Bigcat_hunter
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Oct 1, 2015
- Messages
- 105
Are there any taxidermists here? I am an artists and am interested in becoming a taxidermist. Seems like minimal start up costs. Can you make a good living at it?
Depends, once again depends on your reputation that you need to build up over time. I have a client that hunts all around the world and pays top dollar and sends all of his stuff to some guy that I think is in Texas even though he lives in Colorado.Not in Florida
Really? I challenge you to find any home with a mount in it. It’s just not something people do down here. Or is very rare at least, I know I‘ve never seen one. Hard to make a living with no customer’.Depends, once again depends on your reputation that you need to build up over time. I have a client that hunts all around the world and pays top dollar and sends all of his stuff to some guy that I think is in Texas even though he lives in Colorado.
People with money will pay money to get something done right. If you are good at what you do and know it, charge accordingly and write off the tire kickers.
Sure you can make a living, but a “good one” is very difficult. I’ll use a whitetail deer as an example since it is probably the most widely mounted animal (rough numbers);
form - $60
Eyes - $15
Ears - $15
Tanning - $80 (farmed out)
Misc supplies - $15 (paint, glue, etc)
Overhead - this is so dependent on your area, shop, etc but let’s be conservative and say $20
So, that’s $205 in supplies. Sure you can save a bit by doing tanning in house (maybe $10 in supplies but you have to add several hours of labor) and Bondo ears ($2 instead of $15). Me personally, I have about 15 hours in a standard shoulder mount. It I can get $550, which most people don’t want to pay for a quality shoulder mount, that leaves $345 dollars on the table. $345 / 15 hours = $23 an hour before taxes, healthcare, etc
Interesting. The guys around here charge $700 for an antelope size critter and they always seem to have more work than they can handle. I’ve had them turn down work because they are two years out. That seems like some job security to me. Maybe that’s just around here I don’t know.Sure you can make a living, but a “good one” is very difficult. I’ll use a whitetail deer as an example since it is probably the most widely mounted animal (rough numbers);
form - $60
Eyes - $15
Ears - $15
Tanning - $80 (farmed out)
Misc supplies - $15 (paint, glue, etc)
Overhead - this is so dependent on your area, shop, etc but let’s be conservative and say $20
So, that’s $205 in supplies. Sure you can save a bit by doing tanning in house (maybe $10 in supplies but you have to add several hours of labor) and Bondo ears ($2 instead of $15). Me personally, I have about 15 hours in a standard shoulder mount. It I can get $550, which most people don’t want to pay for a quality shoulder mount, that leaves $345 dollars on the table. $345 / 15 hours = $23 an hour before taxes, healthcare, etc.
This is pretty much exactly what I was gonna say.Better question…can you have a life as a taxidermist? I know my taxidermist gets out and gets nice deer, but it seems like it’s difficult for him to be out during prime time when he’s expecting animals to be brought in. Also more difficult for him to make trips for hunting. This is in whitetail country though where people will bring in the whole head and don’t really care it out themselves, so they don’t have the freezer space at home. May be different in other locations.
Pretty sure every house I’ve been inside in FL has had plenty of mounts.
The taxidermist I use in Virginia seems to do pretty good, got a new toyota pickup, just bought a new shop for his growing business, happy home, etc. basically living the american dream, I'm sure he has a new washer and dryer. So I am 100% sure he is "making a living"
However like the one person before mentioned he doesn't get alot of time to hunt and fish, and he has to put up with people calling over and over again asking if there mount is done after a month or two even though he tells them its a bout a 1 year turnaround. Then there are people that pay their deposit that wont come pick up there finished product, which is what blows my mind.
So yeah he makes a living, a very aggravating living but he makes it