^Not really, Norton. Let's say you use a Paewang PCB for 360+PS3, JLF stick, 6 OSB(F,N)30 buttons on the face, and 6 OSB(F,N)24 buttons for other 2 buttons/start/select/home/turbo (switches PS3 and 360 on the Paewang), you're looking at $24 for the stick, $3 per 30mm button, $2.50 per 24mm button (all the sanwa stuff from lizardlick.com), $40 for the PCB (from focusattack.com), not including shipping that's about $100. So <$100 for the wood, plexiglass, whatever other materials, + labor, is probably gonna fall short for most stick builders.
Anyway...
I am a longtime Hori fan, that being said however, when it came time to figure out my plan to make two "sticks to end all sticks" (aka two sticks to replace a closetful of sticks for various consoles), I went with MadCatz. MadCatz has more aftermarket support and that's a big part of why I went with them, I had an easy time multiconsole-modding my sticks, and there's a lot of options for replacement top panels so I can color-coordinate my sticks (admittedly most Hori sticks have aftermarket replacement panels too).
I don't like the newer non-enormous Hori sticks a whole lot, and the old enormous ones I like still have a problem where unless you baby the cord or make it detachable, it frays really badly. Not to mention some (not all) Hori sticks don't come with all arcade parts, and some of those aren't "easy" to swap new parts into (get a metal nibbler to remove the tabs and use any desoldering bulb and you can get it ready in 20 minutes, but I digress). Whereas with MadCatz, the TE sticks come with all Sanwa parts.
Also, if you have the money for it and you're not afraid to do it yourself, or know someone that can, I recommend getting a 360 MadCatz stick, and installing the
Kitty PCB, which is a solderless dual-mod (actually it adds on multiconsole support, and not only PS3, but you have to do a bit more to use that).
One more thing, the Tatsunoko vs Capcom and Brawl (wrestling) MadCatz SE sticks use a much higher grade of parts than the older Street Fighter IV SE sticks. I've heard that the stick is such a good clone of a JLF that if you pay $1 and order a JLF spring and put it in there instead of the MadCatz spring, it feels the same. The buttons are good too, and have good microswitches. So if you don't want to spend a lot they're a good choice, with an easy upgrade path to Sanwa parts (they use compatible quick disconnects).
Hori makes a 6 button stick, the V3 (VX on 360), which actually uses some decent Hori parts, and I think it sells for around what a SE goes for, so that's another choice. It like the form factor a lot more than the SE's, the V3 is wider. Only thing is it's less straighforward to upgrade to Sanwa parts, with the buttons soldered in (but no tabs), you'll have to do some solder work to attach the stick (meh), but mainly you can't mount a JLF with its mounting plate on the inside without grinding out a lot of material under the stick (bottom of the stick sits too low) or if you forgo the mounting plate, the top of the JLF stick is too high (increased throw, you could try substituting the Hori shaft to see if that works well enough).
Ukee, you will want to figure out your budget, and secondarily you will want to figure out if you want any mods (dual console is really nice, one stick for both 360 and PS3, but any modder will tell you it's a LOT better to go from 360 to both than to go from PS3 to both).
If any of y'all have questions or whatever, I mod sticks for locals as a hobby so I have a lot of experience with them these days, feel free to hit me up.