SteveF":1wq75e9n said:
but if you are using high quality timbers, then your commissions are swallowed by timber costs, so still not a worthy profit
That isn't strictly true Steve. There's an anomaly in the timber market that means I pay
less per cubic foot for boards of heavily rippled Black Walnut like this,
than rubbish Black Walnut like this,
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Black-Walnut- ... SwiONYPvMV
Thirty or forty years I can remember at least three or four UK veneer mills just within my small sphere of awareness, so across the entire country there must have been many more. Today there isn't a single specialised veneer mill anywhere in the UK. So that means when a rare and fantastic log arrives at a UK mill they either have to gather up quite a few to entice over a continental buyer from the veneer trade, or they just shrug their shoulders and treat it as normal timber. These heavily figured boards are no good to the volume timber buyers, they need bland stuff that looks like the samples in their timber flooring catalogues or on their office furniture web sites. Yes, there's a market for luthier timber, but I've got a theory (it's no more than a theory so if someone knows better I'm open to changing my mind!) that the pipeline for luthier timber is absolutely stuffed to the gunwales and the absolute volume that gets sold through and ends up in a musical instrument is nugatory. Net result is that the capacity of the luthier trade to
absorb more timber isn't actually all that great.
The other factor is that, apart from Oak, hardly any hardwood is
graded in this country. So (rough pricing here) Sweet Chestnut is £40 a cubic foot, Oak is £50, Cherry is £60, Walnut is £80, etc. However, as a natural material there's a massive quality range in wood, but out there in the real market there's relatively little price distinction between say a dog rough board of grey Sycamore that's full of shakes and sticker marks, and a breathtaking board of bright white Sycamore with sparkling ripple figure running clear across from edge to edge.
It makes no sense to me, but I'm happy to dive in and exploit this market anomaly. Consequently I can find enough veneer or musical instrument grade timber as solid boards to offer clients spectacular and unique pieces of furniture that they'll never ever find on the high street. I often encourage prospective clients to look at the Heal's Furniture web site,
https://www.heals.com/furniture.html?gc ... oCMGnw_wcB
I tell them I'll make something equivalent, but it will built to a far higher standard, from unique and spectacular timbers, you can decide on sizing and stylistic detailing, and it will cost you only a little bit more than you'd spend at Heals.
Hey, I certainly haven't got all the answers, after all I'm still not consistently hitting that £1000 a week target, but at least i'm getting close enough to keep trying!