I am capable of fixing most things around the house, but lately I’ve realized that it’s usually not worth the time. I have to work 6 days a week most of the time, so if I fix something it eats the entire day I have off. During the couple longer holidays I have during the year, chores like that might take up half the time I get off. Totally not worth it if I have a choice.
Sometimes, there isn’t really a good option to doing it myself. For example, I couldn’t find any place around that would install a security screen on a casement window. It wasn’t a matter of price, no one would undertake the job at all. Considering the sunk time spent looking for parts to do it, having a metal screen custom cut to fit, and the actual installation and adjustment time, I know I’ve spent far more than I’d be willing to just pay to have it done. I would gladly have thrown a few hundred $US at the problem as long as it was someone else’s problem.
Other things I’ve made or done because I couldn’t find a product that fits, or a service to have it done: a stand-alone dish rack for counter-top dish storage, doweled shelves for plates, a wine rack that fits inside an Ikea cabinet, routing cables for Apple TV and Xbox, replacing a ceiling light fixture, building two sets of shelves.
A few weeks ago in a blog post (“If Time is Money”) I pointed out that people waste a lot of time thinking about things that aren’t worth the time of consideration. Each of those projects cost me between half a day to a couple of days worth of work to do; more if you count planning, hardware and tool shopping, prep, and clean up. Given the line of reasoning I laid out in that blog post, the ONLY time doing one of these projects was even remotely worth it was if it wasn’t possible to pay someone to do it.
The bookcases I made were slightly better than a kit from Ikea or somewhere like that, but the cost of the materials equaled or surpassed the price of pre-made, and I easily sank double that cost in time. That makes those bookcases worth about US$500 in time and materials, vs. maybe $200 for Ikea + self assembly - aggravation and planning. And I actually like making things. I generally create my own plans so that I make exactly what I want. The stand-alone dish rack, for example, is made without nails or screws, all wood joints only. It was fun, and turned out pretty decent, but oh, was it so not worth it from a cost standpoint.