Yours For The Making with Robin Johnson

Robin Johnson

Yours for the Making with Robin Johnson is the podcast that celebrates creativity, craftsmanship, and the art of making. Hosted by Robin Johnson - founder of Johnson Bespoke and BBC presenter on shows such as The Travelling Auctioneers, The Restorers, Woodland Workshop this podcast dives into the stories of makers from all walks of life. From woodworkers, metal fabricators, and chefs to artists, designers, and hobbyists, each episode offers real conversations with the people behind the things we love. Whether you're a hands-on creative, aspiring artisan, or simply curious about how things are made, this podcast offers inspiration, insight, and practical wisdom. Expect behind-the-scenes stories, lessons in process and passion, and a celebration of the maker movement in all its forms. Subscribe now and follow Yours for the Making wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts.

  1. 13 hrs ago

    Furniture Making, Social Media and Growing a Bespoke Workshop: George Curl on Building Aspects Bespoke

    George Curl, founder of Aspects Bespoke, joins Robin Johnson to share the realities of building a successful bespoke furniture and cabinet making business. From painting and decorating jobs and handyman work to running a specialist workshop creating high end fitted furniture, George explains how practical experience, social media marketing, strong client relationships and continuous learning have shaped his journey. George discusses the challenges of pricing bespoke projects, training apprentices, finding reliable staff, and balancing creative ambition with commercial reality. He also reveals why Instagram has become one of the most powerful tools for attracting clients, building trust and showcasing craftsmanship. For furniture makers, cabinet makers, woodworkers, joiners, tradespeople and creative business owners, this conversation offers an honest look at what it takes to grow a workshop, build a reputation and create work that stands out. Key Topics Covered Building a bespoke furniture business from scratchMoving from general construction into cabinet makingThe importance of having a dedicated workshopGrowing a team and training apprenticesPricing bespoke furniture and custom joinery projectsWhy social media matters for furniture makersUsing Instagram to attract ideal clientsBuilding relationships with interior designersLearning new skills including veneering and specialist techniquesManaging mistakes, setbacks and project challengesThe value of Google reviews and local searchCreating a reputation for high quality craftsmanshipBusiness growth in the furniture making industry Enjoying the show? Leave a review, follow us, and share the episode with a fellow maker. New episodes every week with artists, designers, craftsmen and creators from around the world. Yours for the Making with Robin Johnson is the podcast that celebrates creativity, craftsmanship, and the art of making. Hosted by Robin Johnson — founder of Johnson Bespoke and BBC presenter on The Travelling Auctioneers, The Restorers, Woodland Workshop — this podcast dives into the stories of makers from all walks of life. From woodworkers, metal fabricators, and chefs to artists, designers, and hobbyists, each episode offers real conversations with the people behind the things we love. Whether you're a hands-on creative, aspiring artisan, or simply curious about how things are made, this podcast offers inspiration, insight, and practical wisdom. Expect behind-the-scenes stories, lessons in process and passion, and a celebration of the maker movement in all its forms. Subscribe now and follow Yours for the Making wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts. Key Moments: 00:00 George Curl's journey into furniture making 02:43 Learning through construction, carpentry and refurbishment 08:20 Taking the leap into a dedicated workshop 10:45 Building a team and hiring apprentices 13:24 Finding a niche through unique bespoke projects 19:08 The challenge of pricing custom furniture 24:18 Educating clients on quality and craftsmanship 34:22 Why workshops and showrooms help win projects 35:35 How Instagram attracts the right clients 38:08 Building strong supplier relationships 40:10 Learning veneering and specialist skills 42:12 Training staff through real projects 52:26 Advice to an 18 year old entrepreneur 55:01 Can a furniture business survive without social media? 57:18 Marketing traditional craftsmanship in a digital world 01:02:07 Future plans and business growth

    1h 3m
  2. Jun 17

    How Storytelling Builds Trust, Wins Clients and Future Proofs Creative Businesses

    What makes someone choose one creative business over another? In this episode of Yours for the Making, Robin Johnson sits down with filmmakers Sam Christmas and Agatha Appleton-Sas, founders of True Story, to explore the power of personal storytelling, brand films, creative identity and human connection. Sam and Agatha share how True Story was born during Covid from a desire to tell meaningful human stories rather than help large companies sell products. Together they discuss the process behind creating Johnson Bespoke's new brand film, the importance of discovering what makes a business unique, and why personal stories create trust in ways traditional marketing cannot. The conversation explores creative entrepreneurship, filmmaking, branding, authenticity, client relationships, the impact of AI on creative industries and why human stories are becoming increasingly valuable. Sam and Agatha also share advice for young creatives, lessons from their own careers and their belief that human connection will remain the foundation of successful creative businesses. Key Topics Covered How True Story was created during CovidWhy storytelling matters more than traditional marketingThe discovery process behind a powerful brand filmHow personal stories attract better clientsBuilding trust through authenticity and transparencyWhy creative businesses should lead with people, not servicesThe role of filmmaking in branding and business growthHuman connection in an AI driven worldCreativity, confidence and overcoming fear of failureAdvice for creatives building their own business Enjoying the show? Leave a review, follow us, and share the episode with a fellow maker. New episodes every week with artists, designers, craftsmen and creators from around the world. Yours for the Making with Robin Johnson is the podcast that celebrates creativity, craftsmanship, and the art of making. Hosted by Robin Johnson — founder of Johnson Bespoke and BBC presenter on The Travelling Auctioneers, The Restorers, Woodland Workshop — this podcast dives into the stories of makers from all walks of life. From woodworkers, metal fabricators, and chefs to artists, designers, and hobbyists, each episode offers real conversations with the people behind the things we love. Whether you're a hands-on creative, aspiring artisan, or simply curious about how things are made, this podcast offers inspiration, insight, and practical wisdom. Expect behind-the-scenes stories, lessons in process and passion, and a celebration of the maker movement in all its forms. Subscribe now and follow Yours for the Making wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts. Key Moments: 00:00 Why Sam started True Story during Covid 03:15 Meeting Agatha and building a creative partnership 08:09 Robin's experience creating a brand film 17:19 Why personal storytelling creates trust 21:58 The power of human centred filmmaking 25:01 How the film changed Robin's confidence in his business 27:27 Why people buy into people before products 31:15 Storytelling versus competing on price 38:27 The process behind creating a brand film 43:27 Why editing takes far longer than people realise 51:15 AI, creativity and the future of human storytelling 58:30 Human connection in a technology driven world 01:04:35 Advice for young creatives 01:09:02 Where to find True Story

    1h 12m
  3. Jun 10

    How Supply 91 Became One of London's Most Awarded Barbershops with Maxwell Oakley

    What does it take to build a barbershop that clients actively recommend, industry leaders recognise, and customers keep returning to? In this episode of Yours for the Making, Robin Johnson sits down with Maxwell Oakley, co founder of Supply 91 Barbers Extraordinaire, to explore how a small lockdown startup grew into one of London's most respected barbershop brands. Maxwell shares the story behind Supply 91, from opening a tiny Islington shop with furniture from Ikea and very little cash, to winning GQ Barber of the Year and expanding across London. The conversation explores customer experience, hospitality, business growth, staff training, company culture, leadership, client retention, marketing, data, and the realities of scaling a service based business. Along the way, Maxwell discusses working with celebrity clients, why listening is the most underrated business skill, the importance of hiring for attitude, and how strong systems help creative businesses grow without losing their identity. If you run a creative business, work in hospitality, own a salon or barbershop, or want to understand how customer experience drives growth, this episode offers practical insight from someone building one of the most talked about brands in the industry. Key Topics Covered Building Supply 91 during lockdownGrowing from one barbershop to four London locationsWinning GQ Barber of the YearWhy listening creates loyal customersCustomer experience and hospitality lessonsHiring for attitude over technical skillCreating a strong company cultureTraining barbers and developing talentUsing customer data and retention metricsExpanding a premium service businessCelebrity clients and cutting famous facesLaunching a new hair product for men Enjoying the show? Leave a review, follow us, and share the episode with a fellow maker. New episodes every week with artists, designers, craftsmen and creators from around the world. Yours for the Making with Robin Johnson is the podcast that celebrates creativity, craftsmanship, and the art of making. Hosted by Robin Johnson — founder of Johnson Bespoke and BBC presenter on The Travelling Auctioneers, The Restorers, Woodland Workshop — this podcast dives into the stories of makers from all walks of life. From woodworkers, metal fabricators, and chefs to artists, designers, and hobbyists, each episode offers real conversations with the people behind the things we love. Whether you're a hands-on creative, aspiring artisan, or simply curious about how things are made, this podcast offers inspiration, insight, and practical wisdom. Expect behind-the-scenes stories, lessons in process and passion, and a celebration of the maker movement in all its forms. Subscribe now and follow Yours for the Making wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts. Key Moments: 00:00 How Supply 91 started during lockdown 02:34 Winning GQ Barber of the Year 03:53 The secret behind customer loyalty 08:05 Why craft fundamentals matter 13:43 Growing from one shop to four locations 15:30 Creating a premium experience for men 16:40 Why barbershops build community 21:45 Hospitality lessons every business should learn 25:26 Building culture through onboarding and training 31:10 Hiring attitude over skill 33:10 Scaling a business without outside investment 39:05 Why every business needs a great accountant 42:00 Risk taking and business growth 48:38 Using customer data to make better decisions 50:45 The power of client retention 55:02 Working with celebrity clients 59:34 Advice for his 18 year old self 01:00:43 The future of Supply 91 and new product launches

    1h 4m
  4. Jun 3

    How Lulu Jacobs Turned Pottery Into a Full Time Creative Career

    Potter Lulu Jacobs joins Robin Johnson to discuss leaving a career in branding and marketing to pursue pottery full time. Lulu shares how a short course at Turning Earth turned into a full creative obsession, leading her to build a pottery business from a garden studio while raising a young family. The conversation explores the emotional highs and crushing failures of ceramics, the reality of selling handmade pottery, the pressure of social media, and the challenge of balancing creative freedom with commercial work. Lulu also talks openly about working with difficult black clay, building an audience online without becoming fake, and why bravery matters more than confidence when building a creative career. Key Topics Covered Leaving marketing to pursue pottery full timeLearning ceramics through Turning EarthBuilding a pottery studio at homeWhy social media feels uncomfortable for makersAuthenticity and community on InstagramThe challenge of working with black clayGlaze chemistry and kiln failuresSelling handmade pottery profitablyRestaurant commissions and wholesale potteryThe impact of The Great Pottery Throw DownFunctional pottery versus art potteryCreative risk taking and overcoming fearPottery as escapism and meditationImposter syndrome in creative industries Enjoying the show? Leave a review, follow us, and share the episode with a fellow maker. New episodes every week with artists, designers, craftsmen and creators from around the world. Yours for the Making with Robin Johnson is the podcast that celebrates creativity, craftsmanship, and the art of making. Hosted by Robin Johnson — founder of Johnson Bespoke and BBC presenter on The Travelling Auctioneers, The Restorers, Woodland Workshop — this podcast dives into the stories of makers from all walks of life. From woodworkers, metal fabricators, and chefs to artists, designers, and hobbyists, each episode offers real conversations with the people behind the things we love. Whether you're a hands-on creative, aspiring artisan, or simply curious about how things are made, this podcast offers inspiration, insight, and practical wisdom. Expect behind-the-scenes stories, lessons in process and passion, and a celebration of the maker movement in all its forms. Subscribe now and follow Yours for the Making wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts. Key Moments: 00:00 Leaving branding and discovering pottery 01:27 The Turning Earth course that changed everything 02:40 Learning pottery privately through failure 03:58 Building an authentic pottery audience online 05:57 The nightmare and beauty of black clay 10:50 Growing up around pottery studios and kilns 15:18 Why pottery feels addictive 18:30 Opening the kiln at midnight 20:35 The financial reality of handmade pottery 23:35 Landing a first restaurant commission 26:58 The impact of The Great Pottery Throw Down 35:15 Pottery as escapism and meditation 42:24 Creative freedom versus commercial work 46:56 Florian Gadsby and the pottery creator economy 49:07 Pottery content creators and social media culture 58:32 Advice to her 18 year old self

    1h 3m
  5. May 27

    How Helen Welch Built One of London’s Most Respected Furniture Schools

    Helen Welch, founder of the London School of Furniture Making, joins Robin Johnson for a direct conversation about teaching craftsmanship, surviving as a maker, and why furniture making still attracts people desperate to work with their hands instead of staring at screens all day. Helen reflects on leaving school early, training as a carpenter and joiner in 1980s London, and eventually building a furniture school that now teaches joinery, steam bending, furniture design, carving, and specialist woodworking skills in Camden. The conversation explores the reality of making a living in furniture making, the financial barriers facing young makers, the decline in apprenticeships, and why business knowledge matters just as much as craftsmanship. Helen also shares her thoughts on resin tables, Nakashima furniture, teaching for over 30 years, and why many people entering woodworking today are searching for something more meaningful than office work and finance careers. Key Topics Covered Why Helen left furniture making for teachingBuilding the London School of Furniture Making from evening classesApprenticeships in carpentry and joinery during the 1980sWhy furniture making businesses struggle financiallyThe rise of finance workers entering woodworkingSteam bending, Kumiko, carving, and specialist furniture coursesWhy resin river tables became so popularGeorge Nakashima and authentic furniture designThe challenge of making affordable solid wood furnitureWhy many people use woodworking to escape screen based workHow apprenticeships have changed in BritainThe importance of business knowledge for makersWhy passion matters in craftsmanshipBalancing teaching, creativity, and family life Enjoying the show? Leave a review, follow us, and share the episode with a fellow maker. New episodes every week with artists, designers, craftsmen and creators from around the world. Yours for the Making with Robin Johnson is the podcast that celebrates creativity, craftsmanship, and the art of making. Hosted by Robin Johnson — founder of Johnson Bespoke and BBC presenter on The Travelling Auctioneers, The Restorers, Woodland Workshop — this podcast dives into the stories of makers from all walks of life. From woodworkers, metal fabricators, and chefs to artists, designers, and hobbyists, each episode offers real conversations with the people behind the things we love. Whether you're a hands-on creative, aspiring artisan, or simply curious about how things are made, this podcast offers inspiration, insight, and practical wisdom. Expect behind-the-scenes stories, lessons in process and passion, and a celebration of the maker movement in all its forms. Subscribe now and follow Yours for the Making wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts. Key Moments: 00:00 Helen Welch on building the London School of Furniture Making 02:03 From carpentry apprentice to furniture teacher 05:31 Why making furniture for clients stopped being enjoyable 08:47 The courses taught at the furniture school 10:41 George Nakashima and the problem with resin tables 18:41 Why people are turning to woodworking again 20:18 Finance workers learning furniture making 23:42 Bringing specialist carving and Kumiko instructors into the school 30:11 The reality of earning a living as a furniture maker 33:38 Why furniture making is financially difficult 39:28 Why makers must understand business 40:26 Former students now running successful workshops 42:31 Expanding into a larger workshop in Camden 45:51 Why apprenticeships are no longer long enough 50:10 How great apprentices learn faster than everyone else 55:19 Advice Helen would give her 18 year old self

    58 min
  6. May 20

    How Simon Thomas Pirie Built a Bespoke Furniture Business That Lasted 30 Years

    Robin Johnson sits down with furniture maker and designer Simon Thomas Pirie to discuss the reality of building a long term creative business in Britain. Simon shares his journey from studying fine art and discovering woodworking through Hook Park, to running a respected bespoke furniture workshop in Dorset for nearly three decades. The conversation explores furniture design, apprenticeships, CNC technology, kitchens, direct client work, workshop culture, scaling a creative business, and the pressure of balancing craftsmanship with commercial survival. Simon also reflects on leadership, hiring the right people, working with architects and interior designers, and why British furniture making struggles without proper industrial support. Key Topics Covered Building a bespoke furniture business from scratchHook Park and the influence of John MakepeaceFine art, furniture design, and creative career pathsThe reality of running a small workshop businessWhy direct client relationships matterKitchens versus freestanding furniture projectsCNC machines and modern furniture productionHiring apprentices and training young makersWorkshop culture and team dynamicsExpanding into larger workshop spacesBritish furniture making versus European manufacturingCreative burnout and staying inspired after 30 yearsGarden bench production and Chelsea Flower ShowWorking with architects and interior designersLegacy, craftsmanship, and long term creative work Enjoying the show? Leave a review, follow us, and share the episode with a fellow maker. New episodes every week with artists, designers, craftsmen and creators from around the world. Yours for the Making with Robin Johnson is the podcast that celebrates creativity, craftsmanship, and the art of making. Hosted by Robin Johnson — founder of Johnson Bespoke and BBC presenter on The Travelling Auctioneers, The Restorers, Woodland Workshop — this podcast dives into the stories of makers from all walks of life. From woodworkers, metal fabricators, and chefs to artists, designers, and hobbyists, each episode offers real conversations with the people behind the things we love. Whether you're a hands-on creative, aspiring artisan, or simply curious about how things are made, this podcast offers inspiration, insight, and practical wisdom. Expect behind-the-scenes stories, lessons in process and passion, and a celebration of the maker movement in all its forms. Subscribe now and follow Yours for the Making wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts. Key Moments: 00:00 Growing up around woodworking 01:41 Discovering furniture making 02:48 Learning at Hook Park 05:20 Teaching furniture design 08:25 Starting the workshop 10:14 The struggle of solo makers 11:30 Kitchens and commercial projects 16:30 Design influences and style 21:50 Expanding the workshop 26:36 CNC technology and production 31:42 Workshop culture and apprentices 50:45 Problems with creative education 58:59 Becoming a furniture maker 01:02:57 Bespoke furniture versus products 01:08:03 Recycled timber projects 01:09:02 Advice to his younger self

    1h 16m
  7. May 13

    Young Crafters Building Careers in Furniture Making and Textile Design

    Robin Johnson sits down with sisters Clara and Rose Prince to discuss studying furniture making and textile design, navigating creative careers, and building a future in craft. Clara studies furniture making at West Dean College while Rose focuses on weaving and textiles at Chelsea College. They speak openly about the realities of creative education, student debt, apprenticeships, networking, exhibitions, and the pressure of entering industries where practical skills matter more than academic status. The conversation also explores collaboration, British manufacturing, women in craft industries, and why hands on work still matters in a digital world. Key Topics Covered: Studying furniture making at West Dean CollegeLearning weaving and textile design at Chelsea CollegeWomen entering male dominated craft industriesNetworking and building industry relationships through exhibitionsStarting a creative career after universityThe reality of running a craft businessCreative collaboration between furniture and textilesThe financial pressure of university and student debtWhy apprenticeships deserve more attentionBritish manufacturing and sustainable productionUsing textiles to support dementia care and cognitive healthBalancing creative ambition with practical industry experience Enjoying the show? Leave a review, follow us, and share the episode with a fellow maker. New episodes every week with artists, designers, craftsmen and creators from around the world. Yours for the Making with Robin Johnson is the podcast that celebrates creativity, craftsmanship, and the art of making. Hosted by Robin Johnson — founder of Johnson Bespoke and BBC presenter on The Travelling Auctioneers, The Restorers, Woodland Workshop — this podcast dives into the stories of makers from all walks of life. From woodworkers, metal fabricators, and chefs to artists, designers, and hobbyists, each episode offers real conversations with the people behind the things we love. Whether you're a hands-on creative, aspiring artisan, or simply curious about how things are made, this podcast offers inspiration, insight, and practical wisdom. Expect behind-the-scenes stories, lessons in process and passion, and a celebration of the maker movement in all its forms. Subscribe now and follow Yours for the Making wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts. Key Moments: 00:00 Introduction to Clara and Rose Prince 00:43 Growing up in a creative and hands on family 02:22 Women entering furniture making and textile design 04:48 Supporting each other through creative education 05:53 Exhibitions and presenting work publicly 07:56 How university prepares students for industry 09:32 Plans after graduation and gaining industry experience 12:19 Collaboration ideas and future business ambitions 17:52 Balancing business goals with personal ambitions 21:43 Family influence and inherited craftsmanship 22:54 The cost of university and creative education 23:10 Apprenticeships versus university pathways 26:31 Textiles, dementia care, and cognitive health 29:23 British manufacturing and preserving craft industries 46:48 Advice to their younger selves

    55 min
  8. May 6

    From Pandemic Pivot to Sculptural Wood Art: How Oliver Chalk Built a Self Taught Wood Turning Career

    Robin Johnson speaks with Oliver Chalk, a self taught wood turner who rebuilt his career during the pandemic by following curiosity rather than a fixed plan. Starting with climbing holds and basic tools, Oliver moved into large scale sculptural woodwork, developing his own techniques through repetition and failure. He explains why surface, texture, and emotional response drive his work, how investing in the right tools changed his trajectory, and why process matters more than outcome when building a creative career. Key Topics Covered Learning wood turning without formal trainingBuilding skill through experimentation and repetitionImportance of investing in professional tools and maintaining themDeveloping a recognisable style through surface and textureWorking with large scale timber and physical challengesUsing natural materials for sustainability and longevityCreative philosophy focused on process and self expressionBalancing risk, safety, and creativity in the workshopWhy failure drives progress and skill development Enjoying the show? Leave a review, follow us, and share the episode with a fellow maker. New episodes every week with artists, designers, craftsmen and creators from around the world. Yours for the Making with Robin Johnson is the podcast that celebrates creativity, craftsmanship, and the art of making. Hosted by Robin Johnson — founder of Johnson Bespoke and BBC presenter on The Travelling Auctioneers, The Restorers, Woodland Workshop — this podcast dives into the stories of makers from all walks of life. From woodworkers, metal fabricators, and chefs to artists, designers, and hobbyists, each episode offers real conversations with the people behind the things we love. Whether you're a hands-on creative, aspiring artisan, or simply curious about how things are made, this podcast offers inspiration, insight, and practical wisdom. Expect behind-the-scenes stories, lessons in process and passion, and a celebration of the maker movement in all its forms. Subscribe now and follow Yours for the Making wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts. Key Moments: 00:00 Introduction to Oliver Chalk and his wood turning work 00:46 Pandemic career shift and early experimentation 02:11 Learning wood turning through trial and error 06:57 Discovering surface texture and creative direction 09:30 Investing in tools and committing to the craft 10:10 Working with large scale timber and safety awareness 18:09 Moving from turning to sculptural carving techniques 22:49 Creative philosophy and finding purpose through making 29:21 Creativity as problem solving and pushing limits 34:23 Process over product and emotional connection to work 39:27 Exhibitions, galleries, and building a career 53:27 Advice on failure and continuous improvement

    59 min

About

Yours for the Making with Robin Johnson is the podcast that celebrates creativity, craftsmanship, and the art of making. Hosted by Robin Johnson - founder of Johnson Bespoke and BBC presenter on shows such as The Travelling Auctioneers, The Restorers, Woodland Workshop this podcast dives into the stories of makers from all walks of life. From woodworkers, metal fabricators, and chefs to artists, designers, and hobbyists, each episode offers real conversations with the people behind the things we love. Whether you're a hands-on creative, aspiring artisan, or simply curious about how things are made, this podcast offers inspiration, insight, and practical wisdom. Expect behind-the-scenes stories, lessons in process and passion, and a celebration of the maker movement in all its forms. Subscribe now and follow Yours for the Making wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts.

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