I know there are various different ways, but anyone who makes and sells crafts, how do you determine a price point?
I know that Kanalah makes and sells quilts.
I guess, in my case, it's more a matter of figuring out a rough material cost, and what I want to "make" per hour.
I was thinking of putting together a couple of really nice chessboards, and selling them, but I really can't think of a good price.
I mean, $100,000 per year is roughly $48.08 per hour (so, round up to $50).
So $25/hr is about $52K per year.
I'm not looking at this as a "full time" thing, but possibly an occasional thing.
But I don't want to "price myself out" of people buying what I'm making.
So with some stuff, I can't figure out how to factor in material costs. So if I buy a paint brush to stain wood, for instance, and I make two products, how can I calculate the cost of the brush, as a percentage, to include in the price?
Also, how much markup? Or does the hourly rate cover that?
I can see what I'm planning on making taking probably 4 to 6 hours, minimum, to make. So at $25/hour that is basically $100 to $150, not counting materials costs.
I know that Kanalah makes and sells quilts.
I guess, in my case, it's more a matter of figuring out a rough material cost, and what I want to "make" per hour.
I was thinking of putting together a couple of really nice chessboards, and selling them, but I really can't think of a good price.
I mean, $100,000 per year is roughly $48.08 per hour (so, round up to $50).
So $25/hr is about $52K per year.
I'm not looking at this as a "full time" thing, but possibly an occasional thing.
But I don't want to "price myself out" of people buying what I'm making.
So with some stuff, I can't figure out how to factor in material costs. So if I buy a paint brush to stain wood, for instance, and I make two products, how can I calculate the cost of the brush, as a percentage, to include in the price?
Also, how much markup? Or does the hourly rate cover that?
I can see what I'm planning on making taking probably 4 to 6 hours, minimum, to make. So at $25/hour that is basically $100 to $150, not counting materials costs.

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