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![]() "Blazer Fan Dan" wrote well, space, tools and what not, are all already in my possession. I have let several young furniture makers use my shop to get started and run into this all the time. It is always hard to get these facts across to beginning craftsmen. Space costs money even if you own it. You have to heat it, maintain it, insure it and pay taxes on it. In time you will need more of it to store material and products. If you were not using it you could sell it or probably rent it out so to be completely accurate you should include that in your costs. After all if you are only netting $1,000 a month but could rent out the space for $500 is all that effort worth the extra $500? Similarly tools cost money. You have to have things repaired and replaced, buy blades and abrasives and occasionally add to the repertoire. I work weekends and nights, maybe 25 hours a week, and have to budget at least $100 month in tool maintenance and supplies. Unless you are willing to give a lot of your profit to your suppiler for finished strips you will have to invest in a good jointer, planer and shaper. Preferably with power feeds as milling a few miles of strip is a mind numbing job. And don't forget the power bill. Lights, power tools and air compressors use a supprising amount of it. im not expecting to make a whole mother load, just enough for a single guy to live decently on (meaning: I won't starve) And how much is that? To stay just above the poverty level you will have to produce and sell 12 - 15 hulls a year. You also have to sell them. That means spending a lot of time taking your boats to boat and craft shows and other outdoor events where people can see them. Can you build 1 or 2 a month and still spend a third of your time selling them? Over time, if you build an exceptionally good quality product at a reasonable price, you will build a reputation and people will start coming to you so your selling time will go down and your prices can go up. But the first 4 or 5 years will be very tough. I am not saying don't do it. In fact I spend a lot of time encouraging young craftsmen and artisans. But you have to understand the business end of it or you won't last long enough to build a reputation. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
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