Chasing the market is gonna be tough. And by market I mean the demographic that pay a price that keeps you afloat.
I sell bows. Not often. Always undervalued and underpaid. But I have a certain reputation with a couple movie prop companies and now and then I get a call. Right now I have a 5 curve upper Great Plains sinew backed bow in the works for one. The agreed price with 20 functional arrows is less than a weeks wages at my job and I bet I will have close to 80 hours into the project when I am done. Chokecherry dogwood arrow shafts still need to be found, cut, straightened, cured, straightened, shaped, straightened, hated with trade points, straightened, and fletcher.
Those shafts will take days to find and a couple hundred miles of driving. Mind you, they are often in prime cottontail hunting territory so chasing shafts does double duty. The stave was $150 with transport because I do not dare use anything but perfect grain osage with the ways day labor extras on a movie set often do everything they can to break equipment...not even joking, have caught them doing it several times on set.
All told, when you total up the costs of material, mileage and gas on my vehicle, I am dow to a dollar or two an hour. Honestly, I am glad I get few commissions like this because the stress makes it miserable. I am doing this one as a thank you to the buyer for a massive favor he did me years ago. I have a debt to him that cannot really be repaid.
And if you are curious about where you may have seen my work, check out the Yellowstone prequel, 1883. Most of the gear of the Sioux war party was mine. And yes, the fateful arrow that pivoted the story was mine.