Monday, July 20, 2015

Making a workroom into a studio

It started last year.  I was treating my work room like a junk room.  It was a mess.  Fabric was everywhere -- mostly not on the shelves that took up a very large portion of the room.  It was hard to move around and finding a given thing that I wanted was a daunting task.

Just a portion of the disaster zone
I decided it had to be changed.

I determined that the first thing that had to happen was to change the existing shelving.  It held a lot, but in such a way that what it held was difficult to get to, and really took up too much space. The supporting uprights tended to block access and the corner layout blocked half of each of the only two walls with an expanse (the other two walls are taken up by windows (front wall) and closets).

After looking at a number of options, and being otherwise in the middle of making the house "all things Ikea" I decided on the Algot shelving system at Ikea.  One of the biggest attractions to me of this system was that shelving could go all the way across the wall, without supports sticking out into the room to hamper access.  A variety of shelf sizes and baskets and hooks was also attractive, allowing for flexibility of design -- both to start and down the road.

After a number of hours playing with the design, I came up with a design for a wall of shelves, and plans for moving some of the furniture in the room.

I also knew that there was no way that the existing stash of fabric would all fit on the new shelves -- nor did I really want it to.  Clearly, I was holding "someone else's stash."  Thus, as I emptied the old shelving I began the process of identifying "other peoples' stash."  I also decided that if I was going to do this thing, I was going to do it right.  Every piece of fabric was pulled out, measured, folded neatly and a hang tag pinned to the piece with as much detail as I could manage (width and length and what I knew or guessed of the fiber content), and determined to be either "yup, that's mine" or "nope, that's 'someone else's'."

Trust me, this is actually progress
Ultimately, I had over 7 of the large blue Ikea bags of "someone else's stash."  Selling that off at approximately $1 a yard paid for the new shelving, with some left over toward the new pieces for the living room as well. It took a while, but finally the room was ready to have the old shelving taken down.  The "keep" pile filled my cutting table, plus a couple more of the ubiquitous Ikea bags (one just of white linen!).  The old wooden shelves were taken down and the work began to install the Algot shelves.

It's a pretty simple procedure, on paper -- place a suspension rail (or in this case, three of them), and hang the uprights from it (them).  Using shelves to set the position of the uprights, screw them in place.

My most excellent husband -- climber of ladders and driller of holes.

The first four uprights in place

Finally, it was time to start putting on the shelves.  


Here it is with most of the shelves in place, but one more trip to Ikea was called for for more shelves to fill that space on the right. 

Oops, cut off the top shelves in this picture.

The shelves have been filled, my antique sewing machine placed and regular sewing table positioned. There's even a space for the full cutting table sized rotary mat to be stored -- the sewing table holds it firmly in place. 

Some table clearing yet to do 

Love the nice deep shelves on the right.  
A few more evenings of putting things away and setting things up, and here is my new work room studio.  It has already been a fantastic experience to walk in, get what I want, do what I need to do and leave without having to move everything three times to do it.

The view from the door. I can now place the cutting/ironing table in the middle of the room where I can walk around it.....





Or it can go against the wall between the windows when I want the floor space. That wall may yet receive a different treatment, but for now it holds a couple of shelves and a hang bar for items I like to have handy when I'm working on the table. 


Not quite all the yarn fits in that cedar chest... I'll have to work on that. 





Here's the whole wall of shelves. My  serger will sit on that antique sewing machine desk. With a few changes of the items on the bottom shelf I would be able to open that sewing machine, but I don't really need to right now. The fabric pretty much sorted by type and/or plan.  




 This is the main sewing wall.  The ceiling fan light doesn't give off much light (need to address that, for sure), but an Ott and a small LED lamp will boost illumination in this area. Yup, that's my warping board on the wall to the right.  Hanging on the hook is one of the large plastic rulers I have, the rest will go there too.
Lots of nooks for storage are in this layout. That's the travel case for my sewing machine hiding behind the swing out on the sewing table. 

So, now the bulk of my former work room/junk room is now a studio.  I look forward to producing lovely things from it.




There are still some things to be addressed, of course, Here's a view of the other end.

At the bottom of the picture are books which need new homes, but that may be waiting until the replacement of living room book cases (there will be more space when that is done).  Those three closet doors are hiding a bit of a mess (though the middle one is in pretty good shape).  They hold most of the embroidery, knitting and weaving supplies -- threads, needles, even my table loom. The right closet is shelves that need to be inventoried, weeded and some organization. Hanging from that hook are unfinished projects -- and perhaps I can let *some* of those totes go too.

To the far left of those closets is a built in desk which needs a good weed (it has been kind of the recipient of items I didn't know what to do with), especially since a laptop usually lives there, which may be replaced with a desktop.

There's a fair amount of stuff around the house to be brought up and integrated, but now that should be fairly easy.  There will be updates -- and in an effort to keep me focused on keeping it organized, occasional photos.






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