Pricing for cleaning oils
-
- Posts: 11008
- Joined: Sat 25 Mar, 2006 8:40 pm
- Location: Devon, U.K.
- Organisation: The Dartmoor Gallery
- Interests: Lost causes, saving and restoring old things, learning something every day
- Location: Glorious Devon
Pricing for cleaning oils
Up until now my pricing for cleaning oils has been somewhat plucked out of the air on the basis of what feels about right. As time goes on, I find that the demand for me to clean oils has steadily grown, to such a level that I should be a bit more disciplined and consistent in my pricing. I am in fact thinking of coming up with a price chart which takes into account the size of the painting with specific charges according to what needs doing. I was wondering how others approach this problem.
- Bill Henry
- Posts: 935
- Joined: Wed 28 Mar, 2007 8:38 pm
- Location: Litchfield, NH USA
- Organisation: Not so much - it's kind of messy.
- Interests: Dry mounting dog hair, counting age spots on old people, playing chess with wood elves, scheming to take over the world.
- Location: Litchfield, NH USA
- Contact:
When faced with trying to determine an equitable rate structure for almost everything do, we use a stopwatch to time ourselves for several sizes on several projects.
Say it takes you twenty minutes to clean a 50 x 60 cm canvas, that would be 50 x 60 / 20 or 150 cm2/ minute. If your shop fee is £30 / hour (£0.50 / min), you could fairly charge £ 0.50 / 150 = £ 0.00334 / cm2. Obviously, I’m making these numbers up – as the TV announcers state, “Results may vary.”
If you use “united dimensions” rather than area measurements for most of your work, you can convert linear to square cm with reasonable accuracy by taking the horizontal plus vertical dimensions of your canvas, dividing that number by two, and squaring the result. In the above example, your united centimeters would be 50 + 60 = 110. One ten divided by two is 55. Fifty-five squared = 3025 cm2 – pretty close to the 3000 we got in the first place. And this conversion always works in your favor unless the horizontal and vertical dimensions are equal.
Whether you wish to include materials such as cotton swabs and cleaning solutions into this equation is a matter of choice, I would think. Despite a primer on the VAT that you guys provided me with, I don’t pretend to understand it too well. If the cost or volume of materials is significant, you may wish to pass them along adding a mark up, of course; if not, you may wish to absorb them and save yourself the headache.
Say it takes you twenty minutes to clean a 50 x 60 cm canvas, that would be 50 x 60 / 20 or 150 cm2/ minute. If your shop fee is £30 / hour (£0.50 / min), you could fairly charge £ 0.50 / 150 = £ 0.00334 / cm2. Obviously, I’m making these numbers up – as the TV announcers state, “Results may vary.”
If you use “united dimensions” rather than area measurements for most of your work, you can convert linear to square cm with reasonable accuracy by taking the horizontal plus vertical dimensions of your canvas, dividing that number by two, and squaring the result. In the above example, your united centimeters would be 50 + 60 = 110. One ten divided by two is 55. Fifty-five squared = 3025 cm2 – pretty close to the 3000 we got in the first place. And this conversion always works in your favor unless the horizontal and vertical dimensions are equal.
Whether you wish to include materials such as cotton swabs and cleaning solutions into this equation is a matter of choice, I would think. Despite a primer on the VAT that you guys provided me with, I don’t pretend to understand it too well. If the cost or volume of materials is significant, you may wish to pass them along adding a mark up, of course; if not, you may wish to absorb them and save yourself the headache.
Don't take life so serious, son, it ain't nohow permanent! – Porky Pine
- John
- Site Admin
- Posts: 1887
- Joined: Sun 27 Apr, 2003 8:00 pm
- Location: Ireland
- Organisation: Tech Support
- Interests: Forums and stuff
- Location: Belfast
- Contact:
I'd agree with your mother on this one Grahame.
Acting as a middleman could leave you exposed to a claim if the job goes wrong.
At least for the small amount of specialist stuff that we are asked about, I am happy to build up good will with the conservator by passing it on direct.
Acting as a middleman could leave you exposed to a claim if the job goes wrong.
At least for the small amount of specialist stuff that we are asked about, I am happy to build up good will with the conservator by passing it on direct.
HOW Much!?
EstLite Picture Framing Software
EstLite Picture Framing Software
-
- Posts: 1951
- Joined: Mon 09 Jan, 2006 12:06 am
- Location: Penzance Cornwall UK
- Organisation: Moonshine Framing Penzance
- Interests: 4 or 5 ...
- Location: West Cornwall, UK
- Contact:
Oil paintings seem to come out anywhere between £40 and £80 for a basic clean (outsourced). Although our restorer does like us to un-frame them first. watercolours, prints and paper art- clean up, de-foxing, bleaching etc usually come out around £20 to £30
we have an arrangement with our restorer (fortunately he's a neighbour) -
we recommend him and take the jobs in, but he does it for the customer, rather than for us.
we discount his framing, he recommends us for framing. Customers often ask us if we can clean oils, watercolours etc, so its handy to be able to take the picture, and they generally have it framed when they come to pick it up.
Having an outside expert handy certainly means you can sleep at night if anything goes wrong.
we have an arrangement with our restorer (fortunately he's a neighbour) -
we recommend him and take the jobs in, but he does it for the customer, rather than for us.
we discount his framing, he recommends us for framing. Customers often ask us if we can clean oils, watercolours etc, so its handy to be able to take the picture, and they generally have it framed when they come to pick it up.
Having an outside expert handy certainly means you can sleep at night if anything goes wrong.
-
- Posts: 11008
- Joined: Sat 25 Mar, 2006 8:40 pm
- Location: Devon, U.K.
- Organisation: The Dartmoor Gallery
- Interests: Lost causes, saving and restoring old things, learning something every day
- Location: Glorious Devon
It seems my current prices are higher than yours for oils, (£75 to £150), but I generally tidy the frame if it needs it at the same time. I'm about the same for art on paper. People seem happy with my prices.kev@frames wrote:Oil paintings seem to come out anywhere between £40 and £80 for a basic clean (outsourced). Although our restorer does like us to un-frame them first. watercolours, prints and paper art- clean up, de-foxing, bleaching etc usually come out around £20 to £30.
-
- Posts: 1393
- Joined: Thu 23 Sep, 2004 8:31 pm
- Location: Detroit, Michigan USA
- Organisation: minoxy, LLC
- Interests: non-fiction knowledge
- Contact:
Most of our painting restoration work involves paintings that have been improperly stored in a basement or garage. Scratches, holes, and flaking paint layers are common. Cleaning is only a portion of the work in an image. There is patching, lining and inpainting as well as removing improper prior restoration attempts.
We charge(quote) a fixed fee based on an hourly rate of $100/ hr after a few tests are made and the painting is totally evaluated.
We charge(quote) a fixed fee based on an hourly rate of $100/ hr after a few tests are made and the painting is totally evaluated.
Jerome Feig CPF®
http://www.minoxy.com
http://www.minoxy.com