• Where Everything Beautiful Begins: A Conversation with Beekeeper Anna Knapp
    Jun 10 2025

    Welcome back to Things I Learned from My Mother from Arcadian Revival, a podcast grounded in slow living, seasonal beauty, and the art of creating a life connected to land, lineage, and meaning through the lens of home.


    In this episode, host Bethany Khan steps away from the tangible work of creating home to explore a more poetic kind of living. She’s joined by Anna Knapp, a neighbor and kindred spirit in Saratoga Springs. Anna is a beekeeper, mother, educator, and community leader whose life embodies what it means to live in tune with the seasons.


    From her early fascination with bees as a child in New Mexico to her thoughtful approach to building community and slowing down in upstate New York, Anna invites us into a world where tending becomes a form of beauty, perseverance, self-discovery, and meaning through connection.


    So settle in. Pour a cup of tea, perhaps sweetened with local honey, and join us as we journey into the world of bees and the quiet lessons they hold about home, care, and the sweetness found in the smallest and most nuanced ways of the world.

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    37 Min.
  • The Art of Craftsmanship, Community, and Leaving a Legacy
    Jun 6 2025

    Episode 6: "The Art of Craftsmanship, Community, and Leaving a Legacy" with Master Craftsman Chuck Donnelly
    Things I Learned From My Mother from Arcadian Revival

    In this episode, I sit down with master craftsman Chuck Donnelly, a man whose work speaks for itself and leaves a lasting impression. Over the span of his rich career, Chuck has not only touched hundreds of home with his craft, he has carved out a career that speaks of pride of the spaces he has built, but also the relationships that he left room to cultivate along the way.

    Together, we explore the parallels between project and path. Chuck shares stories that carry the grain of wisdom earned only through time, patience, and a deep reverence for doing things the right way, especially when no one is watching.

    We talk about the exquisite millwork Chuck created here at our home and for the Arcadian Revival studio, and share a few of our favorite details, deep-rooted inspirations, those details that might initially go unnoticed, but make a space feel like home. In this conversation, craft becomes more than output. Millwork becomes a language of thoughtfulness, connection, and place. As a designer, Chuck brought me to my own deep path of appreciating millwork through a lens that I will always wear, a to a niche passion of mine within the building arts.

    Come sit with us in the stillness of good conversation. This is the kind of episode that reminds us that the best things often take time, and the most beautiful places are built rich with intention.

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    37 Min.
  • Crafting Home with Cabinetmaker Justin Steinberger: On Kitchens, Nature, and the Art of Getting Things Done
    May 30 2025

    Episode Five – Crafting Home with Cabinetmaker Justin Steinberger: On Kitchens, Nature, and the Art of Getting Things Done


    Welcome back to Things I Learned From My Mother, a podcast by Arcadian Revival about creating home, cultivating community, and finding deeper connection to nature, our heritage, and to one another.


    In today’s episode, I’m joined by collaborator and friend Justin Steinberger, a cabinetmaker, father of six, devoted husband, and fellow dreamer rooted in the bucolic countryside of upstate New York. Justin not only helped design and build the kitchen in our home, but he’s someone who understands that true craftsmanship is about more than measurements and materials, it’s about listening closely to how people live.


    Our conversation moves from kitchen design into deeper territory: the balance between creative work and raising a family, the realities and rewards of small business ownership, and the quiet discipline it takes to keep showing up for both the big dreams and the daily to-dos. Justin shares his philosophy on cabinetry as a deeply personal expression of home, one that’s shaped not just by style or trend, but by the rhythms of everyday life.


    We talk about the power of place, especially the role that nature plays in shaping our work and our well-being. We reflect on what it means to step up to the plate, even when no one’s watching, and what it looks like to build a meaningful career doing something you believe in, one project at a time.


    We also look ahead at what’s next...some exciting collaborations we’re dreaming into being...and wrap up with a few thoughtful reflections from Justin on what homeowners should really know before diving into a kitchen or home design project, and how working so closely with people in their most intimate spaces has expanded his view of the world.


    This is an episode about craft, character, and connection. It’s about making space for beauty, for family, and for the kind of homes that feel as good as they look.


    If you’re craving that mix of inspiration and groundedness, pour a cup of something warm and join us.


    Follow along @arcadianrevival for more stories about slow living, seasonal design, and the art of building a life with care.

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    54 Min.
  • Creating Community | Lessons on Opening Our Home and Thinking Beyond Ourselves
    May 22 2025

    Episode 4: Creating Community – A Conversation on Opening Our Home and How Experience Shaped the Creation of a Special Community

    In this fourth episode of Things I Learned From My Mother, I’m once again joined by my mom, Dee Bowyer for a heartfelt conversation about what it means to create community.

    This episode centers around the legacy of the seasonal craft shows my mother hosted for decades, events that were not just about handmade goods, but about building a home-based business rooted in people, the environment, and shared experience.

    We reflect on how these gatherings, often timed with the start of the holiday season (especially the week leading up to Thanksgiving), became annual rituals for so many in our Ohio hometown.

    Hundreds would come through our doors over the years, not only to support local artisans and small businesses, but to feel part of something meaningful, warm, and connected. I wish I could bring you there now.

    We also explore how those early memories shaped the work I do now through Arcadian Revival, creating a sense of place, belonging, and intentional living here in Saratoga Springs, New York.

    From porch gatherings to pop up shops and workshops and the stories we share through this very podcast, community remains a cornerstone of everything we build.

    This episode is a reflection on how giving to community nourishes not only others but ourselves. It’s a story about humble beginnings, handmade treasures, and the significance of connection.

    We hope you’ll listen in as we trace the roots of what “creating community” has meant across generations, and how it continues to grow.

    Tune in wherever you listen to your podcasts, and remember to subscribe so you won’t miss what’s next.

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    27 Min.
  • Creating Home
    May 14 2025

    This episode is all about creating home.

    In this episode, my mom and I sit down to explore what it truly means to create home. We reflect on how design has been passed through generations in our family, not just as an aesthetic, but as a language of care, creativity, and continuity.


    From incorporating heirlooms that carry stories to embracing the rhythms of seasonal living, we talk about how the spaces we shape reflect the lives we lead.


    We also share design and styling tips for anyone starting from scratch, and how even the simplest decisions can turn a house into a home using what you have.


    One of the most thoughtful sentiments is from my mom talking about accepting change, and how the seasons allow us to embrace the mindset of an ever-evolving world.


    At its heart, this conversation is about designing with intention: making spaces that feel warm, lived-in, and welcoming. Home, after all, is less about perfection and more about meaning.

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    32 Min.
  • Living Heirlooms | Lessons Learned from the Garden
    May 7 2025

    Hi, I’m Bethany Bowyer Khan and this is Things I Learned from My Mother from Arcadian Revival, a podcast about creating home, community, and a deeper connection to nature and to one another.

    What does home feel like to you? Is there a scent, sound, or season that instantly transports you to a familiar place? Does it pull at a longing feeling for something warm, or inviting?

    For me home is a feeling…of love and acceptance, of empathy and understanding. It is a place of comfort and ease where we can feel inspired, can grow, and can be the best versions of ourselves. It is a place where lessons from the past help instill values for today. I connect to home through my own experiences of the smell of breakfast thoughtfully being made before I wake or the smell of the fresh summer air breezing through the windows of our century home filled with heirlooms and books where I grew up, I feel home through gardening, with my hands feeling the coolness of the earth between my fingers, of a hug, a shared glass of iced to after an afternoon of yard work, or the warmth of a familiar quilt wrapped around me while listening to a thunderstorm from the comfort of a porch swing on a summer evening. It’s the voices calling my name, laughter, dancing around our kitchen, reading stories at bedtime, and a million other things.

    At its core it’s about creating a place that is welcoming, while keeping in mind that it is a microcosm of the greater global community in which we live in and a just a piece of the larger natural world in which we call home.

    Here we’ll explore answers to this question through generational wisdom, shared perspectives, and from Mother Nature herself.

    Whether you’re here for something you learned from your mother (or father) or you’re a parent yourself or you’re just looking for that warm feeling from a guiding voice we hope you’ll find it here.

    This episode of Things I Learned from My Mother is rooted in the garden, but really, it’s about so much more.

    We sat down at the kitchen table to talk about how gardening has been a place of solace, restoration, and quiet discovery across generations. It’s where we’ve processed grief, reconnected with joy, and found our footing in seasons of change and growth.

    The episode, called 'Living Heirlooms | Lessons Learned from the Garden', opens with my mom and me reflecting on what we’ve learned while kneeling in the dirt together—and how planting became a way to keep going, a way of building home, and a quiet act of hope.

    These conversations, filmed around our kitchen table where we’ve sown seeds, arranged wreaths, made tea, told stories, played games, and shared meals, are where something shifts. The table holds more than just our hands—it holds memory, lineage, and the kind of truths that only come out when there’s a bloom in a vase and a kettle on the stove.

    If you’ve ever turned to your garden when you didn’t have the words, or if you grew up learning from someone who did, this episode is for you.

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    45 Min.
  • Fixing Up Old Buildings
    May 1 2025
    Things I Learned from My Mother from Arcadian RevivalEpisode 1 | Fixing Up Old BuildingsHosted by Bethany Bowyer Khan, Founder, Arcadian RevivalFeaturing Dee BowyerA welcomeIn our very first episode of Things I Learned from My Mother, we begin with how we hope this podcast makes you feel. Hi, I’m Bethany Bowyer Khan and this is Things I Learned from My Mother from Arcadian Revival, a podcast about creating home, community, and a deeper connection to nature and to one another. What does home feel like to you? Is there a scent, sound, or season that instantly transports you to a familiar place? Does it pull at a longing feeling for something warm, or inviting? For me home is a feeling…of love and acceptance, of empathy and understanding. It is a place of comfort and ease where we can feel inspired, can grow, and can be the best versions of ourselves. It is a place where lessons from the past help instill values for today. I connect to home through my own experiences of the smell of breakfast thoughtfully being made before I wake or the smell of the fresh summer air breezing through the windows of our century home filled with heirlooms and books where I grew up, I feel home through gardening, with my hands feeling the coolness of the earth between my fingers, of a hug, a shared glass of iced to after an afternoon of yard work, or the warmth of a familiar quilt wrapped around me while listening to a thunderstorm from the comfort of a porch swing on a summer evening. It’s the voices calling my name, laughter, dancing around our kitchen, reading stories at bedtime, and a million other things. At its core it’s about creating a place that is welcoming, while keeping in mind that it is a microcosm of the greater global community in which we live in and a just a piece of the larger natural world in which we call home. Here we’ll explore answers to this question through generational wisdom, shared perspectives, and from Mother Nature herself. Whether you’re here for something you learned from your mother (or father) or you’re a parent yourself or you’re just looking for that warm feeling from a guiding voice, we hope you’ll find it here. Fixing Up Old BuildingsToday I sit down with someone who shaped my creative vision and sense of place more than anyone else: my mother, Dee Bowyer.Together, we trace the throughlines of our lives that have been built, sometimes quite literally, around the act of fixing up old buildings. From family farmhouses to historic main streets, and from old architectural gems of the south to New York City landmarks, this conversation is rooted in the kind of slow, intentional desire to preserve and make better what lies before us that has shaped both of our lives.We explore how the act of touching and tending aging structures is about more than just aesthetics or preservation…it’s about respecting what came before, and leaving things a little better than you found them. Whether you’re a lover of historic homes, a DIY renovator, a mother-daughter duo with a shared vision, or someone who believes in the quiet revolution of place-making, there is something for you in this episode.We’ll share stories of growing up in a multigenerational farmhouse and learning renovation lessons by trial and error, peeling back layers of newer construction and family heirlooms, community work that intersects with architecture, place, and dignity, the unspoken values passed from one generation to the next about care, craftsmanship, and resilience, and how we both learned, in our own ways, to trust our instincts.We hope this episode ignites a passion toward the power in restoration, not just of places, but of relationships, rhythms, and our own sense of purpose.Keywords for search & SEO:historic home renovation, women fixing up old homes, mother-daughter renovation team, sustainable home restoration, farmhouse living, old house podcast, DIY restoration, historic preservation, Arcadian Revival podcast, Bethany Bowyer Khan, Dee Bowyer, Things I Learned from My Mother, creative home design, rural revival, fixing up farmhouses, old building restoration, community development and design, generational wisdom, multigenerational home⸻Podcast Art NoteThe cover image for this episode was inspired by the botanical illustrations of a 19th-century Tennyson book cover found in the attic of our family’s farmhouse inscribed by one of my ancestors, a worn but beautiful piece of our story that felt just right for our beginning.⸻Produced by: Arcadian Revival in conjunction with Mary Laniewski @scout.ml⸻Follow and SubscribeStay connected with Arcadian Revival and Things I Learned from My Mother across platforms:Instagram: @arcadianrevivalSubstack: The Arcadian RevivalistWebsite: www.arcadianrevival.comYouTube: Arcadian Revival on YouTubePinterest: Arcadian RevivalTikTok: @arcadianrevivalLinkedIn: Arcadian Revival on LinkedIn and Bethany Bowyer Khan on LinkedInSubscribe and share if you...
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    40 Min.