1001 Ways to Make Money If You Dare (74 page)

Read 1001 Ways to Make Money If You Dare Online

Authors: Trent Hamm

Tags: #epub, #ebook

BOOK: 1001 Ways to Make Money If You Dare
12.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

456 TATTOO FOR HIRE.
If you're a licensed tattoo artist working at a studio, look into hosting tattoo parties. Groups of friends (or families, if they're related to
Dog the Bounty Hunter
) who want to get inked can do so in the comfort of their own home, and you can make a couple hundred dollars for every person in attendance. Be sure to check out state laws regarding this trend — no one ruins a tattoo party like the fuzz busting in when you're only halfway done with a tat.

$ $ $ tried it

457 DO HENNA TATTOOS FOR HIRE.
Henna, a natural and temporary dye, is much safer than tattoo ink. Henna parties can be a fun option for kids' birthday parties, bachelorette parties, or even proms. Advertise your services at salons and be sure to perfect a few “signature” tattoos so that you look like you know what you're doing.

$ tried it

458 MAKE NATURAL INK.
Get in touch with your old-world self and make some fun-colored ink out of natural resources like berries. Package it with a quill and you'll have Renaissance geeks going crazy.

$ $ tried it

459 WRITE INVITATIONS IN CALLIGRAPHY.
Calligraphy is relatively easy to learn. Take a class and start writing invitations for customers. People pay a lot of money for perfect wedding invitations. Just make sure you know exactly what they want. You don't want to have to redo 200 invitations for a bridezilla.

$ $ tried it

460 DESIGN INVITATIONS.
Feel like you missed your calling as a graphic artist? Join the club. Make some extra cash on the weekends by doing layout design for invitations (weddings, showers, birthdays, etc). If you don't have a program like InDesign or Quark, see if you can use a computer lab at your local college.

$ $ tried it

461 LAYOUT RESTAURANTS' MENUS.
You know the scene: you sit down at a restaurant, open the menu, and wait to be taken in by the delicious sounding dishes. But when you crack it open, you're not sure where to start looking — and you can't really read the small type anyway. Offer your services as a layout artist — charge extra for correcting spelling at international restaurants (chiken with kapers anyone?)

$ $ tried it

462 WORK AS A STORYTELLER.
If you like kids and can spin a yarn or two, consider working as a storyteller. Libraries, schools, and festivals will often hire storytellers to entertain children. You can make up your own or retell classics such as “The Princess and the Pea” and “Rumpelstiltskin.”

Other books

Touchdown Daddy by Ava Walsh
The Job (Volume One) by Dawn Robertson
Magic Faraway Tree by Enid Blyton
To See You Again by gard, marian
The Reluctant Reformer by Lynsay Sands