Silversmith, the Second Family Line
Hart Gold & Silversmiths, Chipping Campden
Asked in to help with a busy order book in 1994. He never left.
It is easy, walking into the workshop, to read it as a story of two men - David and his son William, the third generation and the fourth. But there is a second Hart in the room. Julian Hart is David's nephew and William's cousin, the son of David's brother Basil, and he has worked at the bench since 1994.
The family line, in other words, does not run in a single thread. It branches. David carries it forward through his son; his brother's son carries it forward alongside. Two of the men raising silver in the Old Silk Mill are the grandsons and great-grandsons of the guildsmen who came to Chipping Campden with Ashbee in 1902, by two different routes into the same room.
Julian did not set out to be a silversmith. He was born in 1976 and spent two years at college studying motor-vehicle engineering - a trade about combustion and tolerances and steel, not about raising a bowl from a flat disc of silver. In 1994, eighteen years old and between things, looking for a job, he was asked by David to come and help out for a while: the workshop was busy, the order book full, and an extra pair of hands was wanted.
The temporary help became a career. He learned the trade at the bench, the way the Harts always have, and the few weeks turned into more than thirty years. It is one of the quieter ways a craft survives - not only the chosen inheritor who turns back to it, but the relative who comes in to lend a hand and finds the work will not let him go.
He works a few feet from his uncle, on the same kind of bench, to the same patterns. In the photographs he is bent over a small silver piece, David watching from behind - the older generation's eye on the younger's hands, a habit of the room that has run through every pairing it has held. The engineering is not wasted on the silver, either: a feel for metal, for tolerance and finish, transfers across the gap between an engine and a chalice more readily than you might think.
Bearded, his hair in a top-knot, in a checked work shirt, Julian sat for a single frame against the workshop's hanging tools. He is the most modern-looking man in the room and the one whose presence is easiest to overlook in the family story, which is exactly why the archive made the portrait: the line is wider than the headline of father and son, and the record should show it.
This is the archive's first record of Julian Hart, made on a working morning in May 2026. The second family line, the route in from motor-vehicle engineering, and the long temporary job that became a life at the bench are all part of how the last working workshop of the Guild of Handicraft has kept going. Alongside David, William and Derek Elliott, his is a name the archive expects to return to.