The Storyteller's Tavern

The Storyteller's Tavern

Mush Hughes and Leigh Northrup talk with makers and artists to learn more about the stories behind their projects and their creative journeys so far. Thanks for joining us here in the tavern!

  1. Chapter 8:9 - Anne Briggs

    Mar 16

    Chapter 8:9 - Anne Briggs

    Anne Briggs is a farmer, woodworker, and educator who turns big, overwhelming dreams into approachable, everyday practices. She blends regenerative agriculture, “lazy gardening,” and traditional hand-tool woodworking into stories and systems that help people build real skills and a life they love using whatever they have to get there. Through her online content and in-person classes, she invites folks to use their hands and their minds in a way that feels playful, honest, and sustainable. She leaves every interaction with a challenge: get outside, get your hands dirty, and look for the good. Because “whether you look for the bad or the good, you’ll find it. Finding the good even in the mundane is the first step towards building a life and a legacy bigger than yourself.” We close out 2025 Maker Camp with Anne as we talk about just how meaningful this event has become to the broader maker community. Anne discusses her start in making, learning from old timers with old tools, and guiding future generations of makers. She speaks about the importance of stewardship, not just with tools, but with skills and knowledge as well. And content creation as an act of service, not self-promotion. Anne touches on her long, difficult journey into motherhood and what it’s teaching her. We discuss the challenges, and well-earned rewards, that come with choosing hard work and creative living. In an emotional wrap up, we all share highlights from the weekend. Anne’s observation that “this is where the good stuff is” really hits home.  Like everything Anne does, this one is full of honesty, hope, a little humor, and a whole lot of heart. More Anne Anne Briggs - Anne of All Trades Website

    39 min
  2. Chapter 8:7 - Kerges & Tamara

    Feb 23

    Chapter 8:7 - Kerges & Tamara

    Leigh and Mush sit down with Kerges Nimen and Tamara Robertson, two people whose paths into making couldn’t look more different on the surface, but who are connected by something deeper. Kergis is a silversmith whose work captures both delicacy and strength, fusing fire, metal, and meaning into jewelry that shines with unmistakable personality. Tamara - part engineer, part MythBuster, part author, part educator - is back on the pod and back at Maker Camp to lead Tinkering T-Rex workshops, build stomp rockets with kids, and spread her lifelong passion for curiosity in motion. Together, they represent two sides of the same spark: one grounded in patient craft, the other fueled by scientific wonder, both rooted in teaching and community. We get into Tamara’s work restoring and operating steam locomotives, and what it means to care for machines that were built generations before us - ones that don’t forgive shortcuts, but teach you to listen, to feel, and to earn your understanding one mistake at a time. We also talk about how learning used to happen through proximity - by standing next to someone who knew more than you, watching, trying and failing - and how that kind of learning still exists today, if you’re willing to seek it out. And we get into a familiar truth about making: it’s not just about the object. It’s about the people, the mentors, the friendships, and the communities that form when curious humans gather around shared obsession. More Kerges & Tamara Kerges Nimen Silversmithing The Real Tamara Robertson

    44 min
  3. Chapter 8:6 - Dennis Forrester

    Feb 9

    Chapter 8:6 - Dennis Forrester

    Dennis Forrester of 21Grams Leather Goods is a leather artist whose work carries both the precision of tattooing and the heart of recovery. What began as a creative outlet during the stillness of the pandemic has evolved into a partnership with Weaver Leather Supply and a life centered around teaching, collaboration, and storytelling through craft. His designs pull from American traditional tattoo imagery - bold lines, timeless symbols, a touch of rebellion - and he’s built a reputation not just for what he makes, but for the way he shares it, with humor, humility, and a real sense of gratitude. We sit down with Dennis to talk about the long road from tattoo parlors and graffiti walls in Huntington Beach to the leather tent at Maker Camp. We dive into how addiction and art became intertwined, how turning creative energy into tangible craft helped rebuild a sense of purpose, and how a single experiment with tracing paper led to a patented process now in shops around the world. We talk about mentorship, friendship, and the kind of community that shows up for you when you least expect it: from fellow crafters like Ethan Carter and Jay Nielsen to the next generation of artists discovering leather for the first time.  Just a heads up: there are some swears in this episode, and we do get into some conversations that deal with addiction, mental health struggles, and recovery. All that said: this one’s raw, funny, and hopeful: a story about making, surviving, and choosing every day to turn experience into art. More Dennis Dennis Forrester - 21Grams Leather Goods Website

    31 min
  4. Chapter 8:4 - Rich & Jenna

    Jan 5

    Chapter 8:4 - Rich & Jenna

    Rich and Jenna Greenwalt of Forged Ingrain are the kind of makers who can build just about anything - and often do. From salvaged wood and concrete to metal, resin, and light, their work ranges from functional furniture to one-of-a-kind art pieces that carry the unmistakable fingerprint of collaboration. Together, they run a full-time creative business just outside of Cleveland, blending Rich’s background in the trades with Jenna’s eye for design and storytelling. Their projects feel industrial and organic at the same time, and their partnership (both in life and in the shop) has become central to their brand. We sit down with Jenna and Rich to talk about the long, surprising path that led from a fish-food factory to a thriving studio in Perry, Ohio, and how a shared need to make things grew into a livelihood. They get into what it means to build side by side, the learning curves of new tools and materials, and why experimentation keeps their work fresh. They talk about the “creation station” apartment garage where it all began, the wild early commissions that came from saying yes to everything, and the deep joy of showing up at Maker Camp each year to reconnect, recharge, and play. From BMX roots to blacksmithing tents, from hats to plasma tables, this one’s about partnership, process, and the kind of creative restlessness that makes you fall in love with making all over again. More Rich & Jenna Rich & Jenna Greenwalt - Forged Ingrain Website

    22 min
  5. Chapter 8:3 - Nick Berchtold

    12/22/2025

    Chapter 8:3 - Nick Berchtold

    Nick Berchtold of Berchtold Design Build has made a name for himself through jaw-dropping CNC creations that blur the line between architecture, sculpture, and satire. By day, he’s an architectural model maker helping design some of the tallest buildings in the world. By night, he’s creating axes, knives, and wild custom projects that mash up 3D modeling, fine woodworking, and an unmistakable sense of humor. Whether he’s carving intricate textures for skyscraper door handles or machining an anatomically hilarious push sticks and axe handles, Nick approaches every project with precision, curiosity, and a knack for seeing what’s possible when you let technology and art misbehave together. We sit down with Nick to talk about that balance between architecture and absurdity: how a childhood spent scroll-sawing fish-tank art turned into a career of building models for the next world’s tallest tower, and how those same skills fuel his after-hours experiments in CNC texture, resin casting, and sculptural weaponry. They get into the story behind his viral mallet covered in 88 maker faces, the moment he realized he could merge professional modeling tools with creative chaos, and how a weekend axe-building challenge led him to gift a dozen custom handles just to help others feel that first spark of making. They talk about forging, 3D printing, fatherhood, Hannibal Lecter heads, and why the future of craftsmanship might depend on people like Nick: designers who aren’t afraid to bring a little irreverence, a little architecture, and a lot of heart into the shop. More Nick Nick Berchtold - Berchtold Design Build Website

    29 min
  6. Chapter 8:2 - Ryan Smith

    12/08/2025

    Chapter 8:2 - Ryan Smith

    Ryan Smith is a woodworker and printmaker whose work has quietly become one of the defining visual signatures of Maker Camp. Every year, hundreds of people walk away with one of his letterpress posters tucked under their arm, each one pulled by hand on a nearly hundred-year-old Vandercook printing press that he’s restored, hauled to camp, and runs all weekend long. Between woodworking commissions, shop builds, and print runs for makers across the community, Ryan has built a practice that sits right at the intersection of craftsmanship, nostalgia, and pure hands-on joy. Leigh, Mush, and Andrew sat down with Ryan to talk about the path that led him here: from early days in social work and woodworking to stumbling into the world of antique presses through a chance connection with Jimmy Diresta, to slowly resurrecting machines that had been locked up and forgotten for decades. We get into the magic of pulling that first crisp print off a freshly carved block, the odd and wonderful logistics of transporting a 500-pound press up a trailer ramp without losing it through the truck bed, and the way these old machines connect him to both tradition and community. We dig into the posters that have become Maker Camp collectibles, the crossover between music and printmaking, why he keeps rescuing presses off Facebook Marketplace, and the joy of making prints for fellow creators whose work he admires. And woven through it all is Ryan’s belief that keeping these old processes alive - in a world rushing toward digital everything - matters not out of resistance, but out of love for the tactile, the imperfect, and the deeply human side of making. More Ryan Ryan Smith - Smith Makes Website

    36 min

About

Mush Hughes and Leigh Northrup talk with makers and artists to learn more about the stories behind their projects and their creative journeys so far. Thanks for joining us here in the tavern!