I hope that this video was helpful to those of you who would like to make woodworking your full time job. If you have any questions or video suggestions, please let me know. You can comment here or message me on Instagram. Thank you for watching.
Thanks for the info. I retired five years ago and bought a saw mill. I am a wood turner by passion and a table maker sometimes. I have about 900,000 lbs of hard wood in what was a horse arena. Walnut oak ash and cherry. Also Osage Butternut and some other rare woods. It’s been the best five years of my life. Your advice is spot on. I am just outside Toronto Canada on a large farm with a huge bush lot full of tight grain maple and ash.
I stumbled across this and really enjoyed hearing about how you're handling the business part of your trade. I'm not a woodworker, but I've been a self employed stonemason for the last 21 years, and there's so many parallels in making a living in the each of these crafts. I've haven't needed to do much marketing in order to stay busy over the years, but I've finally started to let myself turn down some of the projects that don't inspire me in order to save room for more interesting stuff. That can be scary when you need to earn a living, but the tactic of reaching out to designers and architects is something I haven't done enough, so you've motivated me there!
I love the advice about looking after your fingers.Back in the days you could always know a joiner /woodworker at the bar buying a drink.He fumbled a bit with the coins.One or two ends of his fingers we're missing
Excellent advice in here. Would add though that many people who are aspiring to be professional woodworkers might not want to put too much effort into material sourcing right off the bat. Learning how to build things effectively and market yourself is going to be your first priority. Once you start making money and gain experience in whatever niche you begin to occupy, then perhaps looks to save money by sourcing more raw lumber products... or not even. Do you make more money milling raw lumber and saving on that or delivering finished products to customers? And then of course weighing what is more satisfying to you as well. If you're making enough, it's not always about making the most money.
I, too, harvest my own logs from my farm, have it milled, air dry then kiln dry it. I have lots of boards that I have $0.35 bd ft that are worth upward of $10 bd ft.
Great video! I am not a professional woodworker by any measure, but I thoroughly enjoy working with wood and your comments. Keeping any company vertical is the key to success. I am glad you highlighted this, as profit makes the difference between having a hobby you love and making a living doing something you love. I subscribed and will be on the lookout for more videos. Thanks again!
i run a tree service and we just made our first table top from a tree we cut down and had milled. this was very helpful. it is kind of you to share as you have. thank you.
You've made a compelling case for doing your own milling. However, at what point does the cost of doing your own milling outweigh having someone else do it for you? Not only the somewhat expensive cost and maintenance of the saw, kiln, and heavy machinery to move things around, but most importantly your time. Are you a woodworker or a lumber mill? If you spend X number of hours per week dealing with milling your own lumber, is this not X number of hours per week you are not producing end products or actually having any personal free time in life? A quote I like to repeat is "many things in life are cheap or free when doing them yourself, if you don't value your time."
Sawmill, hire a guy to use it 10 days a year costs me 200 a day on average. I only had 12 pieces on my last big cutting spell and he cut those in 4 days. Dry in air here in fresno 1 year per inch of thickness. Spray for bugs before stickering . I never run out of material. I cut only 5 logs this spring. Yes I tie up money into material . But I sell green material and dry material so I get some revenue. I am on social security, I have been in business for years as a pro and hobbyist. I don't take vacation or have a outside life. I am struggling to survive as well. But sometimes, about once a month. I sell something. Then I reinvest all of it an keep going.
One of the best pieces of advise someone gave me was to stop giving my work away. They said “account for every penny you put into a project - materials, gas, tools, wear and tear, every thing you can possibly have needed to expend, then add your time, and add 20% and a lunch for each day you work.” I told them they were crazy and nobody would pay that, they then said “well then you’re in the wrong market or the wrong line of work” and encouraged me to give it a try. I’ll be darned if they weren’t 100% correct, I am now making way more money, and am way less busy. It’s amazing what you can do when your getting payed for what you deserve to earn and stop bending over backwards for people, my quality of work increased, my attitude increased and everything’s way better
@@KeithNewtonWoodworking higher end furniture and picture frames, I’m usually game to try most types of furniture pieces at least once but there are some things I just don’t do. Like you have mentioned before, I also do not market chairs lol. Thats one piece that the equation just doesn’t work on, for the same issues like what you were saying in the video you talked about them.
It takes what everything takes, time. If you put the money you make from woodworking back into tools and a shop it’s totally doable. That’s how I got started while working with a below average salary. You can do it if you want it!
Wow, I’d love to do guitars ( I play badly). Pity I’m not closer, would love to do an apprenticeship! I stumbled into woodworking only a few years ago……
I love your work too!! Do you kiln dry your own logs? I thought I saw in a previous video of your that the kiln you were building is now a shed. Thanks for the great advice. I am just starting out and have slowly built up a workshop, so that I can eventually do it full time. I love your channel ❤
I've made a full time living as a woodworker for 38 years to be precise. I followed you right up to the point you explained how you price your work. What I actually took issue with is just how poorly you explained it. That is literally the single hardest obstacle any woodworker will have to overcome. You'll have material costs, overhead operating costs from sandpaper to utility bills, mortgage or rent, machine upkeep, maintenance and replacement, taxes and the list just goes on. You have to at a minimum learn to be a book keeper or in my case merry one. Also when you said, " add in a little bit for labour" I nearly choked!. If you're not properly calculating a fair price for your efforts, skills & knowledge than you're making your profit at someone else's expense!. I don't think that's what you're doing, but it's how it sounded. When I was a lad growing up my neighbour who was a great craftsmen, teacher and my first employer was always fond of saying " For free, I can go fishing !".
I totally agree with your take. For me, the costs need to be granular. I know it’s not for everyone, but it helps me to know exactly what the costs are across the board. Accrued machine costs, utilities, appreciation and depreciation on the property, work related expenses of all types. This is how one can see if they are solvent at the end of the day. Maybe I’m too analytical for most, but it’s just a plain logical approach and it can be super interesting as well.
i think this carpenter is heart strong not math strong and it reflects in the pricing method. for those who have a spouse who is math strong and supports you: God's blessing is upon you.
Knowing the cost per each -nails, screws, sandpaper ect ect. Knowing the cost of a 1/8 inch bead of glue 24 inches long is also valuable. Streamlining your processes is also critical. Knowing how much electricity each machine uses is critical. There are many more cost factors that go into it. With enough time and effort I believe if you truly want it you will have it.
I appreciate the feedback and I do see what you mean now that you have pointed it out. I'll make another video going into more details the costs and hopefully that'll clear it up.
I'm intrigued by your commentary on having your own sources for logs vs purchasing rough lumber. Haven't given this much thought before, but it makes sense. Can you give a few examples for the cost of some of the logs you source? You have me wondering if investing in a small mill would be worthwhile. Thanks!
Keith, I'd be really interested to see that video. At first blush that seems like a lot but depending on the board feet and slabs obtained the numbers could be quite interesting. The local hardwood suppliers get anywhere from $6-15/bf for most hardwoods, and $12-18/bf for walnut. I'm in the Napa Valley and feel like there are enough hardwood trees coming down in the immediate area that a small guy with an improvised logging trailer, some labor, and solar kiln in the yard could make headway in controlling costs.
Love it man!! I’m a local and have been doing a lot of cutting boards lately and am beginning to want to make the jump into making small furniture and eventually making nice desks and tables. I see what you mean though about finding a way to source wood I think that’s one thing I really need to figure out realistically if I factor in the time spent on the board vs my day job I’m losing money due to supply costs especially since people enjoy different species and varied colors and patterns in boards and that’s not to say my boards are cheap that’s just how much wood costs these days ready to go.
These are really great tips especially in regards to pricing your goods. People often forget to keep in mind the price of consumable materials focusing only on the raw materials.
I am having hard time deciding my labor per hour or day. I have been doing woodworking in Turkey for 5 years now. Labor cost up here is really low. And the interest in high quality furniture is really low. So please tell me how you decide your labour per hour or day. Thank you for the great advices by the way.
Interesting take on your lumber supply. I assume this is only in the slab market, as I don't work with slabs but only milled rough stock. I have a few different suppliers and none of them are high enough to make me even consider milling it myself. It does seem like slabs have skyrocketed in price, probably due to their popularity. Slab furniture just doesn't do it for me like it does everyone else I guess.