BradNaylor
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- 17 Oct 2007
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filsgreen":x0or9tan said:For what it's worth Simon I would think twice about what you write on these forums, you don't know who reads them 8-[ .
I think your Nan will be made up with her coffee table and so she should be, it's a nice piece of furniture. Please don't get cynical about what your worth and how much you could earn, it's not worth the heartache. If your happy to make things for family and friends, carry on.
There has just been a post about what you should earn and what the reality is. It doesn't make good reading. People aren't prepared to pay for real wood and quality, they're just used to MDF. No disrespect to Dan "who is turning it into gold in a northern town".
Phil
No offence taken, Phil.
My tagline about turning MDF into gold is actually an ironic reference to the fact that most professional cabinetmakers these days are forced down the road of making fairly basic custom fitted furniture in order to make a living.
Hobby woodworkers often get upset at the 'low' prices that their beautifully crafted masterpieces would achieve on the open market.
Lets take Simons' coffee table.
It's all well and good advising him that he should be charging £50 per hour but if the table took him 20 hours to make that's a grand! Plus the cost of the wood.
It's a nice table but with the best will in the world nobody's going to pay more than a few hundred pounds for what is a pretty straightforward coffee table.
The analogy with a plumber is not a good one. When you employ a plumber you are buying his services for the number of hours or days that it takes him to complete the job.
The purchaser of a piece of bespoke furniture is buying a piece of furniture. He couldn't give a flying fig how long it takes to make!
Everyone who starts making furniture for a living learns a few things very quickly - or goes bust.
Certain types of job pay far better than others.
A solid wood coffee table like Simon's is expensive in materials, and time consuming to make. When competed, it is worth say £300.
A simple cupboard to hide someone's gas meter in their hallway can be knocked up in a morning out of half a sheet of MDF and a coat of primer. When completed, it is worth say £300!
This is the reason why most professionals don't make many coffee tables!
It's not all MDF, however. This morning I've got to do a quote for a solid mahogany reproduction glazed corner unit. The price comes out at £2800 for a single freestanding piece of furniture. It'll be interesting to see if I get the job.
The thing is however, that this kind of work doesn't come along too often.
Cheers
Dan