Low Level Items to Craft for Profit – Part 3

standing on furniture Low Level Items to Craft for Profit   Part 3

As promised, a round up of a some items for the last few professions in the list. In Part 1 here, I covered leatherworking, tailoring, alchemy & inscription whilst in part 2 here, I covered engineering, blacksmithing, jewelcrafting & enchanting. This week, I thought I’d round up a few odd bits & pieces from the gathering professions of mining & skinning as well as the secondary professions of cooking & fishing. I’m not going to look at Archeology for 2 reasons 1) I haven’t had a go at it yet & 2) I’m not sure it’s really a gold making profession as such!

Mining

Mining is mainly a gathering profession but you can also smelt the raw ores into bars. This on it’s own can sometimes be a profitable second step. Many miners just put their ores straight onto the AH but it’s worth looking at the price of bars too. Why? Because some Blacksmiths, Engineers & Jewelcrafters buy all their bars from the AH as they dropped mining to use that profession slot for a crafting profession.

The highest priced ores on my server tend to be the Outland ones – Fel Iron, Adamantite & of course, Khorium. Cobalt from Northrend is also in short supply as is Titanium so if your miner is high enough for these zones, you should make some good profits here.

The other processes available to miners that immediately jumped to my mind for this article are -

Enchanted Thorium Bar – skill level 250, learned from the trainer. Used by Blacksmith/Enchanter combination to create & disenchant Enchanted Thorium Blades for Greater Eternal Essences.

Smelt Khorium – skill level 375, trainer taught. Khorium is a rare ore in itself so always good profits but the khorium bar is used by engineers to make a Khorium Power Core – a key component of the Turbo-charged Flying Machine. I’ve sold a few khorium bars for 100g each, such is the rarity of this ore & the bars.

Skinning

The beauty of skinning for me is the fact that whilst out questing, you’re killing these creatures anyway, you may as well make the most of them! Once you hit skill 100, you can divide your skill level by 5 to find out what level mob you can skin. So, for example, if your skill is 200, you can skin mobs upto level 40.When skinning, you don’t just get leathers, you can also pick up hides, various scales like black dragonscale, turle scale, fel scale but also arctic fur (Northrend) and in Cataclysm zones, a Strange Bloated Stomach (eeewww!) which gives you a random bonus of volatiles.

The most expensive skinned items on my server are heavy leather, rugged leather and of course, savage leather (Cata) but all hides & the various scales also sell well.

Herbalism

It’s difficult to pick a particular bit of herbalism for this article as so many herbs sell well at all levels. Particular ones to watch prices for are Briarthorn & Goldthorn as well as all the Outland ones (Felweed, terocone, dreaming glory etc).

Fishing

Not renowned for being the most profitable pastime but there are a few fish which sell really well. Many of the cataclysm fish are used for the highest level buff foods so these are a fairly obvious good money item but lower down the scale, alchemists need Oily Blackmouth & Firefin Snapper to name just 2. I find these sell for a nice price albeit slowly as you need a levelling alchemist to be looking for them. If you really enjoy fishing, there are some great pets & fishing rods to be fished up as well as 2 fishing competitions on the weekends. Head over to Els Anglin’ for all things fishing related – it’s got everything you could ever wish to know about fishing in WoW.

Linking in to Cooking below, you can also visit Wailing Caverns & Northern Barrens for the Deviate Fish. It sells well on its’ own & if you eat it, you get a random, shortlived effect.

Cooking

The most profitable cooked items are of course, the top level Cataclysm buff foods but as I mentioned briefly above, cooking your Deviate Fish into Savory Deviate Delight will almost always make you more money! This recipe used to be a very rare drop but I recently levelled a lowbie hordie & got 4 in one session of questing in the Northern Barrens. If you are Alliance, have a look on your AH if you don’t want to farm the recipe – there are usually quite a few available at reasonable prices but I wouldn’t pay more than say, 20gold.

The other way to make a bit of gold with cooking is to do the cooking dailes in the main cities which rewards about 10g as well as a Chef’s Award. You can only do 1 cooking daily per day per character but if you are lower level, they do award good XP & you can use the Chef’s Awards to buy a bag of Imported Supplies containing lots of Cocoa Beans. Cold nicknamed me the Chocolate Cookie Queen – at one point, I was converting the cocoa beans into Chocolate Cookies with my maxed cook & selling maybe 800 cookies per week! Even if you don’t have maxed cooking yet, a level 10 or above can do the cooking dailies to get the cocoa beans. Most bags contain at least 20 & sometimes 40 cocoa beans which I was selling at 1g each!

So there we go – all professions covered except archeology & first aid. I hope you’ve found this series helpful & I’m always open to comments or suggestions for any items you think I have missed.

Until next week, happy gold making

Nev

The Best Professions for New Players

When you are first starting out in Warcraft one of the first big decisions you will make is what professions to choose for your character. With 11 professions to choose from it can be a difficult choice to make. Are all the professions useful? Will you be able to make items that sell or are you going to end up losing money? Are certain professions needed more than others?

I remember all of these questions going through my head when I first started playing. At first I just learned the first professions I came across (which happened to be skinning and leatherworking). Soon, however, I realized that they didn’t help me too much and they weren’t exactly profitable to boot. So I asked around about what were the best professions to learn. Some people advised me to go with whatever crafting profession I wanted and the corresponding gathering profession. Others told me that two crafting professions was the way to go as that was where the real money was. Yet other people told me that enchanting was the real money making profession and that people with any other professions were poor by comparison.

Eventually I decided to go with enchanting and tailoring. Since some people singled out enchanting as being profitable I figured I would soon be on my way to riches – and since I could make my own enchanting materials by disenchanting the cloth armor I made there was no way I could go wrong! Only I soon realized that I always needed more enchanting materials than I could make myself in order to level up my enchanting. Because I was using all of my cloth drops to make armor to disenchant I had less gold than before (when I would have sold my cloth on the auction house). But because I still didn’t have enough enchanting materials to level up I had to spend what little gold I did have on enchanting materials and cloth. Add to this the fact that I couldn’t find any enchants that sold for a profit and I was one broke noob.

It went on like this for months. I just couldn’t make money with professions. I changed, changed again, and changed again. By the time I was level 40 I had probably tried out around seven or eight professions and nothing seemed to work. It took me months to figure out that the problem was I hadn’t been level capped. People weren’t lying when they said enchanting was profitable. The problem was that is was the enchants that produced glows such as fiery, icy, and crusader that made all of the profit – and I was too low of a level to learn those recipes.

The same still hold true today. People with crafting professions MAXED OUT can often make really good profits using their profession. If you aren’t able to max out the profession though, you probably won’t have access to the profitable recipes and the materials to create them.

That is why you should always choose herbalism and mining as your professions until you are at least level 75 (85 if it is your first character). Between them herbalism and mining supply people using blacksmithing, alchemy, inscription, jewelcrafting, and engineering so there will ALWAYS be a demand for herbs and ore. In addition because some people at level cap will change their professions from time to time there is a good market for many low – mid level herbs and ores.

So if you are new to Warcraft and you are leveling up your first character drop whatever professions you have and pick up herbalism and mining. Sell the herbs and ore you find on the auction house and I promise you, when you hit level cap at level 85, you will have a nice bit of gold saved up and can then choose to change your professions to whatever you want.

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