jokingscroll
New Member
So I am wondering what people are charging for this service to print on canvas, coat the piece with varnish, and stretch the canvas?
I used to do a few of these back before the local supermarket and framing shops started doing them for a pittance.
These days they're for the birds. Or folk with printers who don't need to eat or be clothed.
Soooo Bob how many of these do you do a day at $83? Saying you will do them for that price all day and actually making a living on them are worlds apart, no?...
I don't do that many just like I don't do that many of any one particular thing. At a time. But...if circumstances were such I could do 10 a day, be done by lunch time leaving my afternoons for riding horses and smelling the roses, and net well over $700 per day. $700*5 days a week*52 weeks a year comes to a tidy $182,000 per year, I can live on that.
I was at a meeting the other day where various of us were doing show and tell about our respective businesses. I had brought along, among lots of other things, a gallery warped canvas that was hanging on my office wall. Another attendee represented a custom greeting card company that also offered gallery wrapped canvas prints.
The card lady went first and broke out her sample canvas, an 18x24. Unimpressive work.
When it was my turn I unlimbered my sample, also an 18x24. Not only were the sizes coincidental, so was the subject matter. Her's was a guy trying to stay on a bucking horse, mine was a guy riding a horse [non-bucking]. I didn't say much beyond words to the effect that I also offered these. The difference in quality was obvious to most everyone there. Mine was much tighter with proper corners. Someone actually picked up on the proper edge handling that I used vice the lack of same on the card lady's sample.
Edge handing is where you reproduce an inch or two, depending, of each edge, left, right, top, and bottom, flip them either horizontally or vertically, depending, and join them back onto the original image. This makes the vertical sides of the wrap a mirror image of the inch or so of the image itself. Seamlessly at that.
The card lady had announced that her sample was $89.99. She ask how much mine was. $83.00 I replied. The look on her face was priceless.
I'll do this size all day for $83.00 a copy. $5-$6 worth of material and a 15-30 minute [depending] time investment. The quick turnaround is because I've done so many of these I have the pre-press down to a handful of well-defined keystrokes and the stretching down to about 5 minutes. Besides, I enjoy doing them.
True... what bars/frames do you use that allow you to get them done that quickly?
On anything less than 30" on the long side I'll use commercial 1x3 [nominal] stretcher bars. I buy a stock of them them from various places on-line, wherever the best deal that day might be. If I need a size I happen to be out of I stop by the neighborhood Hobby Lobby and get a single set of four. The bars purchased on the cheap on-line tend to have very small knots and the odd bark irregularity but they're uniformly straight and sound. The ones from Hobby Lobby are always clear wood but thet cost a bit more. Just pop them together, square them with a framing square, and drop two or three staples across each corner joint. No glue, no fuss. Takes maybe a minute. None have ever come apart and no one has ever complained about any irregularities, mostly because 75-80% of the entire bar is covered with canvas.
On larger sizes I use finger joint and primed brick mold. It's the perfect size and shape. Available at any home improvement center or lumber yard. Cut in the miter saw, a drop or two of Tight Bond and the stapes up the joint on both sides. Takes a couple of minutes longer and costs a bit more, but I charge accordingly. Gives a larger more substantial looking finished product.
During the entire process the thing that takes the most time is having to reload staples into my air stapler.