Wizard9999":16a8cnf0 said:She certainly seems to be able to get the volume of views to make the YouTube model work.
Terry.
novocaine":26n3h3ov said:in America basic tools includes a table saw, bandsaw, mitresaw and router.
in America cheap timber isn't just white pine.
in America plywood is all baltic birch (anything else is construction timber)
in America a garage workshop is 60m2 minimum.
in America you can quit your well paid job to focus on making videos and this is a viable alternative.
oh and I like April, she's learning as she goes and using fairly basic methods but makes nice looking bits and pieces. there seems to be a group of people who do this sort of stuff and they are all pretty good to watch, although I'm excluding the druken woodworker, the wood whisperer, giaco something and whatever as they annoy the hell out me.
custard":2wqv6vs2 said:I used to work in a job that often took me to the USA, and I met quite a few woodworkers both hobbyist and professional. The reality was different from my expectations,
-the climate across large parts of the USA is pretty brutal, consequently cars are often garaged where as in the UK they're generally left outside, consequently even large American garages don't leave that much space for woodworking
-timber is local rather than national, Americans in aggregate have a fantastic choice of timbers, but on an individual, local basis that's often not the case
-the Americans I met were often astonished at how low UK property taxes are and that the NHS is genuinely free. Many Americans told me that if they had free health care and low property taxes they'd go full time with their woodworking in a heart beat.
-the full time "designer/makers" I met in the US (and I met quite a few) seemed to be operating with very similar costs and revenues to their UK counterparts. The ones that are good at getting out and selling their wares get by okay, the ones that lock themselves away in a workshop out in the sticks struggle. Many are turning to "teaching" as a way of making the numbers add up. Same old, same old.
The grass is always greener, but I came away with the view that the reality facing American woodworkers is on balance not all that much different to the UK.
Monkey Mark":2p8y9hsr said:Simple and good looking. I like it.
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