Make it British Podcast
A podcast by Kate Hills
249 Episodio
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146 – LIVE: No Black Friday
Pubblicato: 01/12/2020 -
145 – Revisited: James Eden, Private White V.C.
Pubblicato: 24/11/2020 -
144 – Revisited: The Making of Make it British
Pubblicato: 17/11/2020 -
143 – Kath Whitworth, Celtic & Co
Pubblicato: 10/11/2020 -
142 – Julie Deane OBE, Cambridge Satchel Company
Pubblicato: 02/11/2020 -
141 – How to darn socks…and other ways to have a more sustainable wardrobe – Emma Mathews, Socko
Pubblicato: 27/10/2020 -
140 – Why UK manufacturing is more sustainable – Christopher Nieper OBE, David Nieper
Pubblicato: 20/10/2020 -
139 – Launching a luxury British childrenswear brand – Rachael Attwood, Britannical
Pubblicato: 13/10/2020 -
138 – You don’t have to be a b*tch to succeed in fashion with Elizabeth Stiles
Pubblicato: 06/10/2020 -
137 – Sketch Pad to Shopping Bag – The Future of Fashion Fulfilment
Pubblicato: 29/09/2020 -
136 – Working in retail as a textile designer – Davinder Madaher, Madaher
Pubblicato: 22/09/2020 -
135 – How to grow a business in difficult times – Hedley Putnam, Putnams
Pubblicato: 15/09/2020 -
134 – Should you move your manufacturing to the UK?
Pubblicato: 08/09/2020 -
133 – The future of trade shows
Pubblicato: 02/09/2020 -
132 – Can I label my product as ‘Made in the UK’?
Pubblicato: 25/08/2020 -
131 – Launching a drinks brand made in the UK – Jack Scott, Dash Water
Pubblicato: 17/08/2020 -
130 – Calculating cost per wear
Pubblicato: 11/08/2020 -
BONUS: How do we future-proof the UK textile industry?
Pubblicato: 05/08/2020 -
129 – Manufacturing on-demand in a micro knitwear factory – Samantha Brooke, Waring Brooke
Pubblicato: 04/08/2020 -
128 – Why reshoring is more cost-effective – Rob Law MBE, Trunki
Pubblicato: 30/07/2020
Kate Hills is on a one-woman mission to save UK manufacturing. In this podcast she shines the light on British brands and manufacturers, and goes behind the scenes of their businesses. With tips, hints and tricks to help you manufacture in the UK and buy British. Never has there been a more critical time to get behind 'made in Britain'.