Yours For The Making with Robin Johnson Podcast By Robin Johnson cover art

Yours For The Making with Robin Johnson

Yours For The Making with Robin Johnson

By: Robin Johnson
Listen for free

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.Copyright 2026 Robin Johnson Art Biographies & Memoirs Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Green Oak Timber Framing: Building Structures That Last 300 Years with Frontier Oak
    Mar 26 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
    Show more Show less
    1 hr and 19 mins
  • The Dark Art of Upholstery: Building a Bespoke British Furniture Business from the Ground Up
    Mar 19 2026
    Robin Johnson sits down with Jeff McGurty, founder and owner of D&P Upholstery in Gateshead, one of the North East's most established bespoke upholstery businesses. Jeff built his company from a one-man band operating out of evenings and weekends into a seven-person team with a brand new, five times larger workshop in Team Valley. In this episode, Jeff and Robin pull back the curtain on the upholstery trade: a craft that is simultaneously a dark art, a dying art, and a business full of genuine opportunity for those who approach it with curiosity and commercial instinct. They cover the nuts and bolts of running a split commercial and domestic upholstery operation, the frustrations of dealing with premium fabric suppliers, the smart play of building a client base through interior designers, and the calculated growth decisions that took Jeff from moonlighting in a small unit to leading a team and developing a new product range under his own brand, Forme. If you work in the trades, run a craft business, or simply love hearing how skilled makers build real businesses from raw skill, this episode delivers.Key Topics CoveredThe realities of running a bespoke upholstery business in the UK todayWhy targeting interior designers is one of the smartest growth strategies in the tradesThe frustrations of dealing with high-end fabric suppliers and why cheaper fabrics often outperform expensive onesHow Jeff grew DNP Upholstery by buying an existing business, retaining its staff, and scaling it upThe role of AI visualisation software in transforming how designers and clients spec upholstery projectsThe modular sofa system that allows Jeff to offer 20 different designs without building 20 different sofasThe honest truth about taking on apprentices and the rising cost of employing peopleWhy hiring a floor manager was the single biggest change that unlocked business growthThe decline of British furniture manufacturing and what the upholstery trade looks like todayPlans for upholstery workshops open to the public and why they double as a powerful marketing toolJeff's advice for anyone wanting to get into upholstery as a careerEnjoying 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 Jeff McGurty and opens with the idea of upholstery as a dark art, hidden craft work that disguises whatever sits beneath it01:30 Jeff breaks down the 50/50 split between domestic re-upholstery and commercial bespoke seating, and how subcontracting frame-making keeps the operation lean02:35 The pair dig into the absurdity of dealing with premium fabric suppliers: week-long quotes, discontinued stock, and bureaucratic trade account processes that slow down real work04:12 Jeff compares expensive fabrics to designer brands and explains why mid-range fabrics with strong rub-test results often do a better job05:59 Jeff's origin story: Sports Science, two weeks of work experience as a PE teacher, and a summer job that changed everything08:11 The business decision that shaped Jeff's early growth: building relationships with interior designers rather than chasing direct-to-consumer work11:49 How Jeff ended up working above one of his interior designer clients, and the move that eventually led him to buy DNP Upholstery from its retiring founders Derek and Pam14:55 Jeff reveals the new modular sofa range being developed under the Form brand, including AI-powered fabric visualisation software built for trade-only use18:11 The clever modular arm system that lets Jeff show 20 distinct sofa designs using a single seat and back unit with interchangeable arms21:07 Robin's honest account of buying a sofa online and why he will never do it again23:39 The best cushion filling? Jeff argues for a foam core with a feather wrap: structure without the sag24:27 Jeff's most unusual project: a Chesterfield sofa made entirely from Paul Collingwood's cricket jerseys, each diamond panel featuring a different team badge27:29 Why employing people remains the ...
    Show more Show less
    53 mins
  • Designing Ash Furniture in Britain with Katie Walker and Charlie Dedman on Sustainable Chair Making and Manufacturing
    Mar 12 2026

    Robin Johnson speaks with furniture designer Katie Walker and designer Charlie Dedman about the collaboration behind Meon Furniture and the realities of modern British furniture making. The conversation explores design for manufacture, steam bending ash timber, CNC machining, sustainable forestry and the business decisions behind heirloom furniture. They discuss the shift from studio craft to batch production, the value of workshop knowledge, and the importance of constant product improvement through feedback and testing. The episode also examines the role of British timber, the impact of ash dieback on forestry, and the challenge of building furniture that will last for decades rather than years.

    Key Topics Covered

    1. Furniture design collaboration between Katie Walker and Charlie Dedman
    2. The launch and vision of the Meon Furniture brand
    3. Steam bending ash timber in chair making
    4. Design for manufacture and batch production
    5. CNC machining in modern furniture workshops
    6. British ash timber and the impact of ash dieback
    7. Sustainable furniture production and responsible forestry
    8. B Corp certification and ethical manufacturing
    9. Furniture product development and continuous improvement
    10. The difference between studio craft and commercial manufacturing
    11. Building heirloom furniture designed to last generations

    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 Katie Walker and Charlie Dedman

    01:23 Origins of the Meon Furniture collaboration

    02:15 Katie Walker’s design education and Royal College background

    07:23 Designing furniture for CNC manufacture

    10:33 Learning woodworking skills through hands on training

    13:48 Steam bending ash timber for chair design

    17:21 Why ash timber is used for interior furniture

    18:52 British ash, forestry and ash dieback

    23:17 The history and reputation of Gaze Burvill furniture

    29:11 Designing joinery that reduces manufacturing time

    31:33 Designing sculptural furniture versus designing for production

    37:35 Product development and improving furniture over time

    41:27 Designing heirloom furniture built to last generations

    45:26 Launch strategy for Meon Furniture

    49:12 Why chair making is one of the hardest furniture disciplines

    50:48 Advice to younger designers entering the craft industry

    Show more Show less
    1 hr and 4 mins
No reviews yet