WILDHOBO
Well-Known Member
My best project, which is garbage in comparison to your work, is an Adirondack 2 person rocker out of Ipe. The wood alone was $800. The specialty paint matched stainless screws that I had to individually cut to my required lengths were at least another couple hundred. It took me three months to build it in my free time. None of that includes tools I needed that didnāt have. And all the drill bits I broke off in that wood. So I have a tiny idea of what it must cost to do the stuff youāre doing with those inlays. I wouldnāt know where to start.The sad part about it is there's no "real way" to make money at it. I mean I'd love to start a little retirement business doing this stuff but people don't realize the cost of custom wood items. As an example, the box in the first video was for my mother-in-laws husband's birthday. She basically commisioned a jewelry box but had no "specifications" and gave me free reign on style, wood type, etc. The wood and hardware was around $200, but the labor (like most things) is the killer. If I was to make that same jewelry box and just charge my labor at minimum wage, it still winds up over $800. If I charged a proper Maker's wage (using the low end of the scale), it shoots to over $1400. But I enjoy doing it and when the fam covers the material cost it softens the blow a bit...LOL.
Here's the one I just finished for myself. I still need to decide what I want to do for the base...something better than my wife's greatgrandmother's sewing machine, which I still need to refurbish...lol:
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