What is the best way to account for finishes in eCabinets? Should I make each finish a different material and add the cost there or do most people add a certain percentage to the labor when using the materials to labor ratio option? What would be a reasonable rate for staining, glazing, painting, distressing?
Thanks for any ideas.
Ellen
Estimating Finishes
Moderators: Jason Susnjara, Larry Epplin, Clint Buechlein, Scott G Vaal, Jason Susnjara, Larry Epplin, Clint Buechlein, Scott G Vaal
- Kerry Fullington
- Wizard Member
- Posts: 4734
- Joined: Mon, May 09 2005, 7:33PM
- Company Name: Double E Cabinets
- Country: UNITED STATES
- Location: Amarillo, TX
Ellen,
I don't know how others are handling costs for finishing. I use a spread sheet that I developed to calculate my labor but it needs a lot of work where finishing is concerned. I need to be able to add labor for each step of a finish just as you are saying, sanding, distressing, staining, finish step one, two and so on. I hope you get some response to this from some of the other members to see how they are calculating this.
Kerry
I don't know how others are handling costs for finishing. I use a spread sheet that I developed to calculate my labor but it needs a lot of work where finishing is concerned. I need to be able to add labor for each step of a finish just as you are saying, sanding, distressing, staining, finish step one, two and so on. I hope you get some response to this from some of the other members to see how they are calculating this.
Kerry
Your question sounds more like a business question than a Ecabs question. The \"going rate\" for a multi step finish varies wildly. The BIG shops have semi-automated and automated spray equipment as well as finish sanders. The best finishers here can get 3 or 4 grand for a top notch job, but most cost less than $1000. I decide how long it will take and charge my shop time rate. There would be several ways to include that price into Ecabs, but I thing that unless you give the same finish every time you should take each job seperately.
Mike
Mike
-
- eCabinets Beta Tester
- Posts: 1740
- Joined: Tue, May 17 2005, 8:33PM
- Company Name: Timeless Cabinetry and Mantles
- Location: South East
Ellen,
I brought a nickle to the table to throw in my two cents, hoping to have some change left over but this is actually a dollar question and I am afraid I don't have enough.
But, in hopes to NOT confuse you with any other shop.
As a general rule I add between 12-18% of the job once I bid it out to allow for an Old world/distressed finish.
Stain jobs only account for about 7-8 % of the cost. While a painted set may run around 5-6 %. For whatever it's worth. I don't bid to compete against other companies. I bid for the opportunity to provide a valued service to go along with our fine cabinets.
You can set up a material such as 3/4\" Birch OW and apply a markup to adjust for this in the system. If your customers wanted to upgrade to an Old world/distressed finish, simply change the materials and then do a cost analysis for the job.
For the most part of costing out a job I place a $ on the larger more costly to build units such as a bank of drawers, refrigerator, or a oven units. I then do a lineal/foot bid for standard base and uppers, then I add the unit cost. Then I add a % up charge for the finishes.
I really hope this doesn't get you confused. My intent is to help add to you knowledge.
I brought a nickle to the table to throw in my two cents, hoping to have some change left over but this is actually a dollar question and I am afraid I don't have enough.

But, in hopes to NOT confuse you with any other shop.

Stain jobs only account for about 7-8 % of the cost. While a painted set may run around 5-6 %. For whatever it's worth. I don't bid to compete against other companies. I bid for the opportunity to provide a valued service to go along with our fine cabinets.

You can set up a material such as 3/4\" Birch OW and apply a markup to adjust for this in the system. If your customers wanted to upgrade to an Old world/distressed finish, simply change the materials and then do a cost analysis for the job.
For the most part of costing out a job I place a $ on the larger more costly to build units such as a bank of drawers, refrigerator, or a oven units. I then do a lineal/foot bid for standard base and uppers, then I add the unit cost. Then I add a % up charge for the finishes.
I really hope this doesn't get you confused. My intent is to help add to you knowledge.
Intel Core i7-5820K (6-Cores, 3.3GHz, 15MB Cache)
32Gigs DDR4
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960 4GB
SSD 840 256Gig, 2TB, 3TB, Samsung (2TB)
Corsair RM650
32Gigs DDR4
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960 4GB
SSD 840 256Gig, 2TB, 3TB, Samsung (2TB)
Corsair RM650
-
- New Member
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Tue, Apr 24 2007, 12:42PM
-
- eCabinets Beta Tester
- Posts: 1740
- Joined: Tue, May 17 2005, 8:33PM
- Company Name: Timeless Cabinetry and Mantles
- Location: South East
Ellen,
You will also need to take into consideration of your location. Where ever that may be, (hint). Some places with a greater population can do really well with specialty finishes while other less populated places will not support a finish at all they just want boxes
You will also need to take into consideration of your location. Where ever that may be, (hint). Some places with a greater population can do really well with specialty finishes while other less populated places will not support a finish at all they just want boxes

Intel Core i7-5820K (6-Cores, 3.3GHz, 15MB Cache)
32Gigs DDR4
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960 4GB
SSD 840 256Gig, 2TB, 3TB, Samsung (2TB)
Corsair RM650
32Gigs DDR4
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960 4GB
SSD 840 256Gig, 2TB, 3TB, Samsung (2TB)
Corsair RM650