-
Website
http://carrieanddanielle.com -
Original page
http://carrieanddanielle.com/what-would-improve-your-work-space/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Linda Borland-Fitzgerald
252 comments · 1 points
-
Rick_Juliusson
64 comments · 1 points
-
Lori_from_Texas
53 comments · 1 points
-
MoJo
204 comments · 1 points
-
alligator_kate
133 comments · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
In the longer term: a large studio space where I can stretch myself and welcome others, wood floors, white walls, big windows, great sound system, an extensive music collection, shelves of art supplies, a tickle trunk of costumes, love and creative energy.
BUSY BEING BRILLIANT. KINDLY PISS OFF.
I don't know what it is about my need for privacy that makes my husband call me for something URGENT - YEAH RIGHT! - or knock on the door - anything it seems to get my attention and
piss me off.
These are all elements I need in my studio since my space has only one window and I am not a friend of cold dark winters. Two items I dream of owning for my space is the Eames lounge chair in brown leather with ottoman of course and the Lux table lamp designed by Alberto Meda and Paolo Rizzatto for Luceplan.
Actually I like my workspace. It's cozy and I have it well organized. I have my Paris posters and my Chinese calendar in addition to the other "spiritual" objects that are meaningful to me only. Classical music in the background and hi-tech task lighting that is energy efficient and goes off at noght when I leave. I also have a silk potted olive miniature tree... behind ther monitors. I have to admit, I can always use a bit more bookshelf space... But, it's ok. Perhaps I need to purge more often... lollollol
Cécile
a) actually do my filing and get it out of my sight
b) take out all personal items and only put back a few, well-curated pieces
c) get rid of supplies that don't fit in my space and put them in the supply closet. sure i'll have to go fetch them when i need them, but i won't feel so cramped in, and i'll save all that time that i am spending restacking them when i knock them over.
..
Fantasy workspace makeover: my hobby is photography, and i'd love to have a little gallery show in my cubicle. i'd take all the random stuff off the walls, and just put up maybe 10 8x10 prints in a series.
Cécile
As for me, I would like to be respected as the professional adult I am. I have a boss at the moment who insists on treating our professional staff as if we are children.
I recently jumped ship from the corporate world to a small management consulting business - I LOVE the work, and the woman I work with, and the home-based office is perfect (even down the the HM Aeron chair I'm sitting in!), but I didn't realize until now how much I would miss the little human distractions that so often annoyed me in a big office.
Perhaps that explains why I'm on this site instead of diligently working away at the moment ;-) Live 'n learn...
My home work space is miniscule for all the things I use it for. I have my laptop and scanner there, with all my office supply stuff. Then there's my sewing machine and materials, which have been exiled to my closet, because my desk is 2'x2'. I don't have enough room to be creative. If I want to sew, I have to drag out everything to my utterly unused dining room table, which is definitely not good for sewing on!
I would benefit the most by getting a long desk/table to create a multifunctional space for my laptop and scanner, and my sewing stuff. Now to find space! Perhaps it's time to sell the dining room table....
You are missing the most importamt part of your improvement plan: the dragon!!! lollollol :-)
Cécile
But for now... I think my office could use a few inspiring pictures.
thanks for the inspiration
For now: Clean/toss/reorganize paperwork and art supplies. Buy bulletin boards and a shelf for over the desk. Little boxes from Ikea for all the little odds and ends. Workable filing system.
Also, a plant and a creativity totem for my desk. I'm not sure what I'm looking for yet, but I'll know it when I see it.
In the future: Someday I would LOVE to have a whole room for a library/studio. Two walls with floor to ceiling bookshelves (with a ladder!). Skylights and huge windows, looking out into leafy trees. A white leather Eames lounge chair (man looks like everyone dreams of one of these!). A large farmhouse-style table for writing and art-making. A vintage typewriter. Millions of canvases and a whole wall of bulletin boards for a massive, constantly-shifting inspiration and story board.
mmmyes.
http://inspiredology.com/inspiring-work-environ...
The world hasn't always been safe for me, and my psyche has built an elaborate defensive fortress around some major traumas (on top of being taught not to trust my Self), resulting in a PAINFUL artistic block that has lasted for 8 years. With therapy and the help of my True Self, I am overcoming! Still, small, young parts of me can be terrified of speaking (of telling their truth, in any way), and a creativity token is whatever symbol or object that I decide will help me with this.
I have to share a portion of one interview from a current project I'm writing on female entrepreneurs (for a college alumni magazine): This alumna, Jill Rossi, began her own interior design firm in 2002. On her website (www.jillrossi.com) she writes, "The spaces we inhabit and the objects with which we surround ourselves have a direct impact on our emotional well-being. By creating positive, nurturing environments these places can serve as constant wellsprings of positive experience in our lives."
Something Jill said during our interview that struck a chord with me is that "One of my biggest pet peeves is lifestyle magazines. People subscribe to a lifestyle and then go through as a checklist, getting items without putting thought into what their bringing into their lives." Not that magazines aren't a great source of inspiration, but we shouldn't be content to reproduce someone else's vision without injecting our own. "Cultivate a lifestyle that nurtures you. YOU can create your own lifestyle that's reflective of you, not a marketing agency."
Jill provides staging services for people selling homes. (Where less is always more, and clutter-free is key.) When she was having part of her own home renovated, she packed everything away in that room -- every picture, every nicknack. Afterward, she said, "We moved the furniture back but no things. It was wonderful. Peaceful." She said sometimes that removing everything, even if only temporarily, can help neutralize a room and give you a new perspective (and you can put more thought into what goes back).
You'll thank me for it.
I need a twice a week cleaner - that is affordable. Any help on that front would be greatly appreciated.