The Red List of Endangered Crafts is an inventory of traditional crafts and trades practiced in the UK that are at risk of dying out in the succeeding generation. The original Red List, which took two years to compile,[1] was first published by Heritage Crafts on 3 May 2017 with financial support from the Radcliffe Trust.[2] The inventory evaluated 169 crafts[3] and all are graded along the model of animal species at risk, using categories: least concern, endangered, critically endangered, near-extinct and extinct.[4]
The second edition of the Red List was published on 9 March 2019, with 212 crafts evaluated; the critically endangered list increased to 36 crafts. 102 crafts were classified as currently viable.[5][6]
The third edition of the Red List was published on 24 May 2021, with 244 crafts evaluated; the critically endangered list increased to 56 crafts. 110 crafts were classified as currently viable.[7][8]
Research for the fourth edition of the Red List began in September 2022, with financial support from the Pilgrim Trust, and was released on 11 May 2023. This edition evaluated 259 crafts and added a further 17 skills to the list including straw hat making and encaustic tile making.[9][10]