04-15-2017, 10:49 AM
Hello folks.
It's been a while since I've been here. I'm finally setting up my shop again. I'll be spending a year working full time in the shop to see if I can at least make a small profit doing something I love. At the end of a year I will evaluate whether I need to get back into engineering consulting for my income.
I'm semi-retired, but at age 57 I still need supplemental income for a few years before I start tapping into my IRA account.
So I leased a shop space at the Houston Foundry, 1,800 sq ft located 10 minutes from my house in the Houston Heights, where other makers also lease shop space. There is another woodworker, a metal worker, glass worker, and others. The location is owned by a large specialty metal fabrication shop, so there's lot's of craftsmen on location.
Making a profit in wood (and metal) is extremely difficult, but's it's been a dream of mine for a long time, so here we go. This will actually be like a one year vacation for me, waking up every day and just enjoying my passion.
I still see a few folks here from when I was more active in the past. I look forward to interacting with everyone as I take this journey.
PS - I posted this same thread in the hand tool forum, sorry for the double post, but some folks don't venture....
It's been a while since I've been here. I'm finally setting up my shop again. I'll be spending a year working full time in the shop to see if I can at least make a small profit doing something I love. At the end of a year I will evaluate whether I need to get back into engineering consulting for my income.
I'm semi-retired, but at age 57 I still need supplemental income for a few years before I start tapping into my IRA account.
So I leased a shop space at the Houston Foundry, 1,800 sq ft located 10 minutes from my house in the Houston Heights, where other makers also lease shop space. There is another woodworker, a metal worker, glass worker, and others. The location is owned by a large specialty metal fabrication shop, so there's lot's of craftsmen on location.
Making a profit in wood (and metal) is extremely difficult, but's it's been a dream of mine for a long time, so here we go. This will actually be like a one year vacation for me, waking up every day and just enjoying my passion.
I still see a few folks here from when I was more active in the past. I look forward to interacting with everyone as I take this journey.
PS - I posted this same thread in the hand tool forum, sorry for the double post, but some folks don't venture....