johnnyb
Established Member
I'm about to move into a slightly rundown 900sqft unit. My equipment is a bit Mickey mouse for joinery and maybe ok for furniture. The rent isn't restrictive and I'm trying to think creatively about making it pay.
My idea is to run basic "classes" for a nightly fee. What the gist of these will be is obviously open to debate. It's not to start a school but to bridge the gap between a high end school and a men's shed. I was a member of a popular woodcarving club and it was held in a school and was always packed. The machinery was strictly out of bounds and it was hand tools only ( and the odd drill). I found when we introduced group projects ( we all made Windsor chairs!) It went down a storm and years later some of the guys still make windsors. Another project was wooden locks. I know it's just a seed ATM but joinery shops are shutting down Willy nilly. And these are industrial. What do the panel think.please don't concentrate on h and s and insurance in your answers!
My idea is to run basic "classes" for a nightly fee. What the gist of these will be is obviously open to debate. It's not to start a school but to bridge the gap between a high end school and a men's shed. I was a member of a popular woodcarving club and it was held in a school and was always packed. The machinery was strictly out of bounds and it was hand tools only ( and the odd drill). I found when we introduced group projects ( we all made Windsor chairs!) It went down a storm and years later some of the guys still make windsors. Another project was wooden locks. I know it's just a seed ATM but joinery shops are shutting down Willy nilly. And these are industrial. What do the panel think.please don't concentrate on h and s and insurance in your answers!