kit for a polishing compound.

Cast iron skillet cooking over an open campfire
Kit 03 of 10

The Kitchen

Cook, Prep, Preserve, Serve

A complete cook-from-scratch system with zero electricity. The grain mill grinds wheat, corn, coffee, and spices. The mason jars preserve what the garden grows. The skillet and Dutch oven handle any heat source from induction to campfire.

10 Items $447
01
starStart HereThe Kitchen

A Cast Iron Skillet

Lodge 12-Inch Skillet (L10SK3) · $35

Lodge has been pouring iron in South Pittsburg, Tennessee since 1896. Pre-seasoned. Gets better every time you use it. Sears, bakes, fries, roasts. No coating to flake. No handle to loosen. Seven pounds of American iron that does one thing perfectly and never stops.

02
Buy EarlyThe Kitchen

A Dutch Oven

Lodge 6-Quart Enameled Dutch Oven · $80

Braise, stew, bake bread, simmer stock. The enameled interior does not need seasoning and will not react with acidic foods. Goes from stovetop to oven to table. Paired with the skillet, there is no cooking method these two cannot handle between them.

03
Buy EarlyThe Kitchen

A Cutting Board

John Boos Maple Edge-Grain Block · $120

Hard maple, edge-grain construction. Gentle on knife edges. Self-healing surface closes around cuts instead of scarring. Refinish with linseed oil from The Mend Kit. A plastic board goes in a landfill. This one goes to your grandchildren.

04
Buy EarlyThe Kitchen

Mason Jars

Ball Regular Mouth Quart Jars, 12-Pack · $15

Preserve everything The Garden grows: tomatoes, pickles, jams, dried herbs, fermented vegetables. Store dry goods, grains, seeds. Drink from them. Organize hardware. The most useful vessel ever mass-produced. Lids are the only consumable, and they are cheap and universal.

05
The Kitchen

A Baking Dish

Pyrex 13x9 Glass Baking Dish · $12

Borosilicate glass that goes from freezer to oven. Casseroles, cobblers, roasted vegetables, lasagna. Non-reactive, see-through, easy to clean. Twelve dollars and it does not wear out. The best cost-per-use ratio on this entire list.

06
The Kitchen

A Grain Mill

Corona Manual Grain Mill · $45

Grinds wheat into flour, corn into meal, coffee into grounds, spices into powder. Cast iron body, steel burrs, hand crank. Bolts to any table or countertop. No electricity. The bridge between raw grain and bread, between harvest and table.

07
The Kitchen

Mixing Bowls

Stainless Steel Nesting Set · $25

Mix, prep, serve, store. Stainless steel does not stain, crack, shatter, or absorb odors. Nesting design means they store in the footprint of the largest bowl. Use the small one as a double boiler insert over the cast iron kettle. Indestructible.

08
The Kitchen

A Mortar and Pestle

Marble Mortar and Pestle · $35

Grind spices, crush herbs, make pesto, pulverize salt. The weight of the marble does the work. No moving parts, no blades to dull, no motor to burn out. Civilization used this for ten thousand years before the electric blender, and it still produces a better texture.

09
The Kitchen

Wooden Spoons

Olive Wood Spoon Set, 3-Piece · $20

Olive wood is dense, tight-grained, and naturally antimicrobial. Will not scratch cast iron seasoning. Will not melt on a hot pan. Will not conduct heat to your hand. Season with linseed oil from The Mend Kit. Three spoons cover every stirring, scraping, and serving task.

10
The Kitchen

A Cast Iron Kettle

Lodge Cast Iron Kettle · $60

Boil water on any heat source: stove, hearth, campfire, woodstove. Cast iron retains heat longer than any other material. The kettle that sits on the fire grate in The Hearth and keeps the house warm and humid all winter. Pairs with the trivet to protect every surface.

Warm fireplace with wood floors and hearth broom
Kit 04 of 10

The Hearth

Fire, Light, Warmth in the Dwelling

The complete home fire system. Every consumable here is makeable: lamp oil from rendered fat, beeswax candles from a hive, kindling from any forest floor. This is light and warmth without a utility bill and without a supply chain.

10 Items $400
01
The Hearth

An Oil Lantern

Dietz #76 Original · $30

Cold-blast design burns for 11+ hours on a single fill. Lamp oil is the only consumable, and it can be rendered from animal fat if supply chains fail. The globe protects the flame from wind. Hang it, carry it, set it on a table. Light without electricity since 1840.

02
The Hearth

Fireplace Tools

Wrought Iron 4-Piece Set · $80

Poker, tongs, shovel, broom. Wrought iron will not melt, warp, or weaken at fireplace temperatures. These are the hands that manage the fire: move logs, clear ash, adjust airflow, sweep the hearth. Forged, not cast. They flex instead of snapping.

03
The Hearth

A Fire Grate

Cast Iron Fireplace Grate · $60

Elevates the wood off the hearth floor. Air circulates underneath. The fire burns hotter, cleaner, and more completely. Less smoke, less creosote, less wasted wood. Cast iron tolerates the heat cycle of a daily fire for generations without cracking.

04
The Hearth

A Bellows

Leather Fireplace Bellows · $40

Directs air exactly where the fire needs it. Revive dying embers without blowing ash into the room. Leather body, hardwood frame, brass nozzle. The bellows is how you control a fire without chemicals, without lighter fluid, without waste.

05
The Hearth

Candle Holders

Cast Iron Taper Holders, Pair · $25

Hold beeswax tapers steady on any surface. Cast iron base will not tip. Pair with the beeswax candles below for light in any room. Simple, weighted, permanent.

06
The Hearth

Beeswax Candles

Pure Beeswax Taper Candles, 1lb · $20

Burn brighter, longer, and cleaner than paraffin. No petroleum byproducts. Beeswax is the only candle material that produces negative ions when it burns, actively cleaning the air. The consumable is makeable: keep bees, harvest wax. Connects directly to The Garden.

07
The Hearth

An Ash Bucket

Copper Ash Bucket with Lid · $45

Copper does not spark and conducts heat predictably. The lid seals embers safely. Carry ash out of the hearth and into The Garden as soil amendment, or leach it with water to make lye for the soap in The Body. Every output becomes an input.

08
The Hearth

A Log Carrier

Waxed Canvas Log Carrier · $35

Haul firewood from the stack to the hearth without dropping bark across the floor. Waxed canvas sheds moisture and resists rot. Leather handles take the weight. Folds flat when not in use. Re-wax it with beeswax from The Mend Kit.

09
The Hearth

A Chimney Brush Kit

Chimney Sweep Brush Rod Kit · $45

Creosote is the silent threat of every wood-burning hearth. It builds up, insulates, and eventually ignites. A chimney brush used twice a season prevents the house fire that no insurance policy truly covers. The item nobody thinks to buy until they need it most.

10
The Hearth

A Cast Iron Trivet

Cast Iron Trivet · $20

Protect every surface from the cast iron skillet, the Dutch oven, the kettle. A trivet is the bridge between The Kitchen and The Hearth: move a pot from fire to table without scorching wood. Cast iron on cast iron. Simple, permanent, essential.

Hand planes, chisels, and saws hung on a workshop wall
Kit 05 of 10

The Workshop

Build, Measure, Fasten, Shape

Every tool here works by hand. No batteries, no cords, no consumables. The brace and bit replaces any power drill. The jack plane replaces any electric sander. This is a complete joinery and construction shop that runs on calories.

10 Items $425
01
The Workshop

A Jack Plane

Stanley No. 5 Jack Plane · $60

Flattens rough lumber, smooths surfaces, trims doors, chamfers edges. The No. 5 is the one plane that does 80% of all planing tasks. Sharpens on the same waterstone as every other blade on this list. Stanley has made this plane since 1869.

02
The Workshop

A Tape Measure

Stanley PowerLock 25ft · $25

Measure twice, cut once. The PowerLock mechanism has been the industry standard since 1963. True-zero hook adjusts for inside and outside measurements. Twenty-five feet covers any room, any lumber, any project.

03
The Workshop

A Hand Drill

Brace and Bit Set · $80

Drill any hole in any material with no electricity and no battery to die. The brace provides mechanical advantage through its sweep. Bits are interchangeable: auger bits for wood, expansion bits for large holes. The drill that built every barn and house before 1920.

04
Buy EarlyThe Workshop

A Hand Saw

Disston Crosscut Hand Saw · $50

Crosscut teeth rip through lumber in any direction. The Disston taper-ground blade tracks straight without binding. Full-size hand saws cut faster than most people expect. Sharpenable with a saw file indefinitely. No cord. No chain. No fuel.

05
Buy EarlyThe Workshop

Bench Chisels

Narex 4-Piece Bench Chisel Set · $60

Cut mortises, pare tenons, clean joints, carve details. Chrome-manganese steel holds an edge and sharpens easily on the waterstone. Four sizes cover every joint from fine dovetails to heavy timber framing. Paired with the mallet, these cut any joint that holds a building together.

06
The Workshop

A Wooden Mallet

Hardwood Joiner's Mallet · $25

Drive chisels without damaging handles. Tap joints together without denting wood. Assemble furniture without marring surfaces. A steel hammer mushrooms chisel handles and dents workpieces. A wooden mallet transmits force without destruction. It is the difference between building and breaking.

07
The Workshop

A Combination Square

Empire True Blue 12-Inch · $30

Check square, measure depth, mark 45-degree miters, scribe lines, find center. One tool replaces five. The blade slides and locks at any position. The most-used layout tool in any shop. If your square is not square, nothing you build will be either.

08
The Workshop

Bar Clamps

Jorgensen Bar Clamps, Pair · $40

Hold glue-ups. Secure workpieces. Press joints tight. You never have enough clamps and you always need at least two. Jorgensen clutch pads protect the workpiece. Steel bar, cast iron jaws. They apply hundreds of pounds of pressure and do not slip.

09
starStart HereThe Workshop

A Hammer

Estwing 16oz Claw Hammer · $30

Forged from a single piece of American steel. Head and handle are one piece. The claw pulls nails. The face drives them. Sixteen ounces is the weight that frames a wall and sets a finish nail without fatigue. Estwing has made this hammer since 1923 and has never had to redesign it.

10
The Workshop

Screwdrivers

Multi-Tip Screwdriver Set · $25

Phillips, flathead, Robertson, Torx. Every fastener in the modern world and every fastener in the old one. No batteries, no chuck to wear, no charger to lose. Magnetic tips. Hardened shafts that take torque without twisting. The tools that hold everything else together.

Garden fork standing in rich turned soil
Kit 06 of 10

The Garden

Grow, Harvest, Sustain

The scythe and broadfork separate a garden from a homestead. Seeds are not listed because they are self-reproducing: one packet of heirloom seeds produces seeds forever. Pruning shears live in The Blade. Preserving jars live in The Kitchen. This kit breaks the ground and brings in the harvest.

10 Items $743
01
starStart HereThe Garden

A Spading Fork

Forged Steel Spading Fork · $60

Break any ground. Turn compost. Lift root vegetables. Aerate compacted soil. The spading fork goes where the shovel cannot: rocky soil, clay, established beds with root systems. Forged tines flex and spring back. Cast tines snap. The tool that starts the food supply.

02
The Garden

A Hoe

Forged Flat Hoe · $40

Open planting furrows. Cultivate between rows. Sever weeds at the root. The flat hoe has been the primary food-growing tool for every agricultural civilization in history. Forged steel head on an ash handle. The blade sharpens with a file.

03
The Garden

A Wheelbarrow

Steel Tray Wheelbarrow · $120

Move soil, compost, harvest, stone, wood, and everything else that is too heavy for arms and too bulky for a basket. A steel tray does not crack in cold weather and does not degrade in UV. Pneumatic tire. This is the logistics system of any property.

04
The Garden

A Watering Can

Haws Galvanized Watering Can · $50

Galvanized steel, brass rose. The Haws design distributes water in a gentle rain pattern that will not flatten seedlings or erode soil. Two-gallon capacity balances weight and coverage. Made in England to the same specification for over a century.

05
The Garden

A Bow Rake

Forged Bow Rake · $35

Level beds. Break clods. Spread mulch and compost. Remove debris. The bow design flexes on impact instead of transmitting shock to the handle. Forged steel head with fourteen tines. The rake prepares the ground after the fork breaks it.

06
Buy EarlyThe Garden

A Hand Trowel

Forged Steel Hand Trowel · $20

Dig planting holes. Transplant seedlings. Weed tight spaces. Measure planting depth with the inch marks stamped on the blade. Forged from a single piece of steel. The stamped sheet-metal versions bend on their first day. This one never will.

07
The Garden

A Scythe

Austrian Scythe with Snath · $180

Harvest grain. Clear tall grass and brush. Manage a meadow. The Austrian scythe is lighter and sharper than the American style. The blade peens with a hammer instead of grinding, which means sharpening adds no heat and removes almost no metal. The scythe that feeds villages.

08
The Garden

A Broadfork

Meadow Creature Broadfork · $200

Aerate soil to 16 inches deep without turning it. No-till cultivation preserves soil structure, mycorrhizal networks, and earthworm populations. Step on, lean back, lift. The broadfork does in seconds what a rototiller does in minutes, without destroying what lives underground.

09
The Garden

Garden Twine

Jute Twine Spool · $8

Tie tomato plants. Trellis beans. Mark rows. Bundle herbs for drying. Jute is plant fiber: fully biodegradable, compostable, and makeable from raw fiber if supply chains fail. Breaks down in soil after the season, adding organic matter instead of microplastics.

10
The Garden

A Harvest Basket

Woven Harvest Basket · $30

Carry the harvest from garden to kitchen. Open weave lets dirt fall through. Rinse produce right in the basket. Woven from natural fiber, it lasts decades and composts when it finally does not. The vessel that connects The Garden to The Kitchen.

Hands threading a needle in warm light
Kit 07 of 10

The Mend Kit

Repair Everything Else

Every consumable in this kit can be made from raw materials: thread from flax and beeswax, glue from hides, oil from flax seed, patches from leather or woven fiber. The philosophy is simple: do not replace what you can repair. The shoemaker's last means you resole your own footwear instead of buying new.

10 Items $155
01
starStart HereThe Mend Kit

A Sewing Awl

Speedy Stitcher Sewing Awl · $15

Lock-stitch through leather, canvas, nylon, rubber, and anything too thick for a needle. Repair the pack, the tarp, the log carrier, the bellows. The Speedy Stitcher has been manufactured in the same factory since 1909. The bobbin holds heavy waxed thread and the needle is replaceable.

02
The Mend Kit

Waxed Linen Thread

Neve's Bees Waxed Linen Thread, 100yd · $8

Linen from flax. Wax from bees. Both materials are makeable from raw inputs. The thread that repairs the pack, the blanket, the bellows, the log carrier. Waxed thread resists moisture, holds knots, and glides through the sewing awl without tangling.

03
The Mend Kit

A Beeswax Block

Pure Beeswax Block, 1lb · $10

Waterproof thread. Condition leather. Seal wood. Polish metal. Lubricate saws and drawer slides. Beeswax is the universal maintenance material for almost every item on this list. The consumable is makeable from a hive. One pound lasts years.

04
The Mend Kit

Hide Glue

Old Brown Glue (Liquid Hide Glue) · $15

The only truly reversible wood glue. Heats apart with steam. Repairs that break clean. Used to build every piece of fine furniture before 1950. Traditional hide glue is makeable from animal hides and water. The modern liquid version stays ready in the bottle.

05
The Mend Kit

Needles

Sailmaker's, Darning, and Upholstery Needle Set · $15

Curved needles for upholstery. Straight needles for darning. Heavy triangular-point sailmaker's needles for canvas and leather that the awl cannot reach. Steel needles last lifetimes. They are the oldest tools in this kit and the least likely to break.

06
The Mend Kit

Copper Rivets

Copper Rivets and Burrs Set · $15

Permanent mechanical fastener for leather and heavy canvas. Rivet the pack straps. Reinforce belt loops. Repair tool belts. Copper does not rust. Set them with the hammer from The Workshop and the last below. A rivet outlasts any stitch in a stress joint.

07
The Mend Kit

Patches

Leather and Canvas Patch Assortment · $15

Material for the awl and needles to work with. Leather patches for the pack, the bellows, the strop. Canvas for the tarp, the log carrier, the tool rolls. Both materials are makeable from raw hides and woven fiber. Keep an assortment and nothing stays broken.

08
The Mend Kit

Baling Wire

Steel Baling Wire, 100ft · $10

Bind, splice, hang, secure, and emergency-repair anything that thread and rivets cannot. Twist it around a broken handle. Wire a gate shut. Hang a lantern. Ranchers call it the universal repair material for a reason. Bends by hand, holds under load.

09
The Mend Kit

A Shoemaker's Last

Cast Iron Cobbler's Last · $40

Resole, re-heel, patch, and stitch footwear instead of replacing it. A good pair of shoes is worth repairing. A last provides the form, the awl provides the stitch, the waxed thread provides the hold. This tool means you never throw away shoes because the sole wore through.

10
The Mend Kit

Linseed Oil

Pure Linseed Oil, 1qt · $12

Finish and protect every piece of wood on this list: the cutting board, the wooden spoons, the mallet, the handles, the blocks. Linseed oil is pressed from flax seed and is fully makeable. It penetrates, hardens, and protects without sealing out the wood's character.

Handmade soap bars and a boar bristle brush on linen
Kit 08 of 10

The Body

Hygiene, Grooming, First Aid

Zero clothing. Zero climate dependency. The straight razor lives in The Blade. The soap is the only consumable that gets used daily, and it is the most makeable substance on earth: fat, lye from hardwood ash, and water. Everything else is a tool that lasts indefinitely.

10 Items $175
01
starStart HereThe Body

Soap

Tallow Bar Soap · $5

Clean everything: your body, your hands, your dishes, your clothes. Tallow soap is animal fat saponified with lye. Both ingredients are universally available. Fat from any animal. Lye from hardwood ash and water. The most essential consumable on this list and the easiest to make.

02
The Body

A Brush

Kent Boar Bristle Hair Brush · $25

Distributes natural oils from root to tip. Smooths without static. Boar bristle is keratin, the same protein as human hair, and it has been used for grooming since antiquity. Kent has been making these in England since 1777. No plastic. No batteries.

03
The Body

A Sea Sponge

Natural Sea Sponge · $15

Naturally antimicrobial. Dries quickly. Lasts months longer than synthetic sponges and composts when it is finally done. Softer on skin than any synthetic and harvested in a way that allows the base to regrow. The original renewable bathing tool.

04
The Body

Linen Towels

Pure Flax Linen Towels, Set of 2 · $30

Linen is made from flax, the same plant as the thread in The Mend Kit and the oil in The Workshop. It dries faster than cotton, resists mildew, softens with every wash, and lasts decades. Lint-free. Naturally antibacterial. The towel that gets better with age.

05
The Body

Tweezers

Medical-Grade Stainless Steel Tweezers · $15

Remove splinters, ticks, thorns, and debris. Precision-ground tips that close flat and grip fine objects. This is first aid at the most basic level: remove the thing that does not belong. Stainless steel, autoclavable, indestructible.

06
The Body

A Healing Salve

Comfrey Salve · $12

Beeswax, oil, and comfrey leaf: all makeable. Accelerates healing on cuts, scrapes, burns, and cracked skin. Comfrey has been called knitbone for a thousand years. The salve that fills the gap between tweezers and time. Pairs with the beeswax from The Mend Kit.

07
The Body

A Washboard

Galvanized Steel Washboard · $30

Scrub anything clean with soap and water: clothes, rags, towels, shop cloths. No electricity. No detergent pods. No special cycles. The ridged surface creates friction that breaks soil loose. Paired with the tallow soap, this is laundry at its most fundamental.

08
The Body

A Tongue Scraper

Copper Tongue Scraper · $8

Copper is naturally antimicrobial. Ayurvedic practitioners have used copper tongue scrapers for thousands of years. Removes bacteria and residue that brushing misses. Costs eight dollars and lasts the rest of your life. The hygiene tool nobody knows they need until they try it.

09
The Body

Nail Clippers

Seki Edge Stainless Steel Nail Clippers · $20

Japanese stainless steel. Precision-ground cutting edges that produce a clean cut without splitting or tearing. Seki has been the blade-making center of Japan since the 13th century. The same metallurgy that makes katanas, applied to the most mundane tool in this kit.

10
The Body

A Shaving Mug

Steel Shaving Mug · $15

Build lather from tallow shaving soap (makeable, like the bar soap above). The mug is the vessel; the straight razor from The Blade is the tool. Stainless steel does not chip, crack, or absorb. This completes the shaving system: mug, soap, razor, strop.

Fountain pen and open journal on a wooden desk in morning light
Kit 09 of 10

The Desk

Think, Plan, Record, Teach

The intellectual life without a power outlet. Graphite pencils are out because graphite cannot be made. Willow charcoal is made from a fire and a branch. The slate board is a reusable writing surface that never runs out. Every item here records, calculates, or teaches without a battery.

10 Items $208
01
The Desk

A Fountain Pen

Noodler's Ahab Flex · $25

Piston-fill mechanism draws ink from any bottle. The flex nib varies line width with pressure, producing handwriting that a ballpoint cannot replicate. Disassembles completely for cleaning. Made in the USA from vegetal resin. The last writing instrument you buy.

02
The Desk

Ink

Walnut Ink Concentrate · $10

Soak walnut hulls in water. Reduce. You have ink. The same recipe has been used since the Roman Empire. Walnut ink is a warm brown that works in the fountain pen above and with any dip pen or brush. The consumable is literally makeable from a tree you can grow in The Garden.

03
The Desk

A Journal

Leuchtturm1917 Hardcover A5 · $25

Archival-quality, acid-free paper that handles fountain pen ink without bleeding. Numbered pages. Table of contents. Thread-bound spine that lies flat. Record plans, observations, sketches, accounts, ideas. The journal is the memory that does not forget and does not crash.

04
The Desk

Charcoal Pencils

Willow Charcoal Set · $8

Burn a willow branch in a low-oxygen fire. You have a drawing and writing instrument. The oldest art medium in human history. Works on paper, on wood, on slate, on stone. The sketch tool that can be made from literally any campfire.

05
The Desk

A Farmer's Almanac

The Old Farmer's Almanac · $10

Planting calendars. Frost dates. Moon phases. Tide tables. Weather patterns. Sunrise and sunset times for every day of the year. Published continuously since 1792. Pairs with The Garden to time every planting and every harvest correctly.

06
The Desk

A Slide Rule

Pickett N600-ES · $30

Multiply, divide, find squares, square roots, logarithms, and trigonometric functions. No batteries. No display to crack. Every engineer born before 1970 learned on one of these. The Pickett went to the moon with Apollo. Faster than mental math, more reliable than any calculator that needs charging.

07
The Desk

A Magnifying Glass

Brass Magnifying Glass, 3x · $25

Read fine print. Inspect grain structure. Examine plant health in The Garden. Identify insects. Start a fire in direct sunlight as a backup to the ferro rod. Brass frame and glass lens. The simplest optical tool ever made, and one of the most versatile.

08
The Desk

A Slate Board

Slate Chalkboard with Natural Chalk · $20

Write, erase, rewrite forever. Teach arithmetic. Sketch plans. Leave messages. Chalk is calcium carbonate: ground limestone that is found on every continent on earth. The slate surface does not wear out. The original reusable writing surface, older than paper.

09
The Desk

A Chess Set

Wooden Folding Chess Set · $40

The greatest strategic thinking tool ever created. Teaches planning, consequence, sacrifice, and patience. Two players, no batteries, no consumables, no screen. The game that every culture has adopted and no culture has outgrown. The board folds for storage.

10
The Desk

A Reference Book

Pocket Ref by Thomas J. Glover · $15

768 pages of every conversion, formula, reference table, wire gauge, thread pitch, and specification a person could need. Fits in a back pocket. Math, science, engineering, construction, plumbing, electrical. The offline search engine.

Children playing outdoors in golden afternoon light
Kit 10 of 10

The Childhood

Play, First Tools, Wonder

Every item teaches something: the knife teaches responsibility, the fishing rod teaches patience, the slingshot teaches aim, the harmonica teaches music, the wagon teaches work. No batteries. No screens. No plastic. A childhood built from steel, wood, leather, and imagination.

10 Items $355
01
The Childhood

A Wagon

Radio Flyer Classic Red Wagon · $100

Haul dirt, rocks, firewood, tools, groceries, siblings, and everything else a child (or an adult) needs to move across a yard. Steel body. Rubber tires. Handle that steers. The toy that does real work and teaches that work can be fun.

02
The Childhood

A Truck

Tonka Mighty Steel Dump Truck · $30

Pressed steel body. The Tonka Mighty has been running over rocks and surviving sandbox burial since 1964. No batteries. No sound effects. Just a child, a truck, and dirt. It teaches building and demolition in the same afternoon, and it survives both.

03
The Childhood

A First Knife

Victorinox My First Swiss Army Knife · $25

Rounded blade tip for safety. Real blade for real work. This is the knife that teaches a child what a tool is, what responsibility means, and why sharp things deserve respect. Whittling, cutting rope, opening packages. The beginning of The Blade.

04
The Childhood

A Fishing Rod

Ugly Stik GX2 Youth Combo · $30

Graphite and fiberglass composite that absorbs the abuse a young angler delivers. Paired with a basic spincast reel. Teaches patience, observation, biology, and the direct connection between effort and food. The hobby that becomes a skill that becomes a provision.

05
The Childhood

Marbles

Glass Marble Set · $10

Hand-eye coordination. Physics. Strategy. Trading. Losing gracefully. Winning without gloating. Glass marbles have been found in Egyptian tombs. The game that requires nothing but a flat patch of dirt and a circle drawn with a stick.

06
The Childhood

A Glove and Ball

Rawlings Leather Baseball Glove + Ball · $60

Full-grain leather that breaks in and never breaks down. Playing catch is the simplest form of connection between two people and the best way to learn that practice produces improvement. The glove softens with use. Condition with linseed oil from The Mend Kit.

07
The Childhood

Building Blocks

Maple Wooden Blocks Set · $40

Spatial reasoning. Balance. Architecture. Destruction. Maple hardwood, sanded smooth, natural finish. No magnets. No connectors. No instructions. The child decides what to build and how, and gravity provides the only constraint. The first lesson in engineering.

08
The Childhood

A Jump Rope

Leather Jump Rope, Wooden Handles · $15

Cardio, coordination, rhythm, counting. Works anywhere with six feet of clearance. Leather cord does not tangle or kink like nylon. Wooden handles shaped for small hands and large ones. The simplest exercise tool ever made, used by every boxer and every schoolyard.

09
The Childhood

A Harmonica

Hohner Marine Band · $30

Teach yourself music. No lessons required. No sheet music necessary. Blow and draw. Major diatonic key of C plays blues, folk, country, and campfire songs. The Marine Band has been in production since 1896. Fits in a pocket. The instrument that goes everywhere.

10
The Childhood

A Slingshot

Trumark Slingshot · $15

Teaches aim, patience, consequence, and respect for projectiles. The ammunition is rocks, the most universally available consumable on earth. Wrist-braced steel frame. Surgical tubing bands. Small game capable. The tool that bridges play and provision.

The Pattern

Everything connects.

The ferro rod lights the hearth. The hearth ash makes lye for soap. The soap cleans the linen that was woven from flax. The flax seed presses into the linseed oil that finishes the cutting board. The cutting board supports the vegetables grown with the spading fork. The spading fork was sharpened on the waterstone that sharpens every blade on the list.

Every output becomes an input. Every item maintains or enables at least one other. This is not a shopping list. It is a system. The 100 items work together because they were chosen together, from first principles: what does a human need, and what is the best tool for that need, forever.

Start with The First 10 for $258. Build outward as the need arises. In the end, you will own 100 things worth keeping and nothing worth throwing away.

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