Sunday, 24 July 2011

Making Money In The Wood Working Industry

By Owen Jones


Are you a woodworking hobbyist, who is seeking to make money in the woodworking industry? If you are, you can make money, no matter what your level of ability. It is a great business to be in, because of the fact that you can make money as a woodworking novice making simple items and selling them and, when you become skillful, someone will offer you a job or you can remain self-employed..

Even a total beginner woodworking amateur can make clothes pegs and clothes hangers. These can be sold around the neighbourhood or to a local shop, if you do not like the idea of selling yourself. After a few weeks, as you gain confidence, you can move onto swing seats, chess boards, stools, bird tables, dog kennels and wine racks. After a few months of that, you could attempt a garden bench. After that, you are away.

The key to any woodworking project is the woodworking plans. A set of drawings or even just one drawing, an exploded diagram, of the object to be made. The plans will give a clear, exploded diagram, all measurements and angles, a narrative, explaining what to do first and possibly pointers too.

The pointers could be about the timber to use, the skill level of the project, the estimated time it will take to complete, the tools to use and the finish to give it.

Once you have acquired the skills to make various items of furniture such as garden benches and garden tables, you can go looking for a full-time job, if that is what you want. A word of warning though, do not try to be what you are not. A good foreman carpenter will see your level of skill within 15 minutes, but he will decide to keep you on depending on your ability and attitude to employment.

He may judge that you do not know enough, but he may reckon that you are worth a try, because you appear to be keen and eager to work. On the other hand, you may have loads of ability, but if he sees a lazy or impertinent streak, you may be up the road anyway. The foreman carpenter will be experienced and will know what kind of person will fit in and whom to give a chance to.

Site work is obviously different from woodshop work, so bear that in mind when you ask for a job. Just because you can measure precisely and cut tidily with both feet on the ground, it does not mean you can cut a roof in while perched on a rafter 20 feet in the air.

If your line of learning is as I have suggested above, you would probably be better off applying for a job in a woodworking shop or even a cabinet maker's shop. Or an up market kitchen cabinet manufacturer's, where you can be taught more under supervision.

Later, you can move on to installing the items others have made in peoples' homes, which takes another type of skill. People skills come into play here too, because the public can be rotten when they are paying to have work done. Stick with your woodworking or carpentry, whichever route you decide to follow and you may be the foreman carpenter within a few years.




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