Note how much difficulty the Weasleys have in buying wands. Rowling isn’t very good about economics, but I get the impression that buying a wand is comparable to buying a car or perhaps a house—except that you can’t really share a wand like you would a car or house and you can (and do) carry your wand everywhere with you. So 1 is the best number.
Wands cost 7 Galleons. People throw around comparable sums all the time in canon. Percy Weasley bets 10 Galleons on a Quidditch game, heck, Harry buys three sets of Omnioculars (wizarding binoculars) at 10 Galleons apiece to watch the Quidditch World Cup. Many wizarding supplies less useful than a wand cost considerably more. There really is no good reason for witches and wizards not to carry multiple wands except for tradition. Even the Weasleys could afford multiple wands if they made it a priority.
Still doesn’t make sense why Gred and Forge would have used wands. $700 for the right wand is a perfectly sensible purchase, even on a limited budget, considering how much difference it tends to make and that a wand typically lasts a lifetime.
OK, those are good examples. I didn’t remember the specific numbers, but now I’m wondering why Ronald had to suffer with a broken wand so long if they are just 7 galleons. Hogwarts seems to be expensive; surely letting Ronnie go without, damaging his grades and learning, isn’t a very good idea.
It might be partly psychological. The Weasleys are poor, and they’re habituated to trying to save money. Ask someone who lived through the Depression whether they would rent a nice suit for a job interview, or pay double for high-reliability smoke detectors. Or, ask yourself whether you have more than one smoke detector in each room of your house, with the batteries changed out of phase (one set replaced in summer and winter, the other in spring and fall).
Note how much difficulty the Weasleys have in buying wands. Rowling isn’t very good about economics, but I get the impression that buying a wand is comparable to buying a car or perhaps a house—except that you can’t really share a wand like you would a car or house and you can (and do) carry your wand everywhere with you. So 1 is the best number.
Wands cost 7 Galleons. People throw around comparable sums all the time in canon. Percy Weasley bets 10 Galleons on a Quidditch game, heck, Harry buys three sets of Omnioculars (wizarding binoculars) at 10 Galleons apiece to watch the Quidditch World Cup. Many wizarding supplies less useful than a wand cost considerably more. There really is no good reason for witches and wizards not to carry multiple wands except for tradition. Even the Weasleys could afford multiple wands if they made it a priority.
Rowling’s money is wildly inconsistent. I use the figure of one Galleon = $100USD and stick with it.
Still doesn’t make sense why Gred and Forge would have used wands. $700 for the right wand is a perfectly sensible purchase, even on a limited budget, considering how much difference it tends to make and that a wand typically lasts a lifetime.
OK, those are good examples. I didn’t remember the specific numbers, but now I’m wondering why Ronald had to suffer with a broken wand so long if they are just 7 galleons. Hogwarts seems to be expensive; surely letting Ronnie go without, damaging his grades and learning, isn’t a very good idea.
It might be partly psychological. The Weasleys are poor, and they’re habituated to trying to save money. Ask someone who lived through the Depression whether they would rent a nice suit for a job interview, or pay double for high-reliability smoke detectors. Or, ask yourself whether you have more than one smoke detector in each room of your house, with the batteries changed out of phase (one set replaced in summer and winter, the other in spring and fall).
One is no doubt the best number for most people, but there’s considerable variation in wealth—Malfoys should have extra wands.