Terry McGee wrote: ↑Mon Jan 08, 2024 12:35 am
Interesting. I imagine you'd get a number of slides out of each stick, so that cost doesn't sound high. But that probably tells us that I haven't considered the price competition in the whistle market! Penny whistle, and all that!
My goal with these things is to produce as good of a quality whistle as I can while still keeping the price as affordable as possible. That means saving pennies anywhere possible without sacrificing quality to do so. I don't really want to become yet another $100-300-per-whistle whistle maker. It kind of runs back to my first forays into whistledom years and years ago when it was near-impossible to find affordable folk music on the internet. I was terribly offended that I had to pay somewhere around $5.00 a tune to get out-of-copyright sheet music for folk tunes on the web, so I spent some of my own money and started putting those tunes up for free. Now, of course, there are sites that are much more well known and used than mine, but I don't mind that one bit. Goal accomplished.
I don't want people to feel like they
have to spend that kind of money. I mean, I'm not going to kill that market, for sure. I just contacted Fred Rose to get one of his whistles...but I want to kind of blur that line between "starter whistle" price and "decent whistle" price. (And please, let's not muddy this thread up with yet another decades-old discussion about how Generations are just fine. I know that there are plenty of folks who hold to that. And I don't deny them their opinion. Horses for courses. You know who you are...resist the temptation lol!).
These tuning slides add just shy of $1.00 USD to the end production price, which isn't crazy, and I can live with it. But if I could make a slide for $0.25 for the same quality, there's no reason not to spend a little effort to find a source.
Terry McGee wrote: ↑Mon Jan 08, 2024 12:35 am
Wow, how exciting.
Then there will come the Session version, the Quiet-as-a-Church-Mouse version, the "all the different keys" versions, the full sets, the "can you do a version to match my eyes?" versions, etc, etc. And then someone will ask about flutes....
Keep us in touch!
I'm trying not to look too far into the future, or let myself get too excited about it. I'm just trying to take things as they come and if becoming a big whistle maker doesn't pan out, I won't get too bent out of shape about it. I'm mostly excited that I've managed to make some whistles that don't seem to suck
Perhaps my next foray will be designing a C whistle though I imagine Cs and all of the little D variants are a niche market compared to the standard D. Honestly, the next thing I'm interested in is looking into more robust plastics. The plastic I'm using is sustainable, not petroleum based, and used in food and medical industries, so I feel pretty good about using it. But it'll also warp if you leave it in in your car in the summer in warm climates. They make more uv and temperature resistant plastics, and I imagine I'll casually keep looking into those to see if I can find something I can use but also feel safe about people putting in their mouths.