That’s nice stuff, better than you see around your average market. I don’t know how you are selling it but I would look at some alternatives because I know that people making a living off stuff inferior to yours.
Have you checked out what is selling at markets near you?
I’ve been paid expenses for playing trumpet, money for time off work ditto, and now receive an annual honorarium as church organist plus extra for weddings and funerals (one of each, to date). Also got paid to sing once or twice. Not much, but I guess it qualifies.
Thanks! Looking at local markets is on my list of things to do early this year - but it’s much more scary selling things in person than online. Still, time to be a big girl and try it out; I’ll never know if it’ll work out if I don’t give it a shot, at least!
My senior year in high school an art teacher paid me $20 for a copy of my cat tessellation that I made in my digital art class. It wasn’t much, but the fact that somebody liked it enough to buy it from me made me feel good.
I’ve been paid for playing music in various configurations, the most recent (if you can call it that) being a band playing our own music in NYC/NJ in the mid to late '90s. We made enough to buy studio time, and put out a demo cassette and a CD. That was about it. Lots of fun though, which, most likely to the detriment of the enterprise, was all I expected to get out of it.
My expertise is drums, but I think I made more money during a 6 month stint playing bass in a country band when I was living in Colorado than I ever did playing drums.
My favorite episode from that time ('87, '88?) was when we were the house band at a midway BBQ/beer shed at Cheyenne Frontier Days. Slept on the stage, played 5 sets over the course of the afternoons and nights, and got paid $3600 in $5 dollar bills at the end of the week. We were all looking over our shoulders while we practically ran to our vehicles with our pockets stuffed with cash. Got to see the carnival life for a week and saw Johnny Cash and a bunch of other big acts for free (the shed was just outside the main grandstand).
I’ve been paid to play the piano in bistros a couple of times, and it was my own compositions & improvisions I was playing; but it was never “time to quit the day job” sort of thing.
I’ve been told I could sell prints of my photographs at the local art & framing stores, or set up a kioskbooth along central park or at some street fair. Haven’t tried it yet though.
I hear you. I was at the local Guitar Center the other day just for fun. I was playing a decent guitar through a decent amp - just basic rhythm stuff, not “hey look at me” riffing (I hate that crap). Anyway this Eastern Eurpopean fellow about my age listened for a while and then wanted to talk to me - he liked my playing, which is cool, and told me a tale about being involved in music for years in Ukraine and then a 20+ year gap and now he is looking at guitar. He got kinda misty-eyed and talked about how he wished he’d stuck with it the way I had and was asking me about what it was like to be a professional. I had to help him step away from the fantasy, made it clear that I had never seriously considered being a pro musician, and encouraged him to be happy that he loves music so much and can keep growing from where he is at.
Folks on the SDMB like **Le Ministre **and **picker **who are pro musicians are the exceptions - being able to devote your life to making money from your art changes everything - what lifestyle you are prepared to have, your relationship with your art since it’s gotta pay the bills, etc…
A misty-eyed gay boy once tipped me after I sang Sarah McLachlan’s Angel on karaoke night at a bar in Atlanta.
I do some pretty decent graphic design stuff for family and friends that ends up saving them a few bucks, but that’s about it.
My better half has sold some sheet music of pieces she has written through the Sibelius Music Store and we are on the cusp of getting her own music company off the ground to give it a real go.
I haven’t seen anyone mention my hobby yet, so I’ll throw it in. I have been paid for woodworking. I’ve made and sold pen and pencil sets, salt and pepper shakers, small woodcarvings, breadboards, small boxes, etc… I would like to one day move up the size scale and make some furniture, but I don’t have the necessary tools or space to do so. Not yet at least.
I’ve sold carved calabash, paintings & clothing I’ve made from reclaimed stuff, dyed, bleached & generally funked up, bookmarks, little reversible dolls, hair scrunchies, vests knitted from old sheets, hats, bags.
Beginning freelance photographer (website here). I had some of my Vietnam photos bought by a travel organization for publication on their website. I also have done some private photo shoots in my studio that paid fairly well.
Oh I wish. Good lord do I wish. No, I get hired because I work cheap, and I’m known for my ‘humor’. Of course, it always ends up this way:
“This is too obscure. Can you change it?”
“You mean dumb it down a bit?”
“…Yeah.”
Grumble.
(No lie, last project? 100 pages of dialogue, none of which will be used because the developers decided, at the last minute, that the game needed to go a ‘dark and gritty’ direction instead of a ‘humorous’ direction.)
Not sure I’d call it art, but I’ve had lots of my pictures published in NASCAR related publications, including a few nationally distributed ones. I was a NASCAR photographer for 5 years, 3 of which were contracted to NASCAR. This was on the old Busch North touring series (now Camping World East and bears little resemblance to the series I was associated with). I also had some of my racing work show up on trading cards. That was kinda neat.
I’ve also sold some of my regular photography as well.
I sell my art here - hoping to do a book with the stories and images soon. I design logos, do freelance illustration and design table accents and figurines for a collectibles company (they sculpt them in Hong Kong).
It’s about a 1/3 - 1/2 of my income, depending on the year.
Aside from web and graphic design in my some of my day work, I paint resin doll faces and make doll clothes on commission, with personal designs selling here and there. I’m not famous but I’m fairly well known in a niche community and have been in a magazine. Not quite what I got my fine art degree for, and it doesn’t make enough to live on, but it’s really nice for reminding me that my artistic side hasn’t become totally worthless, which helps me continue to work on other creative stuff that I don’t get paid for.
When I was younger I got into making chainmaille. I sold a number of necklaces and shirts. Hardly profitable at an hourly rate but it was fun to get money for a hobby.