The easiest side hustle ever 💰 #shorts #sidehustle #upcycling #furnitureflip #furniture #diy

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The easiest side hustle ever 💰 #shorts #sidehustle #upcycling #furnitureflip #furniture #diy

99 thoughts on “The easiest side hustle ever 💰 #shorts #sidehustle #upcycling #furnitureflip #furniture #diy

    1. And materials. Paint, sandpaper, extra wood, etc depending on project. That eats up quite a bit of the funds depending how quickly you can sell your flipped pieces.

  1. $20 is not the only cost there. If you don’t count in your time, because it’s your hobby, OK, but there are still other costs: paint, handles, other materials, water, electricity, tools, spare parts… If you want to find out how much money you’re actually making, you should count everything in.
    And, of course, as someone’s mentioned, you have to be talented, handy and have all those tools. I would like to add one more thing: you must have enough space for all of that. I cannot sand wood furniture in my living room. I just can’t.

  2. I’m flipping my kitchen table and…. it is not easy. It’s so stressful and I can’t wait to be done. First and last project. I hope I can break even from how much the table cost, supplies and all my time.

    1. Dining tables are hard to flip! Tons of work. Also the key is to only buy furniture for extremely cheap, if you have a high risk of losing money you spent too much on the piece!

  3. It’s ACTUALY not the easiest to do. Depending on how you look at it, it can be considered one of the most difficult. But ok…
    Edit: it’s also not the easiest side hustle because you have to understand what a profit is first. And a budget lol

  4. You say easy, but I am always impressed at how AMAZING of a job you do. You definitely make it LOOK easy! If I had your skill, I might say it’s rather easy, myself! Sorry I can’t help but comment, your content is some of my favorite kind!

  5. Yes but where do you sell these things!?? That was my problem ended up running outta room and moved to where I don’t have a ton of space to store finished pieces

    1. Yeah there was someone local to me who always would get crap for free or really really cheap and then she would “fix them up “and try to sell them and almost nobody would ever buy anything because it just look like something to put out for the garbageman that was covered in a coat of paint

  6. Love you flips, you’ve a good eye for interior designs from flip to finishing touches. Do you have website?

  7. Easiest side hustle?
    It’s more than just buying a busted piece of furniture. The equipment and material costs to get started = 💰

    1. Not only that. You need an eye for detail, you need to be “handy” as in using tools, knowing where sh*t goes and what to use and how to use it. Oh and let’s not get into colour theory, knowing what goes with what as far as colour, fabric, timber etc,.. I don’t have an arts or craft bone in my body. I’d be useless at this stuff. I could use the tools easy peasy (where as some people do struggle with that stuff) it’s just the rest of it where I fall down. Using hand and power tools can be taught, but the stuff in sh*t at, I don’t think that is something learned, I think it’s something ingrained. Some people have it and some don’t. Know what I mean?

      Sure, I could build a basic square coffee table, no worries. Even though I’d never built one before. I could sand back an old piece of furniture and maybe even attempt basic repairs with not too many worries. But I wouldn’t know what wood to buy,, what’s good got furniture use etc (apart from pine, everyone knows that type. Lol) but in depth repairs, what and how to do, I have no clue. Once I’ve sanded it or built my square table, what’s next? Where and with what do I patch things up. Which colours do I use, which embellishments, which fabrics, decorations, soft furnishings etc do I use? See what I mean? Not such easy money for someone without the tools and without the ingrained artsy/crafty knowledge.

    2. Call it an investment, and the “knowing how to do everything” part can be learned. Its not that serious, its all in what you like and honestly an opportunity to get creative.. its fairly easy guys. Good money too🤷🏻‍♀️

  8. I use my furniture as a canvase and create my art on them. Haven’t sold any yet. Promoting myself is the hardest part for me. Awesome content 😁i like your work/art

  9. You also need a bunch of different material and tools and a lot of time for it, I mean great if you can but definitely not for everyone

  10. The tools alone would break anyones budget ….especially mine ! Id love to be able to do this but theres just too many “ifs” included ! So ill watch and learn !

  11. How did you get so handy. I’d love to give flipping a try but I don’t have experience with sanders and all of the skill you have for reviving. Whats a good start for learning how to restore? I bought a book called the Furniture Bible

  12. The privileges YOU have make it easy. Like the start up cash to buy all the necessities. The time to not work and just work on furniture.

    1. @AC artist …. the tools she uses. The paints. The supplies add up to over 20 pounds. Thats her privilege. Most people dont have 12 hours and 1000s to even start up .

    2. @Nebraska Covington ahh I see what you mean, but I mean you don’t HAVE to use all those tools to make nice furniture if you are creative enough you can find cheap things at a low price. You can buy tools for a low price, it doesn’t have to be an expensive brand for them to work.

  13. ❤ So much negativity.. I may not tackle everything but you are talented girl. I love what you do…

  14. Play. Passion. Profit. THAT is what makes this the BEST side hustle ever! You are skilled, inspiring, and joyful. It’s sad people who invest the time to WATCH your video (also a time consuming effort that requires a skill set) can’t invest their time to CHEER you on rather than display their negative mindset.

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