• Young Crafters Building Careers in Furniture Making and Textile Design
    May 13 2026

    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 College
    • Learning weaving and textile design at Chelsea College
    • Women entering male dominated craft industries
    • Networking and building industry relationships through exhibitions
    • Starting a creative career after university
    • The reality of running a craft business
    • Creative collaboration between furniture and textiles
    • The financial pressure of university and student debt
    • Why apprenticeships deserve more attention
    • British manufacturing and sustainable production
    • Using textiles to support dementia care and cognitive health
    • Balancing creative ambition with practical industry experience

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    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

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    55 mins
  • From Pandemic Pivot to Sculptural Wood Art: How Oliver Chalk Built a Self Taught Wood Turning Career
    May 6 2026

    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 training
    • Building skill through experimentation and repetition
    • Importance of investing in professional tools and maintaining them
    • Developing a recognisable style through surface and texture
    • Working with large scale timber and physical challenges
    • Using natural materials for sustainability and longevity
    • Creative philosophy focused on process and self expression
    • Balancing risk, safety, and creativity in the workshop
    • Why 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

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    59 mins
  • Started With No Plan & Built a Sustainable Timber Business from Scratch with Ben Goldsmith
    Apr 29 2026

    Robin Johnson speaks with Ben Goldsmith from Design Woodcraft Ltd about building a timber and furniture business without a clear plan. Ben started with no tools, no strategy, and no formal direction, then grew the company through consistent work and curiosity. The conversation focuses on how the business developed into a sustainable operation, milling its own timber, tracking carbon impact, and working with high profile hospitality clients. This episode gives a grounded view of how a creative business can grow through action rather than planning, and where that approach creates both opportunity and limitations.

    Key Topics Covered:

    • Starting a business with no plan or formal training
    • Moving from kitchen work into woodworking and furniture making
    • How Design Woodcraft Ltd grew through trial and consistency
    • Building a sustainable timber supply chain from log to finished product
    • Milling timber, air drying processes, and cost advantages
    • Carbon tracking and creating low impact furniture products
    • Working with hospitality clients and high end restaurants
    • Why word of mouth growth limits scale
    • The challenge of marketing a craft based business
    • Creating recurring revenue through maintenance services
    • Plans to expand workshop capacity and increase turnover

    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 Ben Goldsmith and Design Woodcraft Ltd

    02:47 Starting with no tools and no clear plan

    07:52 Years of operating without strategy or structure

    14:27 Carbon tracking and sustainability in furniture production

    23:01 Milling timber and cost advantages

    26:00 Full control of supply chain from log to product

    29:54 Limits of word of mouth growth

    37:23 Creating a recurring revenue service model

    41:03 Challenges with marketing and content

    1:00:49 Advice on creativity and exploration

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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • Branding, Psychology and AI in Design: How Global Brands Create Emotional Connection and Stand Out
    Apr 22 2026

    Robin Johnson speaks with Paul Drake from JDO Ltd, a global branding agency working with brands such as Dove and Shell, to break down how branding actually works. This conversation focuses on emotional response, visual identity, and why strong brands win attention and trust. Paul explains how design influences perception, how storytelling drives value, and why consistency matters more than originality in many cases. They also examine the real impact of AI on creative industries, from branding and product design to customer experience.

    Key Topics Covered

    • How global brands build emotional connection through design
    • Why branding is about psychology not just visuals
    • The role of storytelling in premium product positioning
    • How distinctive shapes and visual cues drive brand recognition
    • Case study of luxury packaging and high value products
    • The real process behind building a brand identity
    • How AI is changing branding, design, and creative work
    • Practical use of AI in engineering, product development, and training
    • The balance between human creativity and automation
    • Career advice for entering branding, design, and 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 Introduction to Paul Drake and global branding work

    01:11 How branding projects begin and how agencies build brand identity

    02:05 Career path into branding and design industry

    03:00 Emotional response and how brands influence perception

    05:12 Why storytelling drives value in creative work

    07:33 Brand consistency and why it builds long term trust

    10:39 Visual cues, shapes, and consumer behaviour

    12:36 Case study of Mermaid gin and packaging design success

    16:30 Building a global branding agency and creative partnerships

    19:43 What makes a product visually distinctive

    23:06 Designing furniture and creating a recognisable style

    27:04 The economics of design, production, and scalability

    31:58 CAD, CNC, and technical challenges in manufacturing

    36:41 AI in design and the future of creative industries

    41:55 Automation, jobs, and the future of work

    44:34 Can AI replace creativity and brand thinking

    49:03 Limits of AI in product design and real world application

    53:05 AI in engineering and medical innovation

    57:08 Technology as a tool to extend human capability

    1:03:08 Human interaction versus automation in daily life

    1:10:21 How to get into branding and design careers

    1:28:15 Advice for younger self and building confidence

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    1 hr and 36 mins
  • How Paddy Piggott Built the Dragon Bar from Nothing and What Running a Bar Really Takes
    Apr 15 2026

    Robin Johnson sits down with Paddy Piggott to break down how he went from washing dishes during a recession to opening one of Hastings’ most well known bars.

    Paddy shares how he started with no qualifications, worked his way through kitchens and bars, and spotted the opportunity to open the Dragon Bar. He explains the reality of building a venue from an empty 1820 storage unit, digging out the basement by hand, and creating a space that has lasted over 20 years.

    This conversation focuses on what it takes to run a bar long term. Paddy talks through staffing challenges, rising costs, regulations, and why the industry is harder now than when he started. He also explains why bars succeed or fail, and why creating the right atmosphere matters more than anything else.

    Alongside the business, Paddy shares stories from years behind the bar, the culture of Hastings, and why risk, travel, and experience matter more than playing it safe.

    Key Topics Covered

    • Starting in hospitality with no qualifications during a recession
    • Working in kitchens and bars and learning through experience
    • The culture and late night scene at Harper’s in Hastings
    • Opening the Dragon Bar and finding the right location
    • Renovating an empty unit and building the bar by hand
    • Creating a space that attracts loyal customers and strong staff
    • Managing staff and building a team with personality and energy
    • The financial reality of running a bar and rising operating costs
    • Regulations, taxes, and why the industry is harder today
    • Differences between running a bar and a restaurant
    • Why atmosphere and experience drive repeat customers
    • The impact of social media and changing nightlife culture
    • Lessons from travel, risk taking, and personal growth

    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 Paddy Piggott and early career

    00:34 Starting work as a dishwasher during a recession

    01:31 Harper’s bar and late night culture in Hastings

    03:44 Changes in nightlife and social behaviour over time

    08:17 Decision to open the Dragon Bar

    10:10 Finding the location and securing the lease

    12:30 Renovating the space and building the bar

    14:05 Designing the bar and creating long lasting features

    17:10 Running the kitchen and building a reputation for food

    20:10 Staff culture and hiring the right people

    26:39 Why opening a bar today is harder than before

    28:22 Rising costs and the economics of running a bar

    37:26 Buying and rebuilding Fagan’s restaurant

    45:19 Why bars are more viable than restaurants

    50:13 Social media and changing customer behaviour

    52:50 Memorable stories from behind the bar

    1:01:05 Advice to his 18 year old self

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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • How Robin Johnson Built a Joinery Business After Failure and Rebuilt for Growth
    Apr 8 2026

    Robin Johnson reflects on one year of Yours for the Making and the journey behind building his business, Johnson Bespoke.

    Starting in his father’s workshop, Robin developed a hands on approach to making from an early age. He went on to study surf science, where he learned critical thinking, before working at Quiksilver and gaining insight into retail and customer behaviour. After a period in teaching design and technology, he made the decision to leave and start his own business.

    In this episode, Robin shares the reality of building a creative business from scratch. He talks through early struggles with pricing, inconsistent work, and poor financial management. He explains how losing a major project during COVID forced a reset, and how focusing on joinery and controlling costs allowed the business to recover and grow.

    He also reflects on hiring key people, building a skilled team, and setting a clear direction for the company. This is a direct account of building a business through mistakes, pressure, and long term thinking.

    Key Topics Covered

    • One year of podcasting and lessons from creative guests
    • Early exposure to making and learning through experimentation
    • Studying surf science and developing critical thinking
    • Working at Quicksilver and understanding retail behaviour
    • Teaching design and technology and working in private education
    • Starting Johnson Bespoke and early business challenges
    • Financial mistakes and lessons from COVID disruption
    • Why focusing on joinery improved profitability
    • Hiring key people and building a strong team
    • Scaling a creative business and working with global designers
    • Long term ambition to build a leading joinery company
    • Personal growth through podcasting and reflection

    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 One year of podcasting and purpose of the solo episode

    01:14 Early making experiences and learning through experimentation

    03:25 Studying surf science and developing critical thinking

    07:16 Teaching design and technology and working in schools

    12:04 Starting Johnson Bespoke and early struggles

    15:15 Taking on major projects and facing COVID disruption

    19:04 Financial mistakes and learning to manage numbers

    21:41 Hiring Richard Muddyman and scaling the business

    26:35 Building high end joinery and working with designers

    31:42 Podcast growth and building a personal brand

    36:12 Advice to his 18 year old self and mindset

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    45 mins
  • 100 Million Streams and Counting: Soul Singer Sam Wills on Music, Identity and Building a Career as an Independent Artist
    Apr 1 2026
    Robin Johnson sits down with Sam Wills, a soulful vocalist and independent artist from Hastings whose song Traingazing recently hit 100 million streams. Sam grew up in Surrey, moved to Hastings at 13, and cut his teeth playing covers in local pubs and restaurants before developing one of the most distinctive falsettos in British soul music. In this episode, Sam talks honestly about what it takes to build a music career from the ground up without a major label: the four years it took to make his album Breathe, the battle with imposter syndrome, the grind of social media, the reality of streaming income, and what it means to hear your song played by DJ Jazzy Jeff in Ibiza. He also shares the story of building a cabin in the woods by hand using pallet wood, why he started making fruit wine, and what he is planning for album number three. This is a conversation about creativity, obsession, staying independent and finding your own path as an artist.Key Topics Covered:How growing up in Hastings and its live music scene shaped Sam's confidence and stage craftSam's first gig at Pissarros playing Arctic Monkeys covers and the years of pub and restaurant performances that followedReaching 100 million streams on Train Gazing and how that milestone sits alongside imposter syndromeWhat Sam's musical style actually sounds like: soulful harmonies, folk, hip-hop, R&B and jazz influencesThe four years it took to make the album Breathe and the emotional stagnation that inspired itWhy the album tells a cohesive story from start to finish and how listeners have connected with itBeing independent: label services deals, creative control, forming your own team and staying out of the major label systemThe reality of social media for independent musicians: 80% of working time, perfectionism, and the fear of being left behindEnjoying 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 Robin introduces Sam Wills and the context of a Hastings music scene that gave him the space to develop01:03 Sam moved to Hastings at 13 and within months was playing his first gig at Pissarros doing Arctic Monkeys and Craig David covers03:13 Why Hastings is genuinely unique for live music: any night of the week, any part of the Old Town, there is always music somewhere04:51 Traingazing hits 100 million streams and Sam reflects on what that number actually means05:21 Why numbers do not define success but do help when imposter syndrome and self-doubt creep in07:40 Sam describes his musical style: soulful at its core, drifting between folk, hip-hop, R&B and jazz11:13 Why Breathe took nearly four years to make and how a period of stagnation became its emotional foundation14:27 Why being a musician now means being a marketer, content creator and social media strategist as much as a songwriter21:51 Sam's musical influences: D'Angelo, Michael Jackson, Jeff Buckley, Bonnie Raitt, Frank Ocean, Justin Timberlake and Chet Baker23:34 How a single connection in Hamburg led to a festival show in Taiwan and the discovery of a strong listening base across Southeast Asia25:27 Using Spotify and Apple artist dashboards to track listeners by location and how Sam plans to tour East and Southeast Asia27:44 The economics of streaming: a fraction of a penny per play and what 100 million streams would have been worth in the CD era32:46 The British soul community: Jordan Rakei, Tom Misch, Olivia Dean and why artists competing for the same ears often make each other stronger40:59 How Sam started building a cabin in the woods from pallet wood while making Breathe and why the physical project kept him sane54:32 On the danger of chasing the next thing versus appreciating the journey and taking stock of progress58:08 Why making an album requires obsession, belief and the willingness to keep pushing a boulder uphill1:03:29 Advice for anyone wanting to start a music career: invest in self marketing, absorb the music you love, replicate to learn, get obsessed and keep making
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    1 hr and 10 mins
  • Green Oak Timber Framing: Building Structures That Last 300 Years with Frontier Oak
    Mar 25 2026
    Robin Johnson sits down with Christopher Kentish and Oliver Reimann, the co-founders of Frontier Oak, a bespoke green oak timber framing company based in Sussex. Chris came to the craft after a career in film production, introduced to it through his father-in-law's green oak company. Ollie, who studied advertising and marketing and met Chris at the age of 13, joined him in 2018 after working in production and photography. Together they have built Frontier Oak from the ground up, taking on everything from residential extensions, orangeries, and garden rooms to three-bay garages and contemporary pottery studios. Their ethos is straightforward: 100% bespoke, fully handcrafted, and managed end-to-end from groundworks to final finish. In this episode they talk honestly about what it takes to run a small craft business, why they refuse CNC machines, how they handle green oak's unique challenges, what the future of timber framing looks like, and why they are planning to take on apprentices to keep the craft alive.Key Topics CoveredWhat green oak timber framing actually involves and why it has been done the same way for hundreds of yearsHow Chris and Ollie each found their way into the trade from completely unrelated careersThe bread and butter of Frontier Oak's work: residential extensions, orangeries, garden rooms and standalone buildingsWhy green oak clients are a different type of customer and what drives them to choose timber over brick and mortarThe environmental case for green oak construction and the barriers to using fully sustainable building materialsThe technical challenge of working with green oak: movement, tolerances, pre-fitting frames and getting them to site fastHow CAD design fits into a traditional craft workflow without compromising the handmade approachPlans for oak framing workshops and apprenticeships, and the responsibility of passing the craft to the next generationThe unwritten rules around apprentices in traditional trades like thatching and farrieryEnjoying 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 Robin introduces Chris and Ollie and frames green oak framing as the craft every woodworker imagines00:31 Chris fell into oak framing after film production, starting with two weeks helping his father-in-law01:24 Ollie and Chris met at 13, both ended up in production and photography before Ollie joined the tools in 201808:25 The bread and butter of Frontier Oak: extensions, conservatories, garden rooms, garages and orangeries11:53 The stigma around timber-framed buildings in the UK mortgage market and the environmental case for greener building materials21:38 Modern volume house building versus Frontier Oak's ethos: quality over quantity on structures built to last centuries31:59 Why Frontier Oak will not use CNC machines and why handcrafted frames are the whole point35:20 How they manage green oak movement: pre-fitting every frame in the workshop before getting it to site fast41:44 The honest reality of running a small business: admin, late nights and the gap between production time and everything else50:33 Why managing all subcontractors from groundworks to plastering is their biggest challenge and their biggest selling point57:11 The best part of the job: watching clients see their frame go up for the first time1:07:14 Why passing the craft on is a real responsibility and their plans to take on an apprentice next year1:11:15 Advice to their 18-year-old selves: use your 20s to try things rather than committing too early to the wrong path
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    1 hr and 19 mins