Perhaps I could make lots of these tea bag caddies and sell them at craft shows, or give them away as gifts. I hear stories of other artisans who make many pieces of the same design and give them away. One ambitious person actually made several hundred small band saw boxes; one for every guest at his daughter’s wedding.
The result of my experiment was that I came to the realization that mass production is not for me. For one thing, carving boxes does not lend itself to mass production. It’s not like baking cookies or making a jar of peach jam for each of your relatives and friends. Other than using the same design, there is no economy of scale in carving since there are just as many wood chips removed no matter how many boxes you carve.
Even if there was a time benefit, I just don’t like making the same thing over and over again. I like to experiment with new approaches and different techniques. After I made the second tea bag caddy, the third one really became a chore. As I was making it I was thinking of all the other creations in my head that I could be making instead of this duplicate. I guess I’ll just stick to individual pieces.
Dad - nevermind your mass production is a chore revelation... those boxes look FANTASTIC ! I don't know if you are using trick photography or not, but they look really really good and absolutely sellable at a craft show or fair or whatever. My latest idea - use multiples of the same cigar box to help create "secret" drawers in a finished box...don't have the details, but I am sure this is the key... Dave
ReplyDeleteInteresting that you mention secret drawer. One of the three cigar boxes was actually slightly higher than the other two. I raised the inner "floor" and, by doing so, created a hidden lower compartment. I guess it's not a secret any more. It's now known by all 5 people that read my blog.
ReplyDeleteJohn, that's why I make a mold from my carvings... so I don't have to do it all over again.
ReplyDeleteYour work looks great...
A series of the same design is why those 3D carving machines were invented... the drawback is that time on them tends to be fiendishly expensive... which puts the ball back in the craftsmans court....
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