Saturday, April 25, 2026

The far and the near: a craft room in progress

​My craft room does not photograph the way I wish it did.


That is not to say it isn’t charming. Parts of it are very charming. Up close, it can look almost exactly like the room I carry around in my imagination: a basket of papers, a bit of lace, a little red gingham, a doll face behind glass, pens standing up in cups like flowers, a wooden table by the window, old things and useful things living together like they have known each other for years.

Up close, it is a nest.

From farther back, it is more honest.

From farther back, we can see the in-between stage. The stacks. The boxes. The rolling carts. The projects that have not found their permanent homes yet. The things I have brought down from high places because I am tired of owning lovely supplies I can’t reach. (Hayleigh and Brenda have actually brought those down. Full disclosure.) The room is becoming more useful, but maybe not exactly more photogenic.

I keep thinking about Thomas Wolfe’s short story “The Far and the Near.” I loved teaching that story. In it, a train engineer spends years passing a little house on his route. He sees a woman and her child from the train, and they become, in his mind, almost a symbol of goodness and beauty at home. Then, after he retires, he visits them. And what was lovely from far away is not lovely up close.

My craft room is almost the opposite. The close-ups are beautiful. The far away view still has a little bit of work to do.

One basket can look like a poem. One shelf can look like memory. One little cup of pens can look like possibility. But stepped back, all those little poems are still waiting to become a chapter.

That is where I am right now.

I am trying to make this room usable without forcing it to lose its romance. I am trying to bring things down where I can reach them, sort them, touch them, use them, and love them – instead of keeping them tucked away in places that make the room look neater, but my life less possible.

There is a difference between a room arranged for a photograph and a room arranged for a life.

I am a retired English teacher, a junk journalist, a doll keeper, and afghan namer, and a memory keeper. Wow! That sounds a little grand, but it is also fairly accurate, I have spent most of my life loving words …and old paper …and pretty scraps …and family stories …and objects that still seem to have a little breath left in them.

That exact concoction is this room.

It is not just craft supplies. It is old books and calendars. It is lace and old baskets and buttons and beads. It is dolls that remind me of my childhood and motherhood —- and my mother‘s childhood. It is notebooks waiting for truthful words. It is paper waiting to be cut and glued into something that feels like a page from life itself. It is yarn becoming an afghan for someone I love. Right now I spend most of my time working on an afghan for Adrienne. She knows I’m making it, so I can say that much. I usually like to make surprises. Yarn in progress has its own kind of hope. It is row after row of intention. I think it is warmth before it is finished.

And maybe that is what this whole room is: Warmth before it is finished.

My craft room in progress is a funny thing. It can look messier at the exact moment it is becoming more useful. It can look less finished at the exact moment it is becoming more alive. So this is not the grand tour. This is the “during.” This is both the close-up and the longshot. This is the nest still being feathered. Maybe that is a good enough place to begin. Around here, beauty does not always arrive polished. Most of the time it comes in a basket, with a lot of lace hanging out, waiting for life to notice….


5 comments:

  1. I just adore your Craft Room, it's so Organized! My Art Studio was in complete Chaos and now an Adult Grandchild had to move back Home due to a pending Divorce, so I had to relinquish the Space once again so he can live in it. He has vowed to help me with Organization, and being a 3 Generation Family living here, one day I Hope my Spaces, all of them, will be as Editorial as yours so I don't always have to do the Closeups on the Visuals and avoid the Panoramic Views thru the Lens. *Winks*

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  2. PS: Totally borrowing that Profound Quote for a Blog Topic Post. "There is a difference between a room arranged for a photograph and a room arranged for a life." It really was something I needed to Hear and remember, and Share with my own Dear Readers. Sometimes my Vision for a Space isn't all that practical, useful or functional... remembering that is important. Thank You.

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  3. Here just for a moment---I LOVE whatever arrangement occurs, or simply occurs to YOU---any promise of order or work-in-progress is so far ahead of ME that I'll just bring my Windex and hope you have a cloudy window or mirror. I WOULD love to open drawers or doors or cupboards and just DWELL with those scents and colors and designs---I can 'preciate with the best of you, and fail when I pick up the thread. I even dawdle on the GOOD STUFF other folks have made---I have three 10x12 cloths with exquisite pink ribbon flowers, sent all the way from that other Georgia across the ocean, and snugged into a lug beneath the guestroom bed four years ago---they took so long to arrive, and I was so eager, and then I just couldn't pick out the proper frames etcetc. POOH. I justmentioned those today, and will get under that bed and get those our on MONDAY. Tomorrow is taken, and I'll wish you a lovely Sunday on the Prairie!! Good night Sweet Friend. j

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  4. Coming here to comment on YOUR comment on LAWN TEA: I cannot successfully complete the arc to put this new blog address on my sidebar. So I'm repeating my last night's comment on YOUR COMMENT. That lived in the House that Jack Built. A nickel if you remember THAT old poem.

    Oh, GAYLA!! If I did icons and hashmarks and all those strange words and symbols, I'd be LOLLLLing! Did you change it? I'm gonna go LOOK!! Going anyway, as this is my wind-down of a sunny Saturday, with the scent of new-mown lawn and honeysuckle through the screens, and I'd swear the Locusts made today their debut. Isn't this EARLY?

    Yes those Blessigns are around us---Sweet Val of Pretty Little Patches says she finds hearts everywhere she goes, and I imagine she does---she carries that enormous heart of her own on her sleeve, with a kind word and cheerful greeting---I try to emulate all her interest in other people---I love to talk to anyone with a story to tell, sad, true, imaginary, far-fetched or so piercing that you never forget. I still remember with great angst-turned to anger when your home/business was burglarized, and how I wished they'd all fall in a hole. I wish grim things sometimes, and dire consequences for folks who just don't think or care how they affect others---sometimes life-altering chaos scattered in their wake as they stroll away from the crumbs. And several of your Mom stories were so poignantly touching that I had tears on the keyboard, especially her last days.
    I love now that your vibrant voice is returning, strengthening with the new location, and your gift for words unquenched---your rich magic is so evident in every successive post and comment, and it gives me such joy in the reading and in the knowledge of your returning to the little joys of life.

    DO post as often as you can (says she who left the entire world for a couple of years, and blogging for at least four). I just checked out of life for a while, but other duties and calls held me on, though my output of prattle is thinner by far. I've done repeats of several stories, and see that so many other bloggers have disappeared from the boards.

    Loved that DRUNK JOURNALIST---you're the one who could win the Pulitzer with flu and the measles. WRITE ON!!! Peace out.

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  5. I will confess. My craft room is your before. Your craft room is what I hope for an after. I am a memory keeper too.

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