Over the last dozen years I have sold tons of furniture through my web site... or more realistically, I have started the conversation with the customer through the web site. A color brochure is very expensive, but necessary if you are going to work through decorators - they need to have something in hand to take to their customers, not a laptop with a link to your site. The web is international, but it is also local, so shipping is not a primary concern.
If you are not going to be able to get gallery space, you might want to change your style slightly. On close examination, your furniture looks like it is probably well made and very nice, but it doesn't jump at you from the picture as something you "must have." That, to me, means premium wood and classical finishes. I rarely use stain, as you appear to have, to add character to your wood. Your pictures didn't say "buy me."
As Leo points out, custom work by a solo woodworker is a tough business. You may love being the craftsman, but you are also the janitor, the repairman, the sharpening expert, the salesman, and the marketing person. Not much time left for woodworking. When I retired 12 years ago, I wanted a job that kept me away from the golf course. I have a very fancy shop, all paid for by my sales. I have made a profit every year. But I could not live in the style I have become accustomed to (from my pre-retirement jobs) from my woodworking income. But I am successful in that the golf courses are safe from me.