Home › Forums › The Art Business Center › General Art Business › how do you determine cost of lettering?
- This topic has 9 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 11 years, 11 months ago by Carcharhinus.
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April 27, 2012 at 8:40 pm #989626
i would like to know how you determine cost of lettering for hand done signage. A guy painted the letters onto the back of our boat once and he charged by the letter but i don’t remember how much and can’t find him. I was wondering if this is standard when you are doing a sign. I have been asked to do lettering on a window. I’m going to use One Shot and picked out some nice fonts and i want to give an estimate. i thought id do it by the hour but thought maybe i should consider by the letter too. is like 2 or 3 dollars a letter standard? looking for opinions! Thanks!
April 28, 2012 at 7:01 am #1161253You need to factor in cost of paint as well as your time. More letters mean more paint.
Diane
April 28, 2012 at 9:14 am #1161255Not many sign makers left who still do hand lettering.
Price the self stick letters at the hardware store and make sure you are charging at least 2-3 times as much.
My Painting Blog: http://adkpainter.blogspot.com/
This is our ART: useless, boring, impotent, elitist, and very, very beautiful.
April 28, 2012 at 11:29 am #1161258Not many sign makers left who still do hand lettering.
Price the self stick letters at the hardware store and make sure you are charging at least 2-3 times as much.
Sorry, Horsa, but I totally disagree with this approach. Vinyl lettering is dirt cheap… even custom cut vinyl lettering done on a machine.
Hand lettering is becoming a lost art, as you pointed out. It takes a true craftsman to do this work well. If the sign painter is any good at their craft I think they should charge $ 60.00 to $ 100.00 and hour for their efforts… more if it entails any gilding.
Besides, if they can afford the boat, they can afford to pay for the lettering. :thumbsup:
April 28, 2012 at 11:38 am #1161256What I meant was hat anybody who is doing hand lettering should charge considerably more than a sign maker or DIY using vinyl or other machine cut lettering.
There is a definite art to shaping the letters and to spacing them (the technical term, at least in typesetting, is “kerning”).
$2-$3 per letter is about what I pay for 3-4 inch vinyl at the hardware store.
$60-100 per hour is closer to what I would expect to pay for good hand lettering.
Be sure to charge for your design time as well as painting time. That work is also part of the job.
My Painting Blog: http://adkpainter.blogspot.com/
This is our ART: useless, boring, impotent, elitist, and very, very beautiful.
April 28, 2012 at 11:42 am #1161257When I had my shop sign painted I paid about $5-10 per letter. They weren’t broken out separately. And I live in an area where the sign painter who still does it all by hand works cheap!
My Painting Blog: http://adkpainter.blogspot.com/
This is our ART: useless, boring, impotent, elitist, and very, very beautiful.
April 28, 2012 at 3:11 pm #1161259:thumbsup:
May 1, 2012 at 2:43 pm #1161251Sigh. My husband used to be a sign painter and pictorial billboard painter. I still remember the day he came home and told me “a machine” had come out and could do what he did cheaper and in a fraction of the time and he needed to change careers. About 35 years ago…my son was a baby.
I didn’t believe it. He did beautiful custom work and I didn’t believe anyone would buy the cheesy vinyl.
How wrong I was! He still misses it.
Historically, so many artists were sign painters, too. It’s one of those things that looks easy but is very easy to look amateurish, too.
Anyway, there is a site called the Letterheads, they are what’s left of the trade and you might get some ideas of pricing from them. But they are pros, not doing this as a side.
Robin
May 1, 2012 at 2:47 pm #1161252You know, I just reread this. How much experience do you have in hand lettering? It’s not that easy. In fact, when he did a lot of billboards in a row, my hubby would practice his hand lettering at night just to keep his skills up. And he was one of the best in town and started at 16.
Robin
May 2, 2012 at 2:15 pm #1161254I have done custom lettering of signs in festivals and market type shows and did quite well until the computerized machines started popping up at the shows. You need to charge for time and materials.
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