I know we spend our lives focused on art fairs, presenting our product, production, development of image, and the like, but I have a serious question for you. Is your studio space in your home, or outside of it?
Our studio space was half of the basement, but as our business has grown we find that half the house is being engulfed.... and it gets stressful to just find a quiet place away from the action..... So we have begun to consider a studio outside of our home. Im just curious how everyone else copes with this dilema.
Comments
Jacki Bilsborrow, I do love my studio, here on the Eastern Shore of VA, where it is indeed very quiet. I'll take a photo inside later today! It's even more of a mess than usual, as I am leaving on a painting trip on Saturday. Read about that here: http://www.jacobson-arts.com/#!the-origins-pa...... very exciting!!!
My studio is in my basement and really too small. and dark. and cold. We are now in the process of selling our house and moving somewhere when we can have an ideal studio. I really cant wait!
Oh my goodness, some of you have fantastic studios. Carrie, yours looks adorable. It looks like it is in a peaceful spot. Richard, I guess I shouldn't be surprised at your work space. After all, you are working on huge things. But, wow, do you have the supplies!. Karen, your studio is just so stinkin adorable. Lucky you! Dusty and Becky, are you two sure you are artists? LOL, those are incredibly neat and tidy work areas for an artists. Very cute areas. When I am working on a project my whole house looks like a tornado blew through it. I don't know why I have to be such a pig!
Oh, I love seeing the photos of your studio spaces...I'm so envious. I don't really need a studio but I'd enjoy having one just the same...a room of one's own, as Virgina Woolf put it, I think it's just great, thanks for sharing.
I am currently building my studio to fit two watercolor drafting tables, 2 computers and 4 or 4 printer, a mat cutting station and a frame building area and a staging area for shows. so would appreciate any ideas of what to do and what not to do.
My first "workshop" was a 2x4 ft drafting table in an extra bedroom. My kids had already left home, so I didn't need the third bedroom. As the family grew and came for weekend visits, I began to need the third bedroom again. So my workshop moved upstairs to a corner of the computer loft. I have an old computer desk that wraps around a corner. That is now my worktable. I have a couple of short rolling carts that hold most of my supplies, one cart at each end of my table. My husband put a pegboard on the wall above one side of my table, and I hang my larger tools on that. I like having my workshop in the house so I can interact with the family and work, too.