Jjartwood
Member
Ok,despite the advice given to me on this forum (Thank You by the way)
I decided to take a shot at this and I think I got it to work,
TRY THIS, I stretched 5 pens out over several hours by taking very small cuts
to avoid the "that don't take long"guy in the crowd. whenever there was a child
in the group watching I would engage the child mostly by explaining friction
and then I would use a wire and burn in a line,when the crowd got to a good size my wife would call me into the tent to answer some type of question and
I would invite the crowd to look at what I made with my big boy lathe.
When I finished the slimline( not the best job I would not try to sell them)
I would give it to a child in the group who was of grammar school age.
Don't be afraid to shut the lathe off and talk to the crowd.
Don't show off on how quickly you can cut a pen.
Use friction polish to show quick results (I would explain that it is polish and not the finish that I use on my "good" pens).
Also as soon as I shut the lathe off my called me over if there was only 1 or 2 people (usually other wood guys) there.
Every pen that I gave to a kid, resulted with a sale to the parents except for one.
I think the trick to this is to keep in mind that at a show your a salesman
and the serious penmaker has to be left at the shop.
I decided to take a shot at this and I think I got it to work,
TRY THIS, I stretched 5 pens out over several hours by taking very small cuts
to avoid the "that don't take long"guy in the crowd. whenever there was a child
in the group watching I would engage the child mostly by explaining friction
and then I would use a wire and burn in a line,when the crowd got to a good size my wife would call me into the tent to answer some type of question and
I would invite the crowd to look at what I made with my big boy lathe.
When I finished the slimline( not the best job I would not try to sell them)
I would give it to a child in the group who was of grammar school age.
Don't be afraid to shut the lathe off and talk to the crowd.
Don't show off on how quickly you can cut a pen.
Use friction polish to show quick results (I would explain that it is polish and not the finish that I use on my "good" pens).
Also as soon as I shut the lathe off my called me over if there was only 1 or 2 people (usually other wood guys) there.
Every pen that I gave to a kid, resulted with a sale to the parents except for one.
I think the trick to this is to keep in mind that at a show your a salesman
and the serious penmaker has to be left at the shop.