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How about woodworking? All you need is a handful of hand tools, a piece of wood, and a bit of creativity. You could even just start to carve a little gnome from a piece of broom stick with your pocket knife.
Nek minute you have a large shed, wood lathes, thicknessers, band saws and on and on
I feel like wood working is one of those cheap in theory hobbies where basically no one can resist and stay with the cheapest kit.
A tool here or there and suddenly you've got a $5000 chest with an equal worth of tools in it.
If you are willing to settle for cheaper brands then $2,000 can get you a drop saw, table saw, various battery tools, chisels, hammer, etc.
You can upgrade the tools you get the most use of later.
The wood, glue, varnish etc scale with size of project.
You need the space of course.
Take your time and make something beautiful and unique.
It is possible to keep the kit fairly cheap if you pick up stuff at garage sales for the most part and only get the basics for hand and electric tools. At that point the wood is the expensive part.
But yeah, it is easy to blow a lot of money on stuff you don't need if you are just doing it as a hobby and not selling stuff.
Every woodworker I've seen has a gigantic shop with a bunch of purpose built tools totaling between $1000 to $100k. Sure you can start out with hand tools but theyre like a gateway drug and before you know it you're looking for black Friday deals on a compound miter saw, planar, or plunge router.
Last year I only needed a good miter saw. Now I know I'll only be happy with a 5 axis CNC machine.