Well, it was a busy weekend and I ended up not getting my heart-of-the-week into the kiln until this morning. Which means the heart-of-the-week post will be late, probably not up until tomorrow. Instead, today I'm posting pics of my humble studio space, which is lovingly tucked into the corner of our livingroom (someday when my husband and I build our dream house I have big plans for a dedicated studio room..for now this works).
A snapshot of the studio area.
Here are my kilns. The Paragon on the left is used for metal clay and enameling. The Chili-pepper on the right started life as a kiln to anneal my lampwork beads in, back when we lived in PA and I had a glassworking studio. Now that my studio space has carpet and no ventilation hood, I have to work with less flammable things! So, it has been re-purposed as a polymer clay baking kiln. I bought the colorful shelving unit at Joanne's but the shelves are lightweight plastic and come out of the runners if you put anything heavy (like tools!) in them..so it mainly serves as a space to keep my templates and paper in, and I store my sheet metal on top of it.

This is my metalworking bench. I need to get something to hang my flexshaft from...currently it is attached to the bottom left of the table, but that means I can't reach my bench block (on the right). Because of how the table is constructed, I can't attach both the bench block and the flex shaft to the same side of the table...so I'm improvising for now.
My humble tumbler, bought at Hobby Lobby for 30 bucks..lol. I'm saving up for a better one, but for now this works just fine.
My clay table. It's an old countertop screwed into a nightstand. I keep my misc. supplies like resin and paint in the drawers, and my beads, accents, tools and findings stored in the wire organizational cubes on the right.
This is my Clay caddy. I think it's originally supposed to be for scrapbooking supplies, but all the pockets are great to fit my misc. clay tools and gadgets in, and the big area inside fits all my boxes of clay tools and clay. (PS that's my dog Ladybird on the left..she just had to come over and see what mommy was doing).
Inside the clay caddy, I have 3 boxes of texture plates and molds.
Plus a box of clay sculpting tools (wood for polymer clay, stainless steel for metal clay). and by big box-o-polymer clay.
And that's the tour. It's been a slow building process for a number of years. I have a few more big items I'm planning for (primarily a rolling mill and photopolymer plate/etching station)...but this works for me now.