Is a $400 dollar yew bow a fair price , or an insult?
The stave costs (or is valued) at $200 dollars, say. The bowyer takes 30 hours to build, test, and finish the bow. That comes out to a bit over $6 an hour you are paying him for his craft and the years it took to learn it, the tools and overhead, etc. Might as well just flip burgers – it pays better. At $800 dollars for a yew bow, the guy is only making $20 bucks an hour.
Dane
For a professional bowyer, I think 30 hours may be too excessive. Me, yes. But if I did it every day, I would say its more on the lines of 20 hours. I do know someone in WA who makes ELB's but hesitate to give out his name as he told me he is too busy to take new business. He does it for a hobby. He says he counts on 20-24 hours for an ELB. He harvests his own yew however. He charges around 400 for one.
I mean guys, folks who do this for a living I can't imagine do it to get rich. If they want to make a lot of money, join the office rat race like the rest of us, and be content being miserable working, hating commuting and going into work every day, and only working to do the things you love. Instead of working doing what you love.
Its kinda funny, my boss is currently retiring. On the side he has a full saw mill, a few log trucks, and cranes, and a full shop. For a hobby for over 2 decades he makes furniture. Now, in electronics as a director, he pulls down easy 140K a year. He was telling me what he will be bringing in doing high end furnature and I explained I felt so bad for him. He looked at me and told me, "never feel sorry for someone doing what they love".