Hardwick's

Hardwick's We proudly specialize in hard-to-find, new and used tools and hardware.

RUST & DUST SINCE 1932 - For nearly four generations, Hardwick's has provided customers with a unique shopping experience in an old-fashioned, general store setting.

Antique Starrett showcase / cabinet
12/15/2025

Antique Starrett showcase / cabinet

Another intricate cabinet made by our master carpenter, base with locking glass doors to match as a base for an antique ...
12/15/2025

Another intricate cabinet made by our master carpenter, base with locking glass doors to match as a base for an antique triangular Starrett cabinet that we found.

Finished 8 ft hight showcase, just need to add plexiglass to the sliding doors, for Swedish high end axes
01/17/2025

Finished 8 ft hight showcase, just need to add plexiglass to the sliding doors, for Swedish high end axes

Also the beginning of putting up antique tool boards, potentially could put up 150 ft of displays around the store
01/04/2025

Also the beginning of putting up antique tool boards, potentially could put up 150 ft of displays around the store

Current development, a 12 ft long 8 ft high future showcase for swedish made axes. Alot of engineering and thinking out ...
01/04/2025

Current development, a 12 ft long 8 ft high future showcase for swedish made axes. Alot of engineering and thinking out by our master cabinet maker. Picture below are some of the axes shown that will be in the showcase.

Jon Crane, long time customer, recently re-edited video and posted it on Y-T a 11 minute piece on Hardwick’s showing the...
04/20/2024

Jon Crane, long time customer, recently re-edited video and posted it on Y-T a 11 minute piece on Hardwick’s showing the result of the store’s intense improvement of its last 45 years. The tool room had mostly just tables & 4 showcases which developed into 30 showcases and pegboard to the ceiling. Father was purchasing from 25 companies in 1975. Bill & I increased that in 20 years later to 150, not only from the US but also importing from Europe and Japan. A supporting role was from Lloyd Anderson from the mid 80’s onward who was our store manager and a great help.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=96BE1FTsUyI&t=517s

A challenging corner cabinet made for our garden tools, 4ft x 6ft x 7ft high
04/16/2024

A challenging corner cabinet made for our garden tools, 4ft x 6ft x 7ft high

Update on progress. Slow, but moving forward everyday. Photo is of western side of the showroom/store. Opening in 2024
10/04/2023

Update on progress. Slow, but moving forward everyday. Photo is of western side of the showroom/store. Opening in 2024

Slow but sure adding aspects to the new store in Post Falls, an overhead rack to add to vertical display of Klein Tools....
02/18/2023

Slow but sure adding aspects to the new store in Post Falls, an overhead rack to add to vertical display of Klein Tools. An effort to add to the Piled High & Deep. Second picture is shelving and pegboard made from wood as opposed to cold metal.

Next stage of construction done for internal build out of retail showroom. 20 foot long, 6 ft high doors, going up to 9 ...
12/12/2022

Next stage of construction done for internal build out of retail showroom. 20 foot long, 6 ft high doors, going up to 9 feet off of the floor. Will hold displays of hardware similar to the 1st ailse in the old Seattle store.

2 of 3 cabinets made, next step is to apply a clear coat
07/15/2022

2 of 3 cabinets made, next step is to apply a clear coat

An example of the type of showcases we are designing and building by our master inhouse carpenter C.S.. If people who ca...
01/22/2022

An example of the type of showcases we are designing and building by our master inhouse carpenter C.S.. If people who came in our Seattle store the last 40 years had seen the bypass 1/4" glass showcases we had then, I did not want to repeat those for the new store. Showcase shown here has pull-out drawer slides, the others being made will have only shelves not slides. I used Photoshop to color the doors to give an idea of the wood framed bypass doors to offset against all the close colors within the cabinet.
-Dean H

Address

3820 E. Mullan Avenue
Post Falls, ID
83854

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 6pm
Tuesday 8am - 6pm
Wednesday 8am - 6pm
Thursday 8am - 6pm
Friday 8am - 6pm
Saturday 9am - 6pm

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Hardwick Store Legacy & Family History, +more ea wk

This year Hardwick’s has been in business for 86years. Hardwick family moved into the University District at 12th Av NE & NE 42 St 99 years ago. Came originally from Texas to Ellensburg in the Washington Territory in about 1885. Before Texas, came from Southern Tennessee. Emigrated to Westmoreland Virginia in 1636 from Bristol England, then came originally from Derbyshire about 1550.

A story done by Dan Richman for the Seattle PI in 2008, sums it up better than I could for Hardwicks, thanks Dan, for your writing talent -Dean H.

There is no place in Seattle like Hardwick's, a University District hardware store offering what must be the largest selection of hammers under one roof, plus much (much) more. Nor, given insurance requirements, fire codes and even conventional business practices and sensibilities, could such a place likely be created today. "Corporate America couldn't have this," said co-owner Dean Hardwick, 54, a grandson of the store's founder, who runs it with his brother, William, 64. "It's too uncontrolled. It's organized chaos." Every square inch of the 10,000-square-foot, 70-year-old store is crammed with stuff, including the walls leading up to the 16-foot-high ceilings. The aisles are narrow, to jam in more stock. The floors are creaky, the ceilings decrepit and the lighting unsubtle. Hardwick's has both character and characters. It is a treasure trove for anyone with mechanical, plumbing or hardware-related problems to solve or projects to undertake. On a rainy day, it would be the perfect place to wander. It's also priced reasonably, sometimes lower than conventional hardware stores and the giant warehouse stores. "I figure my profit not necessarily on how much I can get but on how little I can sell it for," said Hardwick. "I try to figure out my margins that I've known, that we've been able to do to survive." Marshal Stapp, 66, a professional house fixer, stopped by the store last week, as he frequently does. "If I have a problem, I come and ask and they have the answer," he said. "I need hardware to fix 100-year-old houses. If I found it somewhere else, it would be a specialty, high-priced item. Here, I may have to look in the back of a drawer, and it may have been here for 10 years, but they have it." The northernmost room, itself worth a special trip, is devoted to tools, hardware and painting supplies. The middle room has plumbing supplies, fasteners and housewares, and the southern room is filled with new and used furniture usually bought by university students. Weekday customers are often tradespeople. On weekends "we get refugees from the big-box stores. The lines go all the way down the aisles," said manager Lloyd Anderson, 62, who's been on the job for 24 years. Many people visit from outside Seattle, and some from out of state. Many tools come directly -- not through distributors -- from about 120 companies in the U.S., 15 in Europe, and others in Japan and Israel. And though the store may stock only a few examples of each item, it tends to carry full lines of products, not just the top-sellers. "We feel we should have the stuff it takes to make everything go around," Anderson said. "That's why people have a better-than-average chance of getting what they need." An Austrian hatchet with an offset head and handle, for hewing a log square, sells for $48. An entire case is filled with Japanese saws ($13-$40), which make straighter, narrower cuts than American versions. Want chisels? The store has hundreds, separated into those used on a wood lathe, for hand carving and for carpentry. There's a big selection of brushes, from wire, horsehair, nylon, stiff tampico and stainless steel. Of course there's steel wool -- and also bronze, aluminum and stainless steel wools. Distinctively designed gardening and bonsai tools, from Japanese makers Okatsune and Yoshida Hamono, would make great gifts. (Gift certificates are available.) Levels, up to eight feet long, come from the U.S., Germany and Israel. People have been known to visit just to view the store's vast array of pliers. Then there are the hammers. At least 170 kinds. A whole, long wall full. Rounded and canted-rectangular wooden mallets for hitting chisels, rawhide-ended lead models for power on delicate surfaces, tiny brass numbers for making jewelry on equally tiny anvils (sold elsewhere in the store), and models for planishing -- the process of smoothing sheet metal. A beautifully crafted two-inch chisel from Henry Taylor of Sheffield, England, costs $87. A similar model from Stanley costs about $20. That's part of the store's philosophy. "We have high-quality tools as well as really crappy tools, but we price them as they should be," said Anderson. "In a lot of stuff we'll have three or four grades of product, so someone trying to save a buck can do that." Another philosophy is to buy from small companies often recommended by customers. Paint brushes from -- wait for it -- Paint Brush Corp., of Vermillion, S.D., cost $15 for a three-inch model. Competitors costing as little as $8 are "nowhere near the same quality," Hardwick said. In the hardware department are at least 24 types of doorstops. Also present in profusion are glass and metal pulls and k***s suitable for the area's older houses. Fasteners, including a big selection of hard-to-find stainless steel items, are sold individually, not in blister packs, so customers can make sure they're what's needed and can buy the required quantity. There is no bar-coding and no scanners. All pricing is done by hand or on stickers provided by Do It Best Corp., which supplies about 10 percent of the store's stock. By the way, the store is still a swap shop, where customers can exchange desirable used items for credit or new merchandise. Last year's gross sales were $1.7 million, and though the store no longer enjoys the 20 percent year-over-year revenue increases it had between 1976 and 1990, it has been profitable nearly every year. It now supports the brothers and 12 full-time employees. The Hardwicks own the property on which the store is built and have had many opportunities to sell at a large profit, all of which they have declined. "It's worth hanging in just because we've been doing it and are still doing it," said Hardwick None of the family's fourth generation have committed to taking over when their fathers retire. So if the store were to close? "Oh, well. It's no big deal, really," Hardwick said. "It has to do with Catholic thought -- things come and go, but you just don't worry about that, because there's a bigger thing than yourself out there. That's just the way it works."

And..... Jack Lewis’s review in Yelp