Studio One     Office

This area was originally plumbed to be a bathroom, but my husband finished it as a cedar-lined closet instead. The top shelf is where I store larger finished pieces. This closet also holds embellishment yarns, unfinished projects and different types of material.

In the late 1980s, my in-laws moved into a house in Horace, Kansas. They found this antique spool cabinet in a broken down chicken coop in the back yard. My husband restored the cabinet, taking out the spool pegs, replacing the brass handles and preserving the glass fronts on the drawers. Additional storage is behind the doors and two additional drawers are at the bottom.

I do my rotary cutting on the top surface and store additional cutting mats between the cabinet and the wall.

I didn't realize my cat was walking in front of the camera, so Katya managed to get into the picture.

The dresser was purchased in 1988 at an Oklahoma auction, when a museum closed its doors. This dresser was restored by my husband and the drawers hold smaller finished projects.

The wooden box sitting on the top is a tool chest that once belonged to my grandfather, Joseph Rumoshosky. My husband restored it, lining the drawers with billiard table felt. On the inside of the lid he attached a metal plaque that says "J. Rumoshosky". It also came from my grandfather and was given to me because I was the only other J in the family. I store my embellishment beads in this chest.

Studio One     Office