BLOOMINGDALE Brian Uhr is a cabinetmaker whose work keeps flirting with fame. In addition to some very high-end Manhattan apartments and business, his work can be seen in Carmela’s kitchen on the HBO series “The Sopranos.” This Saturday you can see him at work on The Learning Channel’s “Moving Up” program. “Moving Up” is one of the generation of renovation/reality shows in which people who have purchased an existing house do renovations to it, then invite the sellers back to take a look at what happened to their former home. Like many of the home make-over shows, it’s all about the reaction. Uhr got involved with the show when the producers contacted his business Anything’s Possible in Bloomingdale and asked if he was interested in participating. At first, Brian was reluctant, but Kate, his wife of 14 years, talked him into it. It was a good fit, because the assignment was pretty unusual. “People can go to Home Depot and do a lot of work themselves, but weird little spaces or really unique ideas that’s where I come in,” he said. He had to create an Indian-style, low-to-the-ground modular seating area in a condo in Prospect Park. He has no idea what the reaction during the big reveal will be. He’ll be watching along with everyone else tomorrow night. Uhr, who is 42, has been building custom cabinets and fine furniture since 1989. He designs most of what he builds, usually in conjunction with the client, “We make customer’s vision a reality.” Born in Scotland, Uhr moved to the states when he was a child. He didn’t care much for academics and spend his time in shop classes. He worked in Hawaii for a boat builder from New Zealand and started his own business on Long Island a few years later. His work is in enough demand that he has been hired to travel to Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Virginia and even Florida for jobs. Uhr’s newest projects come out of a joint venture with another cabinetmaker on the West Coast. They have been collaborating on wine caves the newest trend for wine connoisseurs wealthy enough to pay for custom-built digs for their collections. He recently built one in Kennelon that was modeled after a Napa Valley winery. Brian and Kate live in West Milford with their two sons, aged 9 and 7.