| Size | Board feet | Pieces per 100 bf |
|---|---|---|
| 1×8×6 | 4.00 | 25 |
| 1×8×8 | 5.33 | 19 |
| 1×8×10 | 6.67 | 15 |
| 1×8×12 | 8.00 | 13 |
| 1×8×14 | 9.33 | 11 |
| 1×8×16 | 10.67 | 10 |
The 1×8×8 is typical stock for wide trim and shelving. Ordering for a whole plan? It takes 19 pieces of 1×8×8 to reach 100 board feet — tally the real cut list, mixed sizes and all, in the board foot calculator and print it as a slip for the yard.
Worth remembering: dimensional softwood like this usually sells by the piece, not by the board foot — but the BF figure still matters for comparing costs across sizes, estimating framing packages, and talking to mills. Hardwood in random widths is where per-BF pricing rules; see the price table for what species run per board foot.
Every 1×8×8 starts life rough-sawn at (close to) its nominal size, then loses material to drying and surfacing — which is how a 1×8 arrives at the store measuring ¾″ × 7¼″. The nominal-size convention is written into the American Softwood Lumber Standard (NIST PS 20), and it governs everything downstream: the label on the rack, the invoice, span tables and this page's board-foot figure of 5.33 bf. Measure a 1×8×8 with calipers and punch the actual size into a calculator, and you'll come up about a quarter short of what the yard will charge you for — always figure nominal.
Handy when you're loading the truck: at 5.33 board feet, a kiln-dried SPF (spruce-pine-fir) 1×8×8 runs about 12.4 lb, and a denser southern yellow pine version about 16 lb. Fresh, still-wet stock is heavier — roughly 15.1 lb (SPF green) to 24.4 lb (SYP green). A 50-piece framing lift of 1×8×8s is therefore on the order of 620–800 lb dry, which is real payload. Species-by-species figures live in the lumber weight calculator.