jpdesign
Vendor
- Messages
- 235
- Location
- Glen Rose, TX
I feel we can all agree that the craftsman is a dieing breed.
The true craftsman has almost disappeared. The man who apprentices with a master, then strikes out on his own to make his fortune and perfect his craft is almost nonexistent. Today, if someone feels like making something, the internet has made it possible to get supplies and read instructions and learn the mechanics of making whatever it is they want to make. This is not the same as learning under the tutelage of someone who has already spent many years working at what is being taught and learned. I spent six years working under a master hatter. I would have liked it to be 10, as this is a traditional apprentiship. I have spent two more working and building on what I learned first hand. Because of the shortness on my teaching I do not feel that I will be able to call myself a master hatter for at least another 5 years, if then. I am trying to become a master hatter, not just a hatter that taught himself to make hats with a few suggestions here and there from another hatter.
For a craftsman to truly become a master they must work at their craft over time. This does not happen in today’s "immediate gratification" society. This was brought about by the internet. People can look up the cost on just about anything and then go negotiate a price in a store.
If someone knows what the materials I use for a hat cost, then they can negotiate the cost of the hat down to where I get paid almost nothing for the labor that goes into my works. I do not go into a Bootmakers shop and ask him what the leathers he is going to make my boots from cost him to buy. I do not go into a Tailor's shop and ask what the fabrics for my suit cost him. I do not go to buy a car and ask what the steel cost to build it. This is information that should only be privy to craftsperson themselves. What the charge over the cost of the materials goes to paying his bills and paying him for his time, his sweat, his exhaustion. I work hard at creating my hats. I work to produce the best hat possible. I have been working at it for eight years. I want to be rewarded for the time I have put into perfecting this craft, this art. Does an artist get paid based on the cost of his paints or clay. People like me, Fedora, Art, and any other hatter, just like any other craftsman, have spent time and money tracking down near extinct tools, learning how to use those tools properly, and turning raw materials in to works of art. I, and I believe they too, put my heart and soul into my creations. We deserve something in return. This is the first time I have said my hats are a work of art, many others have said it for me. It is not the materials that make the hat; it is the person working with those materials. When you haggle with a reseller, you are only cutting into their bottom line. When you haggle with a craftsman, you are cutting their worth, the value of their work.
With the internet, any one can buy hat bodies and make hats. To make a quality hat that you can make over and over you have to go to a vendor for the materials. For this you either need to be incorporated or have a tax id number. This is also an expense.
If another hatter has questions about making hats I will answer to the best of my ability. There may be a trick or two that I have come up with that I will not give up (Like being able to reblock a wool hat). If someone wants to become a hatter and seeks me out, and wants to learn to make hats in person, I will teach them. If they show promise I may even employ then, they may then truly start to learn the craft. But if a customer wants to ask questions about the process I will only tells them so much and that is it. This knowledge in not widely know for a reason. Knowledge is power. Power from knowledge is valuable. Power without knowledge is soon shown to be worthless. My knowledge can feed my family for the rest of my life, as long as I don't sell it too cheaply. That is what a person buying a hat from me will get, the benefit of my labor and knowledge goes into everything I create.
This is how I feel. In that vain I will tell you that what I paid for the chinchilla body I made the hat from was obscene. I saw it in the stack. I decided that I wanted to be the one to make that hat. So, I bought it. The price I am asking is what I feel I should be able to sell it for, wether it actually covers what my time is worth or not.
Jimmy
The true craftsman has almost disappeared. The man who apprentices with a master, then strikes out on his own to make his fortune and perfect his craft is almost nonexistent. Today, if someone feels like making something, the internet has made it possible to get supplies and read instructions and learn the mechanics of making whatever it is they want to make. This is not the same as learning under the tutelage of someone who has already spent many years working at what is being taught and learned. I spent six years working under a master hatter. I would have liked it to be 10, as this is a traditional apprentiship. I have spent two more working and building on what I learned first hand. Because of the shortness on my teaching I do not feel that I will be able to call myself a master hatter for at least another 5 years, if then. I am trying to become a master hatter, not just a hatter that taught himself to make hats with a few suggestions here and there from another hatter.
For a craftsman to truly become a master they must work at their craft over time. This does not happen in today’s "immediate gratification" society. This was brought about by the internet. People can look up the cost on just about anything and then go negotiate a price in a store.
If someone knows what the materials I use for a hat cost, then they can negotiate the cost of the hat down to where I get paid almost nothing for the labor that goes into my works. I do not go into a Bootmakers shop and ask him what the leathers he is going to make my boots from cost him to buy. I do not go into a Tailor's shop and ask what the fabrics for my suit cost him. I do not go to buy a car and ask what the steel cost to build it. This is information that should only be privy to craftsperson themselves. What the charge over the cost of the materials goes to paying his bills and paying him for his time, his sweat, his exhaustion. I work hard at creating my hats. I work to produce the best hat possible. I have been working at it for eight years. I want to be rewarded for the time I have put into perfecting this craft, this art. Does an artist get paid based on the cost of his paints or clay. People like me, Fedora, Art, and any other hatter, just like any other craftsman, have spent time and money tracking down near extinct tools, learning how to use those tools properly, and turning raw materials in to works of art. I, and I believe they too, put my heart and soul into my creations. We deserve something in return. This is the first time I have said my hats are a work of art, many others have said it for me. It is not the materials that make the hat; it is the person working with those materials. When you haggle with a reseller, you are only cutting into their bottom line. When you haggle with a craftsman, you are cutting their worth, the value of their work.
With the internet, any one can buy hat bodies and make hats. To make a quality hat that you can make over and over you have to go to a vendor for the materials. For this you either need to be incorporated or have a tax id number. This is also an expense.
If another hatter has questions about making hats I will answer to the best of my ability. There may be a trick or two that I have come up with that I will not give up (Like being able to reblock a wool hat). If someone wants to become a hatter and seeks me out, and wants to learn to make hats in person, I will teach them. If they show promise I may even employ then, they may then truly start to learn the craft. But if a customer wants to ask questions about the process I will only tells them so much and that is it. This knowledge in not widely know for a reason. Knowledge is power. Power from knowledge is valuable. Power without knowledge is soon shown to be worthless. My knowledge can feed my family for the rest of my life, as long as I don't sell it too cheaply. That is what a person buying a hat from me will get, the benefit of my labor and knowledge goes into everything I create.
This is how I feel. In that vain I will tell you that what I paid for the chinchilla body I made the hat from was obscene. I saw it in the stack. I decided that I wanted to be the one to make that hat. So, I bought it. The price I am asking is what I feel I should be able to sell it for, wether it actually covers what my time is worth or not.
Jimmy