36. Bespoke Furniture vs Scalable Design: Tim Noone’s Approach episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 18, 2026 · 35 MIN

36. Bespoke Furniture vs Scalable Design: Tim Noone’s Approach

from Behind The Design · host Camilla Ingall

From kitchen joinery to high-end design, this is what it takes to turn craft into a sustainable business.In this episode of Behind the Design Podcast, I sit down with furniture maker Tim Noone, founder of Tim Noone Furniture, to talk about his journey from kitchen joinery to creating high-end custom furniture. He shares the challenges of crafting beautiful pieces while keeping a business sustainable, and how he eventually realized the limits of purely bespoke work. That realization led him to develop a collection that sits between fully custom pieces and high-end retail.We also dive into Tim’s design philosophy and why he believes furniture should enhance a space rather than dominate it. He opens up about collaborating with interior designers, practicing restraint in design, and redefining what success really looks like after years in the industry.For Tim, it is less about scale and more about balancing creative satisfaction, family life, and long-term sustainability.Topics covered in this conversation:His journey from kitchen joinery to high-end bespoke furnitureThe challenges of running a creative business that lastsHow he overcame the growth limits of fully custom furnitureWhy furniture should support architecture and interiorsRedefining success for creativity, family, and sustainabilityIf you love design, craftsmanship, or want a peek behind the scenes of a creative business, this conversation is full of insight and inspiration.Follow Tim Noone Business Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/tim_noone_furnituredesign/:https://www.instagram.com/thecollectionbytimnoone/Business Website: https://timnoone.com/Chapters 01:16 - Meet Furniture Maker Tim Noone03:05 - From Kitchen Joinery to Bespoke Furniture06:12 - Why Furniture Should Serve the Space09:48 - The Sketching and Idea Development Process13:20 - Working with Interior Designers on Custom Pieces16:54 - The Realities of Running a Bespoke Furniture Business21:07 - Why Scaling Custom Furniture Is So Difficult25:32 - Moving from Bespoke Work to a Furniture Collection29:18 - Designing Pieces That Quietly Elevate a Room32:47 - Craft, Business, and Building a Sustainable Career34:58 - Craftsmanship and RefinementKeywordsJoinery processCustom furniture designResidential cabinetrySustainable furnitureInterior design collaborationCraftsmanship tipsKitchen design ideasAustralian joineryDesigner-client collaborationFurniture materials and finishes

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Mar 18, 2026

From kitchen joinery to high-end design, this is what it takes to turn craft into a sustainable business.In this episode of Behind the Design Podcast, I sit down with furniture maker Tim Noone, founder of Tim Noone Furniture, to talk about his journey from kitchen joinery to creating high-end custom furniture. He shares the challenges of crafting beautiful pieces while keeping a business sustainable, and how he eventually realized the limits of purely bespoke work. That realization led him to develop a collection that sits between fully custom pieces and high-end retail.We also dive into Tim’s design philosophy and why he believes furniture should enhance a space rather than dominate it. He opens up about collaborating with interior designers, practicing restraint in design, and redefining what success really looks like after years in the industry.For Tim, it is less about scale and more about balancing creative satisfaction, family life, and long-term sustainability.Topics covered in this conversation:His journey from kitchen joinery to high-end bespoke furnitureThe challenges of running a creative business that lastsHow he overcame the growth limits of fully custom furnitureWhy furniture should support architecture and interiorsRedefining success for creativity, family, and sustainabilityIf you love design, craftsmanship, or want a peek behind the scenes of a creative business, this conversation is full of insight and inspiration.Follow Tim Noone Business Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/tim_noone_furnituredesign/:https://www.instagram.com/thecollectionbytimnoone/Business Website: https://timnoone.com/Chapters 01:16 - Meet Furniture Maker Tim Noone03:05 - From Kitchen Joinery to Bespoke Furniture06:12 - Why Furniture Should Serve the Space09:48 - The Sketching and Idea Development Process13:20 - Working with Interior Designers on Custom Pieces16:54 - The Realities of Running a Bespoke Furniture Business21:07 - Why Scaling Custom Furniture Is So Difficult25:32 - Moving from Bespoke Work to a Furniture Collection29:18 - Designing Pieces That Quietly Elevate a Room32:47 - Craft, Business, and Building a Sustainable Career34:58 - Craftsmanship and RefinementKeywordsJoinery processCustom furniture designResidential cabinetrySustainable furnitureInterior design collaborationCraftsmanship tipsKitchen design ideasAustralian joineryDesigner-client collaborationFurniture materials and finishes

PodParley-generated summary based on available episode metadata and transcript content.

NOW PLAYING

36. Bespoke Furniture vs Scalable Design: Tim Noone’s Approach

0:00 35:17

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Behind The Design?

This episode is 35 minutes long.

When was this Behind The Design episode published?

This episode was published on March 18, 2026.

What is this episode about?

From kitchen joinery to high-end design, this is what it takes to turn craft into a sustainable business.In this episode of Behind the Design Podcast, I sit down with furniture maker Tim Noone, founder of Tim Noone Furniture, to talk about his...

Can I download this Behind The Design episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!