How to Price your Paintings so your artwork will sell - in 7 easy steps
Assigning value to your own paintings is often difficult and setting a price on artwork can be a challenge. Here I explain how a simple formula and some research can help and keep emotions put of the calculation. In a hurry? Here’s a summary for you:
Price up material costs (point 2)
Price up your promotion, advertising and website fees (point 3)
Price up your sellers transaction fees (point 4)
Price up your postage and packaging costs (point 5)
Price up the size of your painting (point 6)
Check your pricing (point 7)
So, you’ve finished painting and your artwork is ready to be sold, but how do you value your work and set a fair price? I’m not selling a secret formula nor am I going to tell you some complex method. Here, I ask and answer the questions you need to know to be able to price your art to sell. Simple!
In a hurry? Here’s a summary for you:
Price up material costs (point 2)
Price up your promotion, advertising and website fees (point 3)
Price up your sellers transaction fees (point 4)
Price up your postage and packaging costs (point 5)
Price up the size of your painting (point 6)
Check your pricing (point 7)
1.Why do you want to sell your painting?
This may seem like an odd question but if you are just creating art as a hobby and hoping to sell the fruits of your labour your motivation will be very different to someone wanting to make a living from their sales. For the latter, you will want to be paid an hourly rate whereas a hobbyist is less concerned with the value of their time, after all, they are creating during their free time!
Personally, although I now sell my artwork on a regular basis I don’t charge by the hour. I find this unfair because I might find that I’m a very slow artist compared to others and I would therefore be charging unfairly high rates for my slowness - hardly fair on the customer! On the other hand, I might be very fast and then underselling my work! I’ll come back to how I charge later on. (if you can’t wait go straight to point 6!)
2.How much do your materials cost?
A really good habit to get into from the start is to keep records of everything you buy when you create artwork. I didn’t at first and it created all sorts of problems later on. I keep a folder for all of my receipts (which I number sequentially) and a log book (just a spreadsheet in Excel) to make a note of the following information:
Receipt Number
Date on receipt
Merchant or shop name
Details of the materials purchased
Net cost
Tax
Total cost
Trust me, later on you will be glad you did this!
Now, the first value you need to know is the total cost of the materials used to create your artwork. Obviously, you won’t use all the paint in a tube so you need to estimate how much you’ve used and divide the cost up accordingly. Don’t forget to include the following:
Paints
Varnish
Canvas
Primer
Mounts and frames (including fixings)
3. How much do your website, online shop and advertising/promotion cost?
This often gets overlooked but can be a considerable hidden cost that can eat into your profits. It’s all well and good creating art that people will buy but if you have to pay to let people know it exists then that cost also needs to be recovered.
Simply add up the total costs of all of the platforms and services you pay for that directly promote, advertise or support your artwork sales. Make a note of the total cost.
I don’t mind telling you that my total costs amount to around £120 per year and I started off aiming at selling, on average, two paintings a month. So, I simply divided the cost by 12 and again by 2 meaning I add £5 to all of my paintings to cover these costs.
4. How much do you get charged for sellers’ transaction fees?
This is another one that often gets forgotten but can be quite significant. Etsy, Ebay, Square and PayPal are all great but they all charge you for completing a transaction. Don’t forget that with Etsy you are paying both to list your item as well as completing a transaction. The sellers fees are clear to see so look up your costs for the value of the artwork you’re selling and add this to your running total of costs.
5.How much does it cost to package and post your artwork?
It’s a fact that everyone loves getting something for free. It’s also a fact that nothing is ever really free!
From my personal experience, I have found that advertising my artwork with free postage and packaging makes the artwork a lot more desirable and I have gained more sales since removing this as a separate charge. It also seems that Etsy will favour listings that offer free delivery.
I learned the hard way on this when I sold a painting last year and, after buying the packaging materials and paying for postage, I made a profit of just £3! Hardly worth the effort! I so wish someone had written this blog and sent it to me beforehand!
So, make a note of the cost of postage and packaging for each painting.
TOP TIP: Make friends with your local post office and ask them to assess your paintings for size and weight to provide an estimate for postage costs AND NEVER POST 1ST CLASS - seriously, it makes no difference at all to the speed of delivery (an insider tip from the Royal Mail!).
ANOTHER TIP: Buy bubble wrap, parcel paper and card wrap in bulk - it is much cheaper that way and will keep your costs down. I also re-use all of my outer cardboard packaging.
6. How to value your artwork - pricing your painting
Okay, this is really what you wanted to know, isn’t it? As promised at the start, I’m not about to direct you to some random website with a secret formula that you’ll have to pay for. Nor will I insist that you have to sign up to my exciting newsletter to learn my secrets - although I’d love it if you did sign up below and become a subscriber!
I have two charging rates that I use; one for artwork that I produce myself and another for commissioned work where I am working to someone else’s specification.
Pricing my own paintings:
Total cost of all materials and services included postage and packaging
Double this figure and note it. This may seem odd but this will easily cover you for other additional costs such as your tax (see note below) and other incidental costs that you will not have foreseen or realised. This is also a common practice amongst gift retailers, so I’ve been told.
Measure your painting in inches and multiply the height by the length.
Multiply your painting size by a factor.
Okay, this is the nebulous bit. If you had a factor of 1 you would be charging £1 per square inch. For a modest canvas of 16x20 inches, this would cost £320 before even adding your material costs. This might be a lot for a new artist to hope for.
I started off using a factor of 0.15 when I first started to sell and this seemed reasonable and I made sales. My factor has steadily increased as my sales have increased, which is inevitable and expected. Indeed, this is actually a good thing for those that bought my art when it was cheaper - their paintings have effectively increased in value!
Finally, simply add your painting value to your material costs and you have the total cost for your painting.
Pricing my commissions
I use the same calculus as above but I use a higher multiplication factor for charging commissions. The reason for this is that I put a lot more time and effort into these works and they often involve more time interacting with the client to develop the specification and I also produce prototypes before embarking on the final painting. I use the same factor for all commissions regardless of painting style or genre so every client is being treated equally and fairly.
Most of my commission clients are very private about the amount they have paid for their artwork so I will not be divulging my charging rate. I will say however, that I always agree the price up-front with the client and, on the basis that I’ve never had a painting declined, I guess I’m pricing them about right.
NOTE: Currently in the UK a hobbyist or “self-starters” can earn up to £1000 per annum (gross) before needed to register for, and pay, tax.
7. Are your prices reasonable and realistic?
The final thing I do with my painting prices is check them with similar works online. This is relatively easy to do with Etsy because you can search for paintings in your similar style, size and media. Then look at the sellers. It is relatively easy to work out who are new artists (or at least new to selling) and those who are professional or have been selling for a long time.
Rather helpfully, Etsy will tell you how long someone has been on the platform as a seller, will tell you how many products they have sold and also how many positive reviews they have had. You can then read their bio to see if they are in the same place as you, in terms of artistic journey.
Armed with this knowledge you can down-select those sellers that are most similar to you and look at how much they are charging for similar artwork. I review my pricing periodically and have found that this works well and my prices, even though they have been steadily increasing, are still in line with the prices of other artists’ work of similar quality, style and size.
Of course, the final litmus test for any pricing strategy is sales. If people are prepared to pay what you are asking for you’re probably doing it right (or maybe even undershooting a little). If you aren’t making any sales then your pricing may be off. In this case, the best thing to do is ask people - most will tell you if they think you are over-charging.
I hope this is of some help to you and do leave a comment and let me know if this has helped or just confused you even more! Good luck!
A Winter's tale - another commission finished
Today has reminded me why I love painting and why this hobby of mine has stayed with me when so many others have gone. No, it's not because it earns me money! The smile on the clients face when he saw his painting for himself for the first time. He was rather pleased to say the least.
One happy client with his commissioned artwork by Roy P Awbery
A Winter's Tale by Roy P Awbery - close up
This painting was very challenging but I got a great deal of satisfaction from finally getting this one right. The original plan was just to have a night snow scene but, as the painting developed, the client asked for the addition of wolves and an elk.
I managed to capture a sense of movement with the animals which was not easy. I'd not tried to do it before but it seems to have worked.
I'm seriously pleased how well this one turned out and now understand why my followers were not too happy with the very simple Jumble Animals. Lesson learned!
How to become an artist - 5 steps to becoming an artist and starting an art career
How to become an artist - 5 steps to becoming an artist and starting an art career. Learn how what to think about on how to become an artist and sell paintings and sell artwork. It is possible to start an art career out of your painting hobby and I explain how I became an artist and painter.
How to become an artist
5 steps to becoming an artist and starting an art career - learn to sell paintings and artwork
I first picked up a paintbrush on 27th December 2018 having never painted before. I’d never had lessons or any form of tuition or help but I did have a brand new, unused, pan of water colours and some water colour paper. My adventures in art all started when, bored after the excitement of Christmas, I was looking for something to do. Now, I have many hobbies and am forever dabbling in different ones ranging from astronomy, photography, electronics, Raspberry Pi programming…the list goes on and on. So how does that get me to selling paintings and calling myself an artist? Read on my friend, read on.
To alleviate my boredom I opened the water colour set that my wife had bought for me for Christmas two years previous and decided to have a go at painting something. The result was rubbish! Not to be beaten I decided to have another go the following day. It was still rubbish but better than the previous day. And so was the case for the 3rd day. Somewhat frustrated that I wasn’t painting like Van Gogh or Michael Angelo I set myself a personal challenge - to paint something, anything, every single day for 30 days. This was intended to be an experiment to see how my work and ability progressed. So, my first tip on how to become an artist and sell paintings: paint every day, even if it’s small and just for a few minutes, but paint something. Anything.
As I set about painting each day I also spent a lot of time reading articles online on painting techniques and also looked for books on the subject. To augment what I learnt online and in books I also watched many YouTube videos that showed different techniques for both water colour and acrylic. I soon learned what different brushes were for and what interesting effects one could achieve by using unusual tools such as scrunched up foil and ripped sponges and tissue paper. Painting doesn’t have to be with a brush and certainly not just one! So, my second tip to learn how to become an artist: soak up as much information as you can about painting methods and techniques and then put these into practice each day you paint.
Now, a funny thing happens when one does something for 30 days straight, or at least it does to me. The activity becomes a habit, or an addiction depending on how one views it. Either way, I found that after 30 days I felt compelled to paint something every evening. Of course, as I progressed my paintings became more complex and also larger. This meant that I was no longer completing a new and different painting every day but I was still painting every day. The other thing that I noticed was that I didn’t settle on a single genre and actually enjoyed dancing from one subject matter to another. One day it was flowers, then landscapes, then starry skies, then cityscapes and even abstract. My 3rd tip on how to become an artist and sell paintings and artwork: don’t settle on a single genre - have fun by exploring the possibilities of painting anything and everything.
Of course, none of this actually meant that I’d become an artist and I probably still identified more with my day job as research scientist. However, this changed about 6 months into my painting. Yes, by the summer of 2019 I was still painting just about every day. So what changed? Put simply, I posted everything I did on Facebook and Instagram and showed people, mainly friends, what I was up to. People seemed to enjoy seeing the process of producing my paintings and they could also see for themselves how my work was developing. Indeed, some even challenged me to produce specific types of painting, which I loved. After a while I started to get offers to purchase a few of my paintings, which was quite a humbling surprise. But it didn’t stop there. Some people told others about my work and I started to receive requests for specific work to be painted - my first commissions. These quickly grew until my most recent commission which was a 5 feet wide mountain scene which I sold for £800 to a very happy client. I also found that my earlier work also began to sell and I can now honestly claim to have people collecting my art. Some of my paintings have now reached as far afield as Canada and the US! Tip number 4 on how to become an artist and sell your artwork: tell people what you’re doing and show them what you’re up to and encourage them to share.
My final tip on how to become an artist is really quite obvious. You have to put yourself out there! I did my first craft show recently and was not expecting to sell anything but sold 4 paintings one of which needed a credit card reader to complete the transaction! I was so glad I purchased a Square reader! The experience was addictive and great fun and I am now looking to sign up to as many shows throughout the coming year as I possibly can.
Since starting out as an artist I have now sold over 100 paintings, in oils, acrylic and watercolour and completed many paid commissions. Do I self-identify as a research scientist? No, I’m an artist and I’m loving it!
My first painting in December 2018!
A recent commission!