The Craft with May Globus

Interior designer and co-host of Netflix show Restaurants on the Edge, Karin Bohn is one of those people you can’t take your eyes off, her presence and energy is that magnetic. 

Her design studio House of Bohn has won numerous awards since opening in 2009, with her team working on residential and commercial projects across North America. She’s also built a legion of global followers who view her Youtube and Instagram content on entrepreneurship, travel, and design. 

She also happens to be one of the most intentional and reflective humans you’ll come across.

In this conversation, we explore her idyllic childhood in Dawson Creek, the greatest lesson her late father passed onto her and the strength of her mother, the long tenacious path to landing her Netflix show, what it takes to be an entrepreneur, the arrival fallacy, and more.

Show Notes

Interior designer and co-host of Netflix show Restaurants on the Edge, Karin Bohn is one of those people you can’t take your eyes off, her presence and energy is that magnetic. 

Her design studio House of Bohn has won numerous awards since opening in 2009, with her team working on residential and commercial projects across North America. She’s also built a legion of global followers who view her Youtube and Instagram content on entrepreneurship, travel, and design. 

She also happens to be one of the most intentional and reflective humans you’ll come across. 

In this conversation, we explore her idyllic childhood in Dawson Creek, the greatest lesson her late father passed onto her and the strength of her mother, the long tenacious path to landing her Netflix show, what it takes to be an entrepreneur, the arrival fallacy, and more.

What is The Craft with May Globus?

The Craft is an audio-visual collection of intimate conversations with creatives, entrepreneurs, and pioneers across disciplines. Each episode weaves through their personal backstory, creative process, and way of living—an exploration of the humanity that connects us all.

Alongside the conversations, the show’s visual storytelling—through editorial-style photography—offers another way in. Like a modern-day magazine editorial, each image is a quiet window into the spirit of the guest and the world they’re shaping.