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Big O

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Posts posted by Big O


  1. I was going to ask about how much a custom holster sells for, but I guess this answers that question. So I'll ask this question between the cost of materials and time spent making the holster are you actually making any money on these?

    From a business model, considering time invested, no.

    It's a hobby that pays for itself, plus a little extra. The time I put into it is "multi-tasked" with watching TV, which I'd be doing anyway, on my nights off from the real job. Most cutting and all stitching are done in my recliner.


  2. I've taken to using the measurement of the trigger guard, rather than the slide, to determine the placement of the stitch line along the bottom of the trigger guard. That's for pancake designs. For wraparound designs like the Avenger, I split the difference between the two measurements.

    I've only recently come to love the Glock. I've always respected them. I stippled both of mine. The first one was my former duty gun, which I bought and then immediately ground off the alien finger grooves which I hated so. LoL


  3. I make perhaps 25-30 a year. It's still just a hobby. I don't see it becoming a full-fledged business, as I feel that the key to my limited success is that it's all done by hand, and in order to substantially increase the income, I'd have to either:

    A. mass-produce using generic templates and a sewing machine, which would wipe out the custom, handcrafted aspect

    or

    B. charge a fortune for each piece, which would probably be appropriate in terms of the time involved, but not for the inherent value

    I typically charge $65 for an Avenger or reinforced pancake, $50 for a pancake or simple pouch holster, $125 for a shoulder rig, $25 for a single mag pouch and $30 for a double.


  4. 3. When you are producing over 2,000 completed orders every year, let's talk again.

    I think that one line pretty much says it all, when you explore its ramifications.

    In the time it would take Lobo to build this one holster, beginning from scratch, how many holsters COULD he have made using his off-the-shelf designs? And that's ASSUMING access to the same pistol and light combo, either the customer's or a generous friend's.

    In other words, how much would it COST Lobo in lost business opportunity?

    I can see his reasoning. It makes perfect sense for him, with the volume of business he has.

    This remains a hobby for me, so it wouldn't be an issue - for me - as long as I can have access to the pistola for the design and molding phases. But I'm handling about 1% of Lobo's volume.


  5. There are basically only two ways to enclose a handgun in critter skin.

    One is to wrap one piece of critter skin around it, and the other is to sandwich it between two pieces of critter skin.

    Pretty much all "innovation" occurs outside the interior stitch lines.

    A holstermaker named Thad Rykba came up with the idea of wrapping the one piece around "backwards", with the fold at the trigger guard, and a welt along the top. That was pretty cool. I tried to copy that once. He did it way better.

    Another one named Roy Baker came up with idea of making a pancake holster with THREE belt slots instead of two, so that the holster could be worn at one of two different angles. I tried to one-up him with an extra belt slot once, to make it a 3-way instead of 2-way. His way was way better.

    I even tried to "innovate" with a two-way Avenger design. Again, the original, boring, traditional way was way better.

    People keep asking me for "innovative" cavalry-draw SOB holsters. I keep refusing, because I will not play any part in their predictably perforated kidney, unless I'm pulling that trigger myself, and for good reason.

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