There's More to See in this Great Sewing Studio

The former guest house that Katrina uses as a studio has almost too much window space! There are 5 sets of sliding glass doors and skylights. All the natural light is a boon, however, for an artist who works so much with color.
Katrinas farm, Rose Butte Ranch, has dogs, horses, goats, and lovely sheep to help supply her fiber arts projects. To read and see more about her animals, check out the blog at RoseButteRanch.Tumblr.com.
 
Katrina says shes more prone to perch than to sit down to sew. Her studio layout is designed to group tasks, such as sewing or cutting, to particular areas.
Rose Butte Ranch has three guardian Great Pyrenees to watchover Katrinas sheep and goats.
Katrina loves to store fabric on rolls, as well as to store items vertically. She picked up this roller rack system from a going-out-of-business fabric store, but it was a number of years before she had a studio large enough to use it.
Katrina Walkers sewing studio was originally  planned as a guest house - with a sauna!
The studio has a sleeping loft area, which Katrina now uses for storage.
At lower left, the little red-haired mermaid that is one of Katrinas favorite items in her studio. In the frame, the catalog from a Japanese fiber arts exhibition.
An old pattern cabinet stores - you guessed it - patterns! All of the artists included in our sewing studios story mentioned great storage finds from former fabric stores.
Katrina spins and dyes fibers from her sheep. She has a knitting machine in her studio.
The former guest house that Katrina uses as a studio has almost too much window space! There are 5 sets of sliding glass doors and skylights. All the natural light is a boon, however, for an artist who works so much with color.

The former guest house that Katrina uses as a studio has almost too much window space! There are 5 sets of sliding glass doors and skylights. All the natural light is a boon, however, for an artist who works so much with color.

Photo: Samantha Cabrera

It's the simplest system and makes it easiest for me to find a particular color using my thread charts. Pegboard hooks designed to hold various tools easily adapt to hanging scissors and various other tools. I keep my needles and presser feet in small pegboard bins and jars. My button collection is housed in nut and bolt organizers. So many drawers! They are easy to hang on the wall and inexpensive as well.

If you can't put it on the wall and must use a drawer or bin – label it. My family teases me about this, but I find that labeling drawers, etc. makes sure that I can find what I'm looking for and, just as importantly, I can put it back where it belongs. It's also helpful when I am working with a student in my studio; they can find tools much easier. Under every countertop and table is the potential for more storage. I have a bookcase tucked under my sewing workbench. It's shallow enough that I still have enough room for my foot pedal. I sit at, rather than under, my bench, so this works well for me.

For fabric storage, I prefer to use clear bins so I can see what's inside. And yes, I label them! I sort my fabric according to fiber primarily – silk, wool, cotton, etc. and then by fabric type – sheers, satins, crepes, suit weight, coating weight, knit, etc. In talking with friends I find that fabric organization is a very personal thing. Everyone has a different system. The only thing that matters is that it works for you.

As for studio décor: To paraphrase William Morris – do not have anything in your studio you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful – or find amusing, in my case. The ideal studio space is one that inspires as well as empowers your work. I prefer to hang some of my favorite textiles on the wall where I can see them rather than just store them away. They may never see a pair of shears – and that's okay, because they inspire me every day.

I love having my threads and other tools on display; it makes me want to use them. Other items, such as my little red stuffed mermaid provide no useful function whatsoever, but they make me smile and that lowers stress and makes me enjoy my workspace – which actually is pretty darn useful after all.

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smcfarland Sarah McFarland, contributor
Posted on Jan 19th, 2012 in sewing, online extras, sewing studios, studio spaces

Comments (7)

sewalot128 sewalot128 writes: I loved reading about the three different sewing studios and all the wonderful ideas. I do craft shows and have accumulated enough fabric over the years to have my own fabric shop. Before crafting, I made all my own clothes and some for friends and family. It was easy to contain all my supplies in a little toy chest. Those were the days! I now have a small bedroom as my sewing room. It is cheery and bright with good lighting thanks to the Ottlite company. On the plus side, my sewing machine and serger are well positioned and there are some good storage units. However, there are some drawbacks. I would love to store my supplies together, even in another area, instead of all over the house, plus I wish there were enough space in the room to open up my cutting table to its fullest and to keep my new (and heavy) steam iron system up all the time. Still, I do keep my creative juices flowing, and that is important.
Posted: 4:50 pm on February 11th

lynnche lynnche writes: One of the requirements when we were looking for a house several years ago was that I have a designated sewing space, out of the "public" areas. What we bought has a half-basement, half-crawlspace. My sewing room is the basement part, and the crawlspace(where furnace and water heater are) is used for storing all that Christmas/Easter/Halloween stuff,is separated by a moveable wall. We have 2 8'"church hall" tables in there, at right angles, where my machines are. We got kitchen base cabinets from Home Depot; 4 regular (2 drawers on top with doors underneath) and 2 drawer-only cabinets. In the regular ones I store rolls and/or bolts of stabilizer, freezer paper, pattern paper, etc. A drawer on each side(top center) holds pins, 6" rulers, scissors,etc., and other drawers hold zippers, tapes, snaps,knitting needles,etc. The bottom 2 drawers on one side are for my granddaughter's art supplies. We positioned them regular-drawer-regular, then did the other set back-to-back, and screwed all together, so it is a 4'x8' cutting table on top, which we covered with Pergo.The pins and scissors can't damage it :-) I have many shelf units and arranged them galley-style on one end, which holds fabric and creates a room divider of sorts. A couple of bookshelf units that my husband built for our daughter and her college roommate are now re-purposed as mine, and they back up to the row of shelves, also as part of the room divider. We have bought a pegboard sheet for some of my notions(those not residing in their designated drawers), just have to get it hung up yet. I have several shop-lights around(with the true-color bulbs), and some of those desk-lamps. There is a television on a high shelf within my line of sight when the quiet gets to me, and also a stereo, so I don't feel like I'm being banished to the dungeon :-)We found some button racks (4 small, one that is a floor model and spins)at a sewing store that was throwing them out. I bought an old upright pattern cabinet about 25 years ago from a store that was closing; one of the best $25 bucks I've ever spent! I have a couple of small windows but would really like more natural light(the hazard of being in the basement, I know).
Posted: 10:18 am on January 31st

RevDi RevDi writes: Besides the normal wish for more space, my ideal sewing room would have lots of daylight, room for storage, space to keep my embroidery, serger, and sewing machines out all the time, and most importantly, lots of flat surfaces for laying out fabric, cutting, and pressing.

Right now I live in a very small house. I use a combination step stool/flip iron for most of my pressing, and part of the dining table for rotary cutting. I really have nowhere to lay out anything bigger. My project boxes used to stow projects and fabrics share space with bookcases in a dimly lit area in what used to be a garage. I do have an Ott Lite I can move around as needed, but oh, how I'd love a larger space with flat surfaces!!
Posted: 1:50 am on January 27th

The_Playhouse The_Playhouse writes: I wish there was a better solution to putting a spot of light exactly where I need it. I am having more and more trouble working with dark thread on dark fabrics. Especially black on black on black which I can hardly see anymore even with my readers on. So I wear a head lamp (in addition to my readers), the kind you would wear while walking or working outdoors. Its not at all attractive but gets the job done. Sure I have the otto light, among others, but more things on the sewing deck don't make for a smooth operation. It would be really great if my readers had spot lights. Now that's an idea!
Posted: 10:19 am on January 25th

Sewing2enjoying Sewing2enjoying writes: When we renovated the entire upstairs turning it into the master suite, I took over the former master bedroom downstairs for my sewing work space. The only changes I might make are: more ceiling lighting as it is a large space and I use it all; a better area for my serger so that I would not have to be moving it for use. I have a long credenza I found at a resale shop that is perfect for sewing and has lots of storage including a couple file drawers for my books! I can only use one machine at a time as there is only one area for the chair so I have to exchange one machine for another. I think the ideal would be lifts that could move my machines down into the work table/desk for storage and it would be nice if it were in an L shape for me to move my chair just a little bit to use the other machine. My husband made me a large cutting table and I have many dressers for my stash and also a closet. I need to complete the painting of the room so I could utilize the vast wall space better. In fact, just writing this is encouraging me to complete the room and make it what I want! Thank you, Threads! I am pretty lucky but I can see that making some of these changes myself will help. Now maybe I could move things around a bit to utilize the good lighting I do have. Hmmmmmm.
Posted: 1:21 am on January 25th

Outdooranimal Outdooranimal writes: I would like washable covers for my cutting tables, and a husband that does not put his "stuff" all over the said covers. He brings in a lot of dirt with his "stuff". Vaccuum cleaner and lint roller at the ready. Not to mention the four footed pattern weight I use occassionally. She leaves bits of fur behind, that are vaccuum cleaner and lint roller friendly. She can easily leap onto the cutting tables, and observes her kingdom from there.
Posted: 11:50 pm on January 24th

kmegamom kmegamom writes: I love reading about others sewing studio's/spaces. I think it is really cool that you have sheep and you use their wool to weave and use in a knitting machine! I have a knitting machine, but don't have any space to have it set up right at the moment. My sewing room went from a somewhat small bedroom in our upstairs to a much smaller room downstairs (to save me from having to go up and down the stairs so often, to save my knees and back). I have much less wall space in my new space, so that has had a great impact, wall space is a great place for storing things! But in this room I do have a full lenngth (the full length of the room) size closet that has had the doors removed and my husband installed closet organizers to my liking and I use this space to store my clear fabric bins, my pattern boxes, my threads. This pas several years is the first time I have actually had a real room for sewing and it is a great privledge! Thank you for sharing your space with us.

Posted: 3:28 am on January 24th

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