The Artisan
Adventurer
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May I ask where you live? A house for 48k. What kind of neighborhood is that in?
You can find a fair amount for reasonable money:
https://www.zillow.com/warren-pa/
Hat tip......impressive work! Well done.Thanks concentrating on more full restorations. The toppers will take off as well. I will hire and manage after that. I will still do the sewing though. Here is the type of work I do now.View attachment 559705
Thanks with my wait times as they are the deposit gives them skin in the game. I am happy to refund a deposit though if the project has not been started.Hat tip......impressive work! Well done.
As for "deposit or no deposit", we currently offer custom textile work. We don't take deposits during initial conversations and design. Once a customer approves the design and price they go into our custom order queue. Once their custom order hits my design/cut and sew table the front office confirms they still want the custom order, if so, they pay in full and the order goes into manufacturing. We don't manufacture anything custom without full payment. You'd be surprised how many people will forget a deposit and not wish to pay the remainder. This is the same for $200 Jeep gear carrier or $20,000 GSA order. Now, with that being said we will be limiting our custom offerings due to the demand for larger quantities from established individuals and companies and the surprise people seem to have on pricing for USA/Colorado custom made gear.
We actually go the other way: jobs, with no people to fill them. We have a refinery in town, and a steel plant, and for some of the skilled labor work that's going on, they can't find people. Lots of people here (my next door neighbor, for instance) works at the Cummins plant right over the border...and they can't often can't find people to work to fill jobs.The problem with homes that cheap, is that the area is in low demand for a reason. Typically lack of employment opportunities. Its a hard sell, moving to an area with a 2 hour drive to a well staffed hospital. Poor internet (if any), and bare minimum employment centers.
We actually go the other way: jobs, with no people to fill them. We have a refinery in town, and a steel plant, and for some of the skilled labor work that's going on, they can't find people.
The other issue is the permanence of those jobs. When/if the refinery or factory closes or cuts jobs during the next recession, is there another option to support ones self?
I live in northwest PA. I'm a very short 10 minute drive from a National Forest and multiple ways to use my kayaks, whether on the Allegheny River, the Conewango Creek, or other bodies of water that drain into them, including the reservoir behind the Kinzua Dam, which itself is inside the National Forest. I can use the access road 30 feet from my house to launch or to land if I kayak down from New York.

I feel terrible for the customers who lost money in the bankruptcy. If I were in their shoes I too would likely feel like Marc was a criminal who intentionally defrauded me. But having gotten to know Marc and the business a bit I don't believe that to be the case. I don't believe he ever felt, up to the last day in business, that he wouldn't pull it out and eventually fulfill all orders and turn a profit again.