custard
Established Member
Staying with practical examples. I wanted to offer something that was more unique and distinctive than the previous Shaker Side Table, but was still relatively quick to make and could sell for below £1,000. I found another Shaker design called the "Harvard Table", here's my version,
By getting jigged up to the eyeballs I tried to get the build time down to 20 hours. I've never quite got there, and it takes me about 25-27 hours to make one. Like the previous side table I can kid myself that it's possible to make two in a week, it is, but only by putting in some overtime and then conveniently ignoring it.
I sell these for £750 in highly figured timbers (and because they're more of a feature piece that's what clients generally go for). It's a profitable item. Profitable not in the sense that it puts me in Russian Oligarch territory, but profitable in that with enough orders I could just keep my head above water. I've been doing these for about three years now, and I must have sold, oooh let me think, all of about seven or eight!
It's hard Mike. You need lots and lots of good ideas, not just one, and the energy to make them happen. Even then you're sprinting just to stand still. It's no wonder that when professional makers get together the first question they always ask is "how many hours did that take?", you can see them tumbling the numbers in their heads and wondering if there was even a snowball in hell's chance of ever turning a profit.
By getting jigged up to the eyeballs I tried to get the build time down to 20 hours. I've never quite got there, and it takes me about 25-27 hours to make one. Like the previous side table I can kid myself that it's possible to make two in a week, it is, but only by putting in some overtime and then conveniently ignoring it.
I sell these for £750 in highly figured timbers (and because they're more of a feature piece that's what clients generally go for). It's a profitable item. Profitable not in the sense that it puts me in Russian Oligarch territory, but profitable in that with enough orders I could just keep my head above water. I've been doing these for about three years now, and I must have sold, oooh let me think, all of about seven or eight!
It's hard Mike. You need lots and lots of good ideas, not just one, and the energy to make them happen. Even then you're sprinting just to stand still. It's no wonder that when professional makers get together the first question they always ask is "how many hours did that take?", you can see them tumbling the numbers in their heads and wondering if there was even a snowball in hell's chance of ever turning a profit.