Heritage Insights
Exploring the intersection of tradition, innovation, and British craftsmanship.
Made Properly: How Britain's 44 Hidden Manufacturing Gems Are Using 80/20 Principles and AI to Survive the 21st Century
Comprehensive analysis of 44 British heritage manufacturers and their digital transformation opportunities.
British Shoemaking: The Last Stand of Northampton's 800-Year-Old Craft
Inside the world's most resilient manufacturing cluster, where 200+ hand operations create shoes that last a lifetime.
British Textiles: From Yorkshire Wool to Scottish Cashmere
How Britain's mills survive by weaving the world's finest cloth for Chanel, Burberry, and the Royal Household.
Sheffield Steel: The City Where Metal Was Born
Beyond the decline narrative: The specialist forgers and cutlers keeping the 'Made in Sheffield' mark alive.
Stoke-on-Trent: The Potteries' Fight for Survival
From Burleigh's Victorian steam engines to Emma Bridgewater's tourism empire: How the Potteries are reinventing themselves.
British Luxury Accessories: The London Quarter
Watches, jewellery, and the revival of British micro-manufacturing in the luxury sector.
British Furniture: The Art of Seasoned Timber
The joiners and turners preserving the slow craft of furniture making in an IKEA world.
Abraham Moon & Sons Review: Yorkshire Wool Heritage
Review of Abraham Moon & Sons: The last fully vertical wool mill in Yorkshire. Heritage, quality, and interior design uses.
A.W. Hainsworth Review: The Fabric of the Nation
Review of A.W. Hainsworth: 242 years of weaving history. From scarlet military uniforms to billiard cloth.
Camira Fabrics Review: Sustainable Textiles from Huddersfield
Review of Camira Fabrics: How a Huddersfield mill became a global leader in sustainable transport and commercial textiles.
Harris Tweed Hebrides Review: The Cloth Protected by Act of Parliament
Review of Harris Tweed Hebrides: The Shawbost mill driving the global renaissance of the Orb trademark.
Arthur Price Review: Titanic Cutlery & Royal Warrants
Review of Arthur Price: 123 years of Sheffield cutlery heritage. Two Royal Warrants and the Titanic connection.
Crockett & Jones Review: James Bond's Shoemaker
Review of Crockett & Jones: 146 years of Northampton craft. Managing the James Bond connection while maintaining quality.
Edward Green Review: The Finest Shoes in Northampton?
Review of Edward Green: 'Excellence without compromise' since 1890. Analyzing the premium end of British shoemaking.
Gaziano & Girling Review: The Savile Row of Shoemaking
Review of Gaziano & Girling: How two men reinvented high-end British shoes in 2006. Bespoke aesthetics in ready-to-wear.
George Cleverley Review: Bespoke Shoes & The Chisel Toe Legacy
The last of the true English bespoke shoemakers: 67 years of the iconic chisel toe, royal patronage, and unrivaled craft.
Heathcoat Fabrics Review: Devon's 200-Year-Old Technical Textile Secret
From lace to Mars rovers: How a 200-year-old Devon mill became NASA's go-to for parachute fabric and technical textiles.
Johnstons of Elgin Review: Scotland's Last Vertical Mill
Scotland's cashmere crown jewel: 225 years of vertical integration, from raw fibre to finished luxury. A review of heritage and survival.
NPS Solovair Review: The Real British Doc Martens Story
The boots that built a legend: How NPS Solovair kept the original 'Doc Martens' machinery and workers in England when the brand left.
Robert Welch Review: 70 Years of Minimalist Sheffield Design
Scandinavian minimalism meets Sheffield steel: How Robert Welch changed British cutlery design forever.
Samuel Staniforth Review: The 161-Year-Old Commando Dagger Maker
From kitchen knives to commando daggers: How Samuel Staniforth armed British special forces in WWII and continues the craft today.
Sanders & Sanders Review: 152 Years of Military Boot Heritage
The boots that marched through history: 152 years of military contracts, from WWI trenches to the original Desert Boot.
Tricker's Review: Britain's Oldest Shoemaker Since 1829
The heavy brogue that defined English country style: Inside Britain's oldest independent shoemaker.
W.H. Tildesley Review: The Hidden Aerospace Forge of Willenhall
Forging the impossible: How a 152-year-old Black Country forge makes components for F1 cars and aerospace engines.
William Lennon Review: The Last British Heavy Industrial Boot
Built to survive the apocalypse: Inside the last factory in Britain making true heavy industrial boots.
William Mitchell Review: Hand-Cut Calligraphy Nibs Since 1850
The last of the pen makers: How William Mitchell still hand-cuts steel nibs in Birmingham's Jewellery Quarter.
Rogue Journeyman: The Scandal That Nearly Destroyed Tricker's in 1908
In 1908, a single rogue shoemaker nearly brought down Britain's oldest manufacturing dynasty.
The 1980s Takeover Wars: Barbour's Margaret Barbour vs Corporate Raiders
Dame Margaret Barbour didn't just say no to private equity; she built a fortress that no raider could breach.
The Last Will and Testament of John Lobb Himself
In a dusty archive lies the last instructions of the world's greatest shoemaker.
The 200 Steps: Anatomy of a Crockett & Jones Shoe
We break down the 8-week, 200-operation process that turns a cow into a legend.
Harris Tweed: The Only Fabric Protected by Parliament
In 1993, the British government passed an Act of Parliament to protect a fabric.
Burleigh's Victorian Time Machine: The Tissue Transfer Process
Inside the last pottery in the world to use Underglaze Tissue Transfer Printing.
The Succession Crisis: When the Last Master Retires
The average age of a master craftsman in Britain is 55+. What happens when they retire?
Royal Warrants: The £100M Seal of Approval
We crunch the numbers on what a Royal Warrant is actually worth to a British manufacturer.
The Private Equity Playbook: Why Heritage Brands Die
We explain the math behind the destruction of heritage brands by Private Equity.
The King as Patron: How Charles III Saved Heritage Craft
How King Charles III became the single most important figure in the survival of British craftsmanship.
Loake Review: The Gateway to English Heritage Footwear
For many men, Loake is the first 'real' shoe they ever buy.
Cheaney Review: The Great Buy-Back
In 2009, two cousins bought their family factory back from Prada.
John Lobb Review: The Hermes-Owned Bootmaker
£1,300 for a pair of ready-to-wear shoes? We investigate why.
Burleigh Review: The Saviour of Tissue Transfer
Burleigh isn't just a pottery; it's a survivor.
Moorcroft Review: Art Pottery in an Industrial Age
Moorcroft doesn't make dinnerware; they make art.
Emma Bridgewater Review: The Modern Matriarch of Stoke
How a search for a birthday present turned into a £30M pottery empire.
1882 Ltd Review: Design-Led Disruption
Bone china was boring. Then Emily Johnson came along.
Dartington Crystal Review: The Last Crystal Factory
We visit Torrington in Devon to see the last major crystal factory in the UK.
Cumbria Crystal Review: Bond's Glassmaker
If you've seen James Bond sip whisky in Casino Royale, you've seen Cumbria Crystal.
Ettinger Review: The Royal Wallet
If Prince Charles needs a wallet, he calls Ettinger.
Tusting Review: From Tanning to Bags
Tusting started as a tannery in 1875. Today, they make the bags for Aston Martin.
Swaine Review: The Indiana Jones Connection
They made Bond's briefcase and Indiana Jones's hat.
Leather Satchel Co Review: The Customizable Classic
Want a neon pink satchel with your name on it for under £150?
Private White V.C. Review: Factory to Closet
Can a factory become a luxury brand? Private White V.C. did.
Kent Brushes Review: The World's Oldest Brushmaker
Founded in 1777, Kent Brushes holds the longest continuous Royal Warrant.
Hillbrush Review: Royals and Street Sweepers
From sweeping Buckingham Palace to cleaning British streets.
James Smith & Sons Review: The Cathedral of Umbrellas
It is the most famous umbrella shop in the world.
Fox Umbrellas Review: The Rolls Royce of Rain
If James Smith is the retailer, Fox is the manufacturer.
Mathmos Review: The Original Lava Lamp
The 1960s icon is still made in Poole, Dorset.
Fears Watches Review: The Bristol Revival
How a 20-something revived his family's dead watch brand.
Vertex Review: The Dirty Dozen Reborn
One of the original 12 manufacturers for the British Army in WWII.
Garrick Review: The Norfolk Watchmaker
Dave Brailsford is building watches in Norfolk that rival the Swiss masters.
Pinion Review: Bronze Age
Piers Berry builds watches in Oxfordshire that look like they were dredged from a shipwreck.
Deakin & Francis Review: Kings of Cufflinks
Did you know the popping eye skull cufflinks seen in Kingsman were made in Birmingham?
Broadway & Co Review: The Last Silver Brush
In a small workshop in Birmingham, they still make silver hairbrushes by hand.
Titchmarsh & Goodwin Review: The Real Antiques of the Future
Since 1920, they have been making furniture in Ipswich that is indistinguishable from originals.
Ercol Review: Mid-Century Modern, Made in Bucks
Lucian Ercolani founded it in 1920 to make good design accessible.
Conway Stewart Review: The Churchill Pen
Winston Churchill used one. We review the revived British pen brand.