For London makers

A booking tool that’s yours to keep.

Free to use, quick to set up, and yours from the first booking. When you want to reach new people, the marketplace goes and finds them — the one time we take a small cut.

Sign up as a hostHow it works
Private first

Start private. Open up when you’re ready.

Share your booking link with your people. Nettle handles the reminders, the payments and the no-shows — you keep every booking and every guest. The marketplace is there when you want it, not a toll you have to pay.

0%

Your own link

Guests you bring, booked through your private link. We take nothing.

12%

Marketplace discovery

A new guest found through Nettle. The 12% only ever touches business you wouldn’t have had.

How the money works

Plainly.

Free to list
No monthly fee, no setup cost, no limit on how many sessions you run.
0% on your guests
Keep every penny, less Stripe's card fee. That's the only deduction.
12% on discovery
Only on bookings the marketplace brings you. Your regulars stay free, always.

Guests pay in full when they book. You’re paid out around 24 hours after each session — once you know everyone turned up.

Who it’s for

Small, skilled, hands-on.

If you teach or host something in a small group and want it to run without the admin, you’re who we’re looking for.

Pottery at the wheelJewellery makingForaging walksFlower workshopsAllotment hoursWhittlingBookbindingNatural dyeingLife drawingTalks worth crossing town for…or something hands-on we’ve missed

Every host is met and approved before they list. The seal says so.

Joining

Four steps, no rush.

1

Tell us what you make

A short note about your sessions — what you host and where.

2

A conversation

We talk it through together. No pressure, no hard sell.

3

Set up your sessions

We help you list your first few and connect payments through Stripe.

4

Share your link

Send it to your guests and take bookings the same week.

Why Nettle

One plant, or many?

Stinging nettle spreads by rhizome — a root system that creeps sideways underground. A patch that looks like dozens of separate plants is very often one organism, connected below.

That’s the shape of this: independent makers, each tending their own patch, quietly connected by the network below.

Get started

We’re starting with just a handful of London makers.

If that’s you, say hello. We read every note.

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