"Turn Your Garden Shed Into A Small-Scale Lure Making Factory In Just 7 Days – Or Your Money Back!" If You’re Looking For A Simple, Cost-Effective Way To Get Started Making Hard Plastic Lures From Your Home Workshop, Then Look No Further!
Dear Fellow Lure Maker, Do you want to go semi-professional with your lure making, start selling a few lures online, on ebay or at the local markets/tacklestore? Or do you just want to punch out a massive pile of custom lures that will keep you and your buddies stocked with fish-catching weapons for years? Either way, you’ve come to the right place! Why? Because to go down that path you need to jump a few hurdles, and:
" I Have The Answer To All Three Challenges That Stop Most Folks From Going Into Lure Production!"
Didn’t realize there are four things to to get between you and a mountain of homemade lures? Listen up, here they come! 1. Speed – You Need To Make Lures Fast! If you really enjoy hand making lures, patiently shaping each lure body to perfection and then setting it aside to start on the next one, then forget about making plastic lures. Plastic lures are all about making a bunch of lures at once, and then going ahead and doing it all again. And again, and again! If you want to be able to make a few bucks from your lures you have to be able to knock them out quickly, or find some way to charge a lot of money for each individual lure. 2. Perfect Replication – You Need To Make Identical Lures, Fast! Carving wooden lures is great therapy, and these days I have a system that allows me to make a whole bunch of hand made wooden lures that are close to identical. But making any kind of lure one-by-one is slow, and even though the lures are very nearly identical, they’re never perfect. It’s no problem if all you want is to catch fish, but if you plan to sell lures you need them all to be identical in shape, weight and action. Enter plastic lures. One of the brilliant things about making plastic lures is the precision you get – with a little practice even an amateur in a home workshop can acheive perfect, identical lure bodies. 3. Cost Effectiveness – You Need To Make Identical Lures, Fast And Cheap! The materials used to make plastic lures are quite cheap. In fact, you can churn out some hard plastic lure bodies for just a few cents each! In fact, you should expect that an average sized bass lure will run to around $1 by the time it’s been painted and fitted with hooks and rings. And that’s if you’re paying retail proces for the wire, hooks and rings! So why do commercial lures cost so much then? Especially those that are mass produced in countries where plastic injection molding can be done very cheaply? Well, think packaging, think shipping, think branding and marketing and then add profit!
Excellent question! When I first looked into making plastic lures I found that it would be easy (and cheap, on a per lure basis) to get a commercial company to make them. They were literally only a few cents each. The problem was that it cost over $10,000 to set up, and I had to make 100,000 lures minimum! I knew that I made good wooden lures, but I didn’t know if they would necessarily be just as good made from plastic, and I wasn’t ready to mortgage my house just yet! Then I found a company that helped budding manufacturers test and prototype small batches of product in preparation to scale up for larger production. They wanted almost $10,000 dollars to build the tooling, but at least they would make batches as small as 500 lures. But it still works out at over $20 per lure! And of course, buying injection molders and rotational casting machines was too expensive and out of the question when my lures were still experimental!
Commercial Protoyping And Testing Techniques Are Perfect For Small Scale Lure Production – And You Can Get Started For Less Than $150!
What I didn’t know was that even the big lure companies start by developing a prototype of their lure that they test and fine tune. Once they get it working they do a small scale production run to see if it will translate to large scale production. If all goes well, they go into full production. I’ve found that the techniques these companies use for getting from the concept design stage to small scale production can easily be done by an amateur lure maker in his home workshop. You don’t need an injection molder. You don’t need a rotational caster. You don’t need mixing machines or a factory to put it all in! Best of all:
I can literally take a walk through the isles of my local hardware store and get hold of everything I need to be making hard plastic lures today, but chandlery stores, model makers supply shops and online sources are also good. The fact is, I make my hard plastic lures using simple, cheap and commonly available materials, and after 2 years of selling my secrets I am yet to have anyone ask for a refund on the grounds that they can’t get the materials they need to make their own lures!
"Make Your Own Fishing Lures: Plastic Lures" This is the simplest and most foolproof way to start producing batches of hard plastic lures from your home workshop – or your money back! With full details of the prototyping, mold making and lure making process, step by step photographs and personal support you can’t go wrong! And at just $37.00 with templates and bonus products this is an investment that will pay for itself many times over!
"Make Your Own Fishing Lures: Plastic Lures" This is the simplest… Read more…