The Creative Boom Podcast

Creative Boom

The Creative Boom Podcast is a weekly interview show for designers, illustrators, animators, and creative professionals. Host Katy Cowan talks to artists, entrepreneurs and creative thinkers about the realities of building a creative career – confidence, burnout, money, failure, reinvention, and imposter syndrome – in honest, warm conversations that don't dress anything up. Part of Creative Boom, the independent magazine for the creative community established in 2009.

  1. Personal Branding, Visibility and the Truth No One Tells You, with James Martin

    HACE 10 H

    Personal Branding, Visibility and the Truth No One Tells You, with James Martin

    What does "personal branding" actually mean anymore? And do we really need to be visible all the time to build a successful creative career? In this episode, Katy sits down with designer and founder James Martin (Made by James) for a candid, funny and surprisingly deep conversation about the reality behind the buzzwords. From the pressure to show up online to the myth of "being your authentic self", they unpack why so much of what we're told just doesn't quite sit right. James shares his perspective on branding as something far simpler and more grounded. Not performance, but reputation. Not chasing attention, but building trust over time. Together, they explore what actually matters if you want to grow a creative career that lasts. There's talk of confidence, comparison culture, and the uncomfortable truth that many of us still don't quite know who we are, let alone how to present ourselves online. Katy reflects on her own journey of stepping forward after years of staying behind the scenes, and why letting go of perfection can be the turning point. Along the way, James introduces his 'DEEDS' model, a practical way to think about building a reputation through action rather than noise. It's a refreshing reminder that you don't need to play the game the way everyone else is. It's honest. Messy. And it's a much-needed reset for anyone feeling overwhelmed by the pressure to be seen. So if you've ever questioned whether you're doing it "right" online, this one's for you.

    1 h 9 min
  2. Grief, Growth and Rebuilding a Creative Life, with Natty Harris

    10 MAY

    Grief, Growth and Rebuilding a Creative Life, with Natty Harris

    This week, Katy sits down with senior designer Natty Harris for a deeply honest and emotional conversation about grief, loss, and rebuilding your life when everything changes. At the heart of the episode is Natty's brother Thomas, who died suddenly at 24, and the profound impact he had on shaping who she is today. Together, they explore the many forms grief can take, from losing a loved one to navigating life changes that quietly alter who we are. Natty shares what it was like growing up as a young carer, the complicated mix of love, responsibility and identity that came with it, and how those experiences continue to influence her work as a designer and storyteller. The conversation gently moves through the realities of grief. The chaos, the stillness, the strange moments of laughter, and the importance of allowing yourself to feel everything rather than pushing it down. Natty reflects on therapy, timing, and how doing the work before loss changed the way she was able to process it when it came. There's also a wider thread here about creativity. What it means to show up when your emotional tank is empty, how grief shifts your perspective on work, and why so many creatives are feeling exhausted right now. This is an episode about humanity as much as it is about loss. Ultimately, it's a conversation full of hope. About carrying the people we've lost with us. About finding courage in the hardest moments. And about learning, slowly, who you are on the other side.

    48 min
  3. On 20 Years in Design, Letting Go of 'More', and Why Discipline Beats Passion, with David Airey

    3 MAY

    On 20 Years in Design, Letting Go of 'More', and Why Discipline Beats Passion, with David Airey

    Katy sits down with legendary graphic designer and author David Airey to talk about two decades in the industry, but this isn't just a conversation about logos, books, and client work. It quickly becomes something deeper. A reflection on time, family, creativity, and what actually matters when you strip everything else away. They explore what it means to build a long, sustainable creative career in a world that's constantly shifting. From growing up in that in-between analogue-to-digital era to navigating today's AI-fuelled uncertainty, David shares how he's managed to stay grounded, focused, and still in love with the work. His approach is simple but powerful: focus on the client in front of you, don't look too far ahead, and protect your attention at all costs. There's also a refreshingly honest take on success. David opens up about the moment priorities shifted, particularly after becoming a parent, and how that changed his relationship with work. Less hustle, more intention. Fewer projects, better balance. And a growing awareness that time, not money or recognition, is the most valuable thing we've got. Katy and David also get into the realities of the creative industry. The pressure, the comparison, the impact of social media, and why it's so easy to lose yourself in it all. David offers a quietly radical perspective here: discipline matters more than passion. Not the kind of advice that shouts, but the kind that sticks. Along the way, there are stories of early-career missteps, reflections on regret (or the lack of it), and a shared nostalgia for a slower, pre-Internet world that shaped how they both approach life and work today. It's thoughtful, funny, and at times unexpectedly emotional. If you've ever questioned your pace, your priorities, or what you're actually aiming for, this episode will land.

    54 min
  4. The Spark: Liz Seabrook on Matcha, Side Hustles and Being Seen

    29 ABR ·  CONTENIDO EXTRA

    The Spark: Liz Seabrook on Matcha, Side Hustles and Being Seen

    Photographer Liz Seabrook is back for The Spark. Slightly subdued, a little chaotic, but still brilliantly honest. What starts as a playful chat about matcha and East London fashion quickly becomes more reflective. There's talk of cycling rage, parachute pants, and the strange freedom of dressing however you want. But underneath it all is a deeper thread about identity, confidence and finding your place in the world. Liz shares the small things that make a big difference to her day. Quiet time. Space to think. No distractions. A reminder that creativity often needs stillness, not noise. There's also a refreshingly direct take on side hustles. If you're serious about building something, she says, at some point you have to go all in—no half measures. She talks about the skill she envies most. The patience to experiment, to sit with ideas, to not rush straight to the outcome. Something she's actively trying to learn. And then the conversation shifts. Asked what she wants to be remembered for, Liz reflects on the recent loss of a friend. What follows is a quiet, powerful moment about kindness, presence and showing up for others, not just in life, but in her work as a photographer. Because for Liz, it's never just about taking a picture. It's about creating a space where people feel safe enough to be themselves. A gentle, thoughtful end to the episode. And a reminder that, in a world that often feels anything but, being seen and being kind still matter most.

    27 min
  5. AI, Beauty Standards and the Death of Realness, with Liz Seabrook

    26 ABR

    AI, Beauty Standards and the Death of Realness, with Liz Seabrook

    What happens when everything starts to look the same? In this episode, Katy sits down with photographer Liz Seabrook to talk about image-making in a world that feels increasingly artificial. From AI-generated campaigns to face-tuned portraits, they explore what's being lost as perfection becomes the default. They begin with AI, because it's impossible not to. But the conversation quickly moves into something deeper. The strange overlap between technology and beauty standards, and how both are pushing us towards a kind of visual sameness that feels unsettling. Liz shares what she's seeing behind the scenes as a working photographer: Clients arriving with AI-generated mockups; expectations shaped before a shoot has even begun, and a growing disconnect between the people making the work and the outcome. There's also an honest conversation about how we see ourselves and why so many people feel uncomfortable in front of the camera. How years of filters, retouching and social media have quietly shifted our idea of what's normal. And the subtle pressure to look a certain way, even when we think we're immune to it. Katy reflects on her own recent experience stepping back in front of the lens. The vulnerability of it. The surprise of seeing yourself through someone else's eyes. And the reminder that behind every great image is a team of skilled creatives working together to make something real. They also touch on what's happening across the wider industry. The rise of AI in creative workflows, the loss of entry-level roles, and the increasing demand for more content, faster, often for the same budgets. It paints a picture of an industry in flux, trying to keep up with technology that's moving faster than anyone can regulate. And yet, there's still optimism. Liz leaves us with a simple but powerful thought. To be creative is to be optimistic. Because why make anything at all if you don't believe it might be seen, felt or make a difference? A timely conversation about authenticity, pressure and where creativity goes next.

    47 min

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The Creative Boom Podcast is a weekly interview show for designers, illustrators, animators, and creative professionals. Host Katy Cowan talks to artists, entrepreneurs and creative thinkers about the realities of building a creative career – confidence, burnout, money, failure, reinvention, and imposter syndrome – in honest, warm conversations that don't dress anything up. Part of Creative Boom, the independent magazine for the creative community established in 2009.

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