Thanks to Karen Valentine at My Desert Cottage for this wonderful gathering of studio artists.
My South Dakota prairie home seems like it is at the edge of the world sometimes, but thanks to her tour I am thrilled to share my studio with you. It is used for quilting, antique display, genealogy, linens and lace.
It consists of two large 18 x 20 foot rooms which adjoin my mother's apartment in the second floor of the Art & Antique Gallery.
My South Dakota prairie home seems like it is at the edge of the world sometimes, but thanks to her tour I am thrilled to share my studio with you. It is used for quilting, antique display, genealogy, linens and lace.
It consists of two large 18 x 20 foot rooms which adjoin my mother's apartment in the second floor of the Art & Antique Gallery.
The second room of my upstairs studio contains at least 15 suitcases filled with jewelry, patterns, crocheted lace, linens, vintage clothing, and sewing tools.
My desk holds family history and photos. My filing cabinet with its freshly decoupaged finish holds notebooks and binders and writing supplies.
The Victorian dress form extends to full height for the floor length dresses that were the custom of the day. The body shape is most unnatural and assumed that a strong corset was the foundation of every garment.
My little work table is another base cabinet on wheels with a salvaged piece of blackboard slate for the top. It seems there can never be enough horizontal surface in a studio but it is a struggle to keep it cleared off.
My generic to-do list--game pieces glued to magnets on a metal cookie sheet. |
A lady's train case that happens to have my mother's initials stamped on the worn exterior has become my jewel case. Here's the top layer, compacts, broaches, etc. |
The bottom compartment of the jewel case with four trays full. I sew pillow cases out of knit fabric for metal lunch trays to hold the jewelry. |