My Sewing Room

I am a total sticky beak when it comes to other people’s sewing spaces. If there is any opportunity to have a look at where other rad sewists perform fabric magic you can totally believe I am there for it. And given that El Husbando and I are on the hunt for a new house I thought I would take the opportunity to record my current sewing space.

I am super lucky to have my very own sewing room and it was a couple of years in the making. Prior to this space I was using the good ole’ dining table for my sewing wizardry but the constant set up and pack down was becoming a pain. After a big clean out of of stuff and reorganise of our house I totally stuck a flag in this room. It overlooks our backyard and gets lovely morning light.

When I first moved in the walls were purple and grey thanks to the previous homeowners. The walls were repainted a warm white (6 coats of paint!) and the ceiling was also freshened up as well. With a deep clean of the carpet it was like a new room.

The furniture is all from IKEA and I spent ages planning (and saving) for what I wanted. There are two tables for cutting down one side, one larger table with a filing cabinet for sewing on and two Billy bookcases for pattern, fabric and book storage.

Patterns are organised into A4 sized boxes (Dresses, Separates, Random Goodness, Tracings) which keeps a lid on my collection size and things neat and tidy. Notions and miscellaneous goodness as stored in CD boxes and my small sewing book collection is kept together.

My fabric stash is finally well under control and is even smaller than when this photo was taken. This is simply because too many pieces of fabric gave me sewing paralysis and I would also feel guilt about adding to my stash when I had other goodness I hadn’t sewn up. 20 pieces of fabric (not including lining) feels manageable and is working for me currently. And yes, I know I am a weirdo!

My sewing crew at home is all Janome. My starter machine, Violet, is an ancient Janome and is currently off for repair.  My current machine, Daisy, is a Janome MS5072LE and she is a mechanical workhorse. Marigold, my 90s Janome 543D overlocker, was a gift from my aunt and she works like a champ. My most recent purchase is a Janome 2000CPX is still in need of a name and finishes knits like a dream! Name suggestions are well and truly welcome!!!

Finally, to make my lady lair complete I have my knitting and boxes of comics stashed under the cutting tables. My journalling supplies are spread over one table and can easily be packed up when extra room is needed. The one thing missing from these photos are my awesome project baskets. These are simply mesh baskets I use to manage my projects and place everything needed in them – fabric, pattern, notions, M&Ms. For this uber-neat freak they have been awesome at getting my sewjo kicking.

So, there you go. My sewing room. It’s a total decadence to have and I totally love it. As we’re looking for a new house one of the criterion is a fab sewing space. I can’t wait to see where I end up next!

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Comments

  1. I know what you mean about having so much fabric it leads to paralysis! I’m experiencing a bit of that myself and I can seem to stop! I’m trying to set some of date for myself like, no more fabric or patterns until November 21, 2019. No so arbitrary as it might seem – my 65th birthday 🙂

    I don’t have a dedicated sewing room. I sew by the front window in our rather spacious living/dining room. My fabric is stashed all over the place however, including my husband’s room which makes me cringe with guilt. Looking at your photos of your very own sewing room and all that organization made me envious for sure. I love neatness and organization too which is why all this stuff is driving me a little crazy. I never realized when I returned to sewing almost 3 years ago now that it would involve so much stuff. When I started sewing in 1972 it didn’t seem to have so many bits to it as it does now. A few patterns, a machine, a couple of lengths of fabric and threads and off you go. At the moment I have 3 sewing machines, a serger and coverstitch and an unbelievable array of paraphernalia that threatens to swallow up all our living space! I can’t do much about the tools which are all necessary but I can definitely do something about all these patterns and fabric. I bought a beautiful set of architectural/engineering steel drawers last week to keep my TNT patterns in which is great but that had to sit in my office so now it’s creeping into my work space. (sigh) It’s a good thing I love it so much 🙂

    • Sewing paralysis is real!!! And wow – that is quite a fabric buying hiatus! I am beyond impressed 🙂

      Best of luck with your fabulous new drawer set up – they sound amazing! I love the idea of a TNT centre!

  2. I love seeing people’s sewing spaces too!!

    Your room is so neat and well organized! I’m a fabric and pattern junkie so that’s all downstairs and my small sewing room is upstairs.

  3. Versus. I vote for Versus. And thanks for the peek into your sewing lair! How geek am I? I tried to identify your fabric! (Is that Wonderland on your knitting bin?) I’m banishing myself to my sewing hinterland…

  4. I love your sewing room! It’s so well thought out. My biggest problem is how to store my interfacing without creasing it. Sometimes those creases don’t want to come out! How do you store your interfacing?

    • Thank you! I love the space so much! I snaffled one of the wooden tubes that the interfacing comes rolled on from my local fabric store (they had a bunch and were happy to offload one). I roll my firm interfacing around this and it stops all the creases! 😀

  5. I’m sorry , but your sewing room is not big enough for me
    I have a huge room under my house (Aussie style) combined with the laundry
    it’s about 16 feet long and wide. AND it’s still not big enough
    My son built me cupboards ( as I was sick of all the boxes around and the fabric I wanted was always in the bottom box ) 30 drawers and 33 shelves .
    It’s also taken up with 3 embroidery machines ( 1 a 6 needle) overlocker and a Quilting frame . I also have lots of fabric laying around from a friend – our Charity Quilts using her fabrics. With at the moment at least 20 quilts waiting to be Quilted. so no rest for me at the moment. Need to get them quilted this year so that I can start on some more. LOL

  6. Thanks for the look at your sewing room. It is very organized! Also I think a person should have as much fabric as they are comfortable with…not everyone is comfortable being surrounded by walls of fabric! *LOL* I hope you get an amazing sewing room in your new house!

    • I have everything crossed for an amazing new sewing room! This lady is on a quest for lots of natural light (and a great view would be awesome too!) 😀

  7. Thanks for sharing! I also love a sticky beak, being a total nosy parker. Your stash is admirable. I would like to sew down some of my stash because it’s honestly just a bit ridiculous – I think probably still smaller than some people’s but it’s too much for the way I sew, which is what matters.

    I also have a janome overlocker – a different model – and she’s a total workhorse. I love her. How about Lilypilly for the coverstitch? Or Ragged Blossom, from Cuddlepot and Snugglepie 😛

    Having a separate sewing room is such a luxury, I’m always so grateful to have one, but it just makes such a difference. Fingers crossed the next one is even better!

    • Also I meant to say, I’ve been doing the project baskets for about a year BUT I am obviously doing it backwards because I just collect everything once the project is begun. What this means is that I currently have three baskets with half finished projects in them that I am not excited about (they are all either fixes or things I’m sewing for someone else, not high motivation things) and then they get tucked away and I have to start a new basket… obviously I need better discipline!

    • On noes! That sounds like the less fun project basket scenario! Empty those suckers out and fill them with super rad projects for you 😀

      And how great are Janome overlockers? I know there are fancier ones out there but I wouldn’t trade my ole gal for the world!

  8. Your sewing room is beautiful, I love how neat and organised everything is. How do you find the Janome coverstitch? I’ve wanted one for so long but just haven’t been able to commit – it’s a lot of money and I’ve read so many differing reviews.

    • Thank you 🙂

      I really dig my overstitch especially for hems – those stitches just don’t break! If you do a lot of knits than it is a great investment but it is a total luxury!

  9. You are far too tidy! (I think that’s just jealousy because my room is tidy for all of maybe a day!) I need to stop buying fabric, I too have sewing paralysis, but when Istop by the shop for a zip the awesome fabric just jumps into my arms!

    You seem to be on a flower theme for your machines, Violet, Daisy, Marigold and Rose 🙂

    • Ohhh Rose is a great suggestion!

      I too understand the fabric that jumps! A lady has to snaffle those goodies up 😀 I’m just lucky that I don’t have a LFS within 20 minutes of me!!

  10. Oh yay, so glad to hear you and the hubster are going to make the move to a new abode! I recall you saying how necessary it was… here’s to future houses that have better thermal capacity 😛
    And what a gorgeous space – I love seeing other peoples sewing spaces! I’m the opposite to you, a totally messy/organised chaos kinda gal…

    • I am so stoked we’re looking for a new place! We’re tossing up between getting a place that is good to go or one that needs some reno work… Gah! Adulting is hard, yo!

  11. You are so organised. I am fortunate enough to have a large sewing room for my machines but my fabric is now spreading everywhere. I am a big fan of really useful boxes. Had the Janome cover stitch for a year now and does an amazing job.

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