There are some rooms you step into and immediately want to stay a while.
You can’t always explain why. Nothing may look extraordinary at first glance. And yet, something about the light, the air, the quiet invitation of the space makes you slow down. Breathe differently. Feel just a bit more yourself.
Creative spaces work the same way.
Long before the first piece of fabric is cut or the machine is turned on, your surroundings begin to speak. They tell you whether you are welcome to linger or expected to rush. Whether experimentation is safe here. Whether this is a place for perfection (we don’t believe in that)—or a place for possibility (and everything is possible!).
Creativity is responsive. It listens before it speaks.
At SewEndipitous®, we often say we are where unexpected happiness is found in every stitch. That idea didn’t come from nowhere. It grew out of years of watching how creativity behaves when it feels supported—how joy sneaks in when pressure steps aside, and how inspiration appears most often in spaces that feel warm, human, and alive.
In the world of SewEndipitous®, we sometimes talk about the Muses.
Not as distant, untouchable beings, and not as anything that requires belief or ceremony—but as a way of naming something many makers already know to be true: creativity shows up more readily when it feels invited. The Muses linger in rooms where curiosity is welcome. Where beauty is layered, not staged. Where the space feels less like a demand and more like a companion.
The Muses do not arrive in sterile rooms. Boring is boring. We believe in magic!
They favor the soft glow of lamps over harsh overhead light except when needed - such as handling sharp objects! Measure twice, cut once is a phrase to live and craft by.
SewEndipitous® Muses drift toward a well-worn quilt draped across a chair, the familiar scent of fabric and thread, the gentle clutter of tools that are clearly loved and used. They are drawn to spaces where rest is allowed, where making is not rushed, and where joy is not postponed until everything is “finished.”
This is why your sewing or quilting room matters more than we’re often taught to believe.
It isn’t just a container for supplies. It is an environment that shapes how you feel when you sit down to make something—and how you feel determines how freely your creativity flows. When a room feels welcoming, creativity tends to arrive without being forced. When a space feels cold, chaotic, or demanding, creativity often retreats—not out of stubbornness, but out of self-protection.
A SewEndipitous®-inspired sewing room is not about perfection, matching décor, or expensive upgrades, though we like those things. It isn’t something you achieve and then check off a list. Like a quilt, it is built slowly, intentionally, and with care. It might be odd, quirky, and pleasantly weird. If that is you or speaks to you, embrace it! This is your space. Make it magically yours!
It is a space that quietly says:
- You are allowed to be here.
- You are allowed to take your time.
- You are allowed to make something simply because you want to.
In the pages that follow, we’ll explore simple, sensory ways to bring that feeling into your own quilting or sewing space—through light, scent, texture, sound, color, and small rituals that turn an ordinary room into one that gently hums with possibility.
You don’t need to chase the Muses.
You only need to make a place where they feel welcome.
And that is where the magic begins.
Light as Magic: Creating a Warm, Glowing Atmosphere
Light is often the first thing we notice when a room feels right.
Not brightness alone, but quality. The difference between light that interrogates and light that invites. Between illumination that demands productivity and illumination that allows curiosity to unfold at its own pace.
In many sewing rooms, light is treated as purely functional. Overhead fixtures. Bright bulbs. Maximum visibility. And while good task lighting is important—especially for detailed work—it is rarely the kind of light that encourages creativity to linger.
The Muses, as it turns out, prefer gentler company.
They are drawn to rooms where light pools rather than floods. Where shadows soften corners instead of exposing every surface. Where evening sewing feels cozy instead of clinical. This kind of lighting doesn’t rush you. It says, stay a while.

Layers, Not Spotlights
One of the simplest ways to make a sewing room feel more SewEndipitous®-y is to think in layers rather than single sources.
Overhead lights can remain, but they don’t need to do all the work. Table lamps, floor lamps, wall sconces, and even small clip lights introduce warmth and depth. When light comes from multiple places, the room feels more dimensional—more alive.
Fairy lights are a quiet favorite for a reason. Draped along shelves, tucked into glass jars, or woven gently around a window frame, they add a sense of wonder without demanding attention. They don’t say look at me. They say you’re welcome here.
Warmth Over Brightness
If there is one guiding principle for SewEndipitous® lighting, it is this: warmth matters more than brightness.
Bulbs labeled “soft white” or “warm glow” create an atmosphere that feels human rather than industrial. They flatter fabric colors, soften the room, and reduce visual fatigue. This is especially important in a space where you may spend long stretches of time.
Bright, cool-toned lighting has its place—but it often signals alertness, deadlines, and efficiency. Warm light signals safety. And creativity, like joy, tends to show up more readily where it feels safe.
Light That Marks Time
Another quiet magic of intentional lighting is how it allows your sewing room to change with the day.
Morning light feels different than evening light. Sewing under a lamp as dusk settles outside creates a sense of ritual—of stepping out of time for a while. Many makers find that creativity deepens in these transitional hours, when the world slows, and the room glows.
You don’t need to plan this. Simply allowing your space to shift naturally—by turning off overhead lights and letting lamps take over—can turn an ordinary sewing session into something almost ceremonial.
A Space That Glows Back
When light is chosen with care, your sewing room begins to glow in response—not because it’s styled for display, but because it feels inhabited.
Fabric colors appear richer. Textures feel softer. Even unfinished projects seem less demanding, more patient. The room begins to feel like a collaborator rather than a taskmaster. While lighting must be practical in those practical moments, the rest of the time, ask yourself how the light in this room makes me feel.
And in that right kind of light, unexpected happiness has a way of finding its way into your being.
Scent and Memory: Aromatherapy for Creative Flow
Scent has a way of reaching places words never quite manage.
Long before we consciously recognize a smell, our bodies respond to it. A familiar fragrance can soften the shoulders, slow the breath, or call up a memory we didn’t realize we were holding. In a creative space, this matters more than we often acknowledge.
Creativity does not thrive when we are braced or tense. It opens most readily when the body feels calm, grounded, and present. Scent can help create that feeling almost instantly.
In a SewEndipitous®-inspired sewing room, fragrance isn’t about filling the space. It’s about setting a tone and enhancing the experience.
A Whisper, Not a Shout
The most important rule of scent in a creative space is restraint.
Heavy or overpowering fragrances can distract, fatigue, or even overwhelm the senses. The Muses (and many have allergies) tend to slip away when the room demands too much attention. What they respond to instead is subtlety — a fragrance that feels like a background note rather than a main event.
Think of scent as an undercurrent. Something that gently supports the work without announcing itself.
Scents That Support the Maker
Different scents invite different kinds of energy, and there’s no single “correct” choice. What matters is how you respond to them.
Many makers find that lavender, chamomile, or soft herbal blends encourage calm and focus — especially helpful during intricate or emotionally weighted projects. Citrus scents like orange or bergamot can gently lift energy when creativity feels sluggish. Warm notes such as vanilla, cedar, or spice often evoke comfort and familiarity, making the sewing room feel safe and grounded.
Seasonal shifts can also be part of the magic. A light, fresh scent in spring. Something warmer and deeper in winter. These changes signal to the body that time is moving, that making evolves along with the world outside the window. I personally love a nice mixture of sweet orange and allspice essential oils.
Memory Lives in the Air
Scent is deeply tied to memory, and memory is deeply tied to making.
A particular candle lit only while sewing can become a signal — a transition from the rest of the day into creative time. Over time, the scent itself begins to invite focus, almost like a ritual without words.
This is one of the quiet ways unexpected happiness finds its way into the stitches. When scent, memory, and making overlap, the sewing room becomes more than a place where things are produced. It becomes a place where the body remembers how to slow down.
Choosing Gentle Sources
Candles, essential oil diffusers, wax melts, or even dried herbs can all work beautifully. What matters most is that the source feels safe, manageable, and aligned with how you use your space.
There’s no need for elaborate setups. One small candle. A few drops of oil. A scent sachet tucked into a drawer. These small choices are often the most powerful because they feel intentional rather than performative.
A SewEndipitous® room doesn’t try to impress the senses. It tries to soothe them.
When the Room Begins to Remember You
Over time, scent becomes part of the room’s identity. The sewing space begins to carry a signature that belongs only to you. Stepping inside feels like crossing a threshold — from noise to quiet, from obligation to curiosity.
And when that happens, creativity arrives more easily. Not because it’s forced, but because it recognizes the space as one that has been prepared with care.
A room that smells like calm tells the Muses they are welcome.
Textures That Invite Touch (Because Makers Are Sensory Creatures)
Before we ever make with our hands, we experience the world through them.
Texture matters. It grounds us. It reassures us. It reminds us that we are physical beings doing physical work — and that creativity is not just an idea, but an embodied experience.
In a SewEndipitous®-y inspired sewing room, texture isn’t decoration. It’s an invitation.
The Muses are not drawn to slick, untouchable spaces. They prefer rooms that look like they’ve been lived in. Touched. Used. Loved. Rooms where the surfaces tell stories and the materials welcome contact rather than resist it.
Softness Where You Least Expect It
A quilt draped over the back of a chair does more than keep you warm. It softens the room visually and emotionally. It reminds you why you’re here in the first place.
Fabric baskets instead of hard plastic bins. A padded ironing surface. A worn pincushion that fits your hand just right. These small choices subtly change how your body feels as you move through the space.
When the room feels physically kind, the making often follows suit.
Honest Materials, Not Perfect Ones
Natural materials carry a different energy than synthetic ones. Wood that shows its grain. Cotton that wrinkles. Linen that relaxes with use. These materials age alongside you, and that shared aging creates a sense of companionship. Personally, I almost always have an old, oversized flannel shirt in my space that comforts me even when I’m not wearing it.
A wooden table scarred from years of use holds more creative promise than a pristine surface you’re afraid to mark. Scratches, dents, and stains don’t signal neglect — they signal history.
The Muses understand this. They know that perfection rarely leaves room for imagination.
Let Fabric Be Part of the Room
Fabric doesn’t need to live only in drawers and bins. Let it breathe.
Stacks of folded fabric on open shelves, rolls leaning casually in a corner, works-in-progress hanging where you can see them — these are not clutter. They are visual reminders that this room exists for making, not for display.
Seeing fabric regularly invites ideas to surface without effort. Color combinations suggest themselves. Textures begin conversations. The room quietly collaborates.
Imperfection as a Welcome Mat
One of the most powerful ways to make a sewing room feel SewEndipitous®-y is to let imperfections remain visible.
Crooked stacks. Unfinished projects. A chair pulled slightly out of place. These details send an important message: this is a space where work is allowed to be in progress.
The Muses rarely visit rooms that demand everything be finished before it can be seen.
When imperfection is permitted in the space, it becomes permitted in the work. Creativity breathes easier. If you need a “Perfection Stay Out!” sign on the door, make one!
A Room That Feels Good to Be In
Ultimately, texture shapes how long you want to stay.
If a room feels cold, hard, or unyielding, the body looks for excuses to leave. When a room feels soft, grounded, and forgiving, time stretches. Making deepens. The outside world fades a little.
A SewEndipitous®-y sewing room doesn’t ask you to perform. It invites you to settle in.
And when your hands feel at home, creativity follows.
Objects With Stories: Surrounding Yourself With Meaning
Every truly magical creative space has one thing in common: it remembers.
Not in a literal sense, but in the way certain objects seem to hum softly with history. A room becomes SewEndipitous®-y when it is filled not with things chosen for display, but with things chosen for belonging.
The Muses are drawn to rooms that feel personal rather than curated. They linger where objects carry stories — even if those stories are known only to you.
Let Meaning Matter More Than Matching
A sewing room does not need to be coordinated to be cohesive.
That pair of vintage scissors found at a flea market. A button jar that once belonged to a grandmother. A scrap of lace saved from a long-finished project. These pieces may not match each other in color or style, but they belong together because they belong to you.
Meaning creates harmony more reliably than any design rule.
When you surround yourself with objects that carry memory or intention, the room begins to feel layered — not cluttered, but rich.
Everyday Tools as Quiet Talismans
Some of the most powerful objects in a sewing room are the ones you reach for every day.
Your favorite seam ripper. A ruler with softened edges. A pincushion that has seen more projects than you can count. These tools are not just functional; they are witnesses. They have been present for moments of frustration and triumph alike.
Displaying them — rather than hiding them away — acknowledges their role in the creative process. It also reminds you that making is an ongoing relationship, not a series of isolated projects.
Magic appreciates rooms that honor the process as much as the outcome.
Found Objects and Gentle Curiosity
Not every meaningful object needs a long history. Some simply spark curiosity.
A smooth stone picked up on a walk. A small figurine that makes you smile. A postcard, an old photograph, a scrap of handwritten text. These items don’t have to “mean” anything specific. Their job is to invite the eye to wander and the mind to drift. If it resonates with something inside you, it was meant to be with you.
Creativity often enters through these quiet pauses — moments when the hands rest, and the imagination stretches.
Avoiding the Trap of Over-Styling
It’s easy to feel pressure to make a creative space look finished, especially in a world of perfectly styled studios and endless inspiration photos on Instagram or Pinterest. But a SewEndipitous® room resists that kind of polish if it doesn’t feel natural to you.
If an object feels like it’s there only to be seen, it may not belong. The goal is not to impress visitors, but to support the maker—you!
The Muses are not impressed by trends. They are drawn to sincerity.
A Room That Tells Your Story Back to You
When your sewing room is filled with objects that reflect who you are and how you make, it begins to act as a mirror.
It reminds you where you’ve been. It quietly affirms that your work has history and weight. And it reassures you, even on uncertain days, that you belong in the act of making.
A SewEndipitous® sewing room doesn’t just hold supplies. It holds you.
Sound, Silence, and the Rhythm of Making
Every creative space has a rhythm, whether we name it or not.
Sometimes it’s the steady hum of a sewing machine. Sometimes it’s the soft rustle of fabric being folded. Sometimes it’s music, voices, or the familiar murmur of something playing in the background. And sometimes, the most powerful sound in the room is silence.
In a SewEndipitous®-inspired sewing room, sound isn’t about productivity or entertainment. It’s about permission. Permission to move at your own pace. Permission to sink into the work without being hurried along.
The Muses are sensitive to rhythm. They arrive more readily when time feels flexible rather than enforced.
Music as Companion, Not Command
Many makers enjoy having music playing while they sew, but the key is how it feels, not what it is.
Instrumental music, gentle folk, classical pieces, or ambient soundscapes often support focus without pulling attention away from the work. Familiar playlists can be especially comforting — not because they’re exciting, but because they’re predictable. The mind relaxes when it doesn’t have to anticipate what’s coming next.
Some quilters prefer the soft background presence of an old movie or television show they’ve seen countless times. The voices become a kind of companionship, a reminder that you’re not entirely alone, without demanding your attention. There is no correct soundtrack.
There is only the sound that lets your shoulders drop. Thankfully for this writer, they have a penchant for old disco and classic 80’s played really loud or the Andy Griffith Show when a bit more quiet is required. The Muses don’t judge our personal choices that harshly. If it speaks to you, they get it and are forgiving.
The Beauty of Chosen Silence
Just as important as sound is the option for quiet.
Silence allows space for thought, memory, and emotional processing. This is especially true when working on quilts tied to meaningful moments — gifts, milestones, or projects that carry weight beyond the fabric itself.
A room that allows silence without discomfort is a room that feels safe. In that quiet, ideas surface naturally. Decisions become clearer. The work feels less rushed and more intentional.
The Muses often speak softly. Silence makes it easier to hear them.
Let the Room Set the Pace
Sound also influences how quickly or slowly you move.
Fast, energetic music can push the work forward when momentum is needed. Slower sounds encourage patience during detailed or repetitive tasks. Paying attention to how sound affects your body — your breath, your posture, your hands — can help you choose what best supports the moment.
A SewEndipitous® sewing room does not insist on a single rhythm. It adapts.
The Familiar Sounds of Making
Sometimes the most grounding sounds are the ones created by the work itself.
The steady whirr of the machine. The snip of scissors. The tap of a ruler against the table. These sounds mark time in a way that feels different from clocks or alarms. They signal progress without pressure.
When these sounds are allowed to stand on their own, the room begins to feel almost meditative. Making becomes a form of listening as much as doing. Let’s be honest, sometimes the yelp of a “WELL SHIT!” might break the silence, but that becomes part of the familiar making soundtrack too, doesn’t it?
A Space That Lets Time Stretch
When sound is chosen intentionally — or allowed to fall away — the sewing room becomes a place where time behaves differently.
Minutes lengthen. Hours soften. The outside world recedes just enough for creativity to step forward.
A SewEndipitous®-y room doesn’t try to control the rhythm of making. It listens, adjusts, and allows.
And in that gentle rhythm, creativity finds its footing.
Color as Mood, Not Rule
Color speaks before we do.
It sets the emotional temperature of a room in an instant. It can energize or calm, comfort or challenge, invite playfulness or encourage focus. And yet, many sewing rooms treat color as something to control rather than something to listen to.
In a SewEndipitous®-inspired space, color isn’t governed by fads, formulas, or “correct” palettes. It’s guided by response.
The Muses don’t ask whether colors match. They ask how they feel.
Let the Room Reflect the Work You Want to Do
One of the most helpful questions you can ask yourself is not what colors should this room be? But rather, how do I want to feel when I’m here?
Some makers thrive surrounded by soft neutrals and gentle tones — colors that quiet the mind and create emotional space. Others feel most alive when color spills across shelves and walls in joyful abundance. Neither approach is better. Both are valid expressions of creative need.
Your sewing room doesn’t need to support every kind of making. It needs to support yours.
Fabric Is Already Doing the Work
One of the unassuming joys of a sewing or quilting room is that color is already present in abundance.
Fabric stacks, works-in-progress, scraps pinned to design walls — these elements naturally bring life into the space. Rather than hiding them away, allowing fabric to remain visible lets the room evolve along with your projects.
Colors converse with each other when they’re out in the open. New combinations suggest themselves. Unexpected harmonies appear. Creativity happens almost incidentally.
In a SewEndipitous® space, fabric is both material and décor.
Color That Changes With the Seasons
Just as scent and light can shift throughout the year, color can too.
A deeper, richer palette may feel comforting in winter. Lighter, fresher hues might feel right in spring. This doesn’t require repainting walls or overhauling the room. Small changes — a different quilt on a chair, a new stack of fabric on a shelf, a swapped-out pillow — can subtly realign the space with the season you’re in.
These changes signal to the body that movement is allowed. That creativity, like life, is not meant to stay static.
Releasing the Need for Cohesion
One of the most freeing shifts a maker can make is letting go of the idea that a sewing room needs to look “put together.”
A SewEndipitous® space values coherence over coordination. Colors don’t have to match — they just have to belong. When color is chosen intuitively rather than strategically, the room begins to feel honest.
And honesty is deeply inviting.
The Muses are not impressed by perfection. They are drawn to authenticity (one of our favorite words).
When Color Becomes Permission
Color has a way of granting permission quietly.
Permission to try something bold. Permission to soften. Permission to play. Permission to trust instinct over instruction. Permission to be as oddly, strangely, wonderfully creative you!
When a room is filled with color that resonates rather than conforms, creativity feels less judged. Decisions come more easily. Risk feels safer.
In that kind of environment, unexpected happiness has a way of finding its way into the work — often without being asked.
A SewEndipitous® sewing room doesn’t tell color what to do. It listens, responds, and allows.
And when color is allowed to be emotional rather than obedient, creativity feels free to follow.
A Place for Pause: Why Rest Is Part of the Magic
In many creative spaces, rest is treated as an interruption.
A chair is something you sit in briefly before getting back to work. A mug is something you grab while standing. Stillness is tolerated only if it leads quickly back to productivity.
But the Muses don’t work that way.
They arrive most reliably in rooms that allow pause without apology. Spaces where rest isn’t something you earn after finishing, but something that belongs to the making itself.
A SewEndipitous® sewing room understands that creativity is not a straight line. It moves in waves — effort and ease, focus and wandering, doing and simply being.
A Chair That Isn’t About Work
One of the most quietly powerful additions to a creative space is a place to sit that has nothing to do with sewing.
Not a task chair. Not something pulled up to a machine. But a chair meant for thinking, resting, or simply being present in the room. A place where you can hold a cup of tea, flip through a book, or stare at a half-finished quilt without needing to decide what comes next.
This kind of chair sends a subtle but important message: you are allowed to stop.
And when stopping is allowed, starting becomes easier.
Rest as Creative Infrastructure
It can feel counterintuitive, especially in a culture that rewards constant output, but rest is not separate from creativity — it supports it.
Moments of pause allow ideas to settle. They give the mind time to make quiet connections. They create space for intuition to surface. Often, the solution to a design problem appears not while pushing harder, but while stepping back.
The Muses tend to slip in during these in-between moments. When the hands are still, and the mind is open.
Objects That Invite Slowness
A mug you love. A soft throw within reach. A small stack of books or sketchpads. These objects aren’t distractions — they’re anchors.
They remind you that the sewing or quilting room is a place you’re meant to inhabit, not rush through. They make lingering feel natural rather than indulgent.
In a SewEndipitous® space, comfort is not the enemy of creativity. It’s one of its greatest allies.
Letting the Work Breathe
Unfinished projects often carry unnecessary guilt. They sit waiting, silently accusing. But in a room that allows pause, unfinished work feels different.
It feels patient.
A quilt top left on a design wall isn’t a failure. It’s an idea still unfolding. When rest is part of the room’s rhythm, projects don’t feel abandoned — they feel paused.
The Muses understand this distinction. They know that some ideas need time before they’re ready to continue.
A Room That Doesn’t Demand
Perhaps the greatest magic of all is a space that doesn’t demand anything from you.
No deadlines. No productivity metrics. No pressure to prove worth through output. Just a room that says, "Come as you are."
In that kind of space, creativity often returns on its own.
A SewEndipitous® room doesn’t ask you to justify your presence. It offers you refuge.
And when creativity is allowed to rest, it almost always finds its way back — refreshed, curious, and ready to begin again.
The Final Ingredient: Intention
All the elements we’ve explored — light, scent, texture, sound, color, story, and rest — matter on their own. But what transforms a sewing room into something truly SewEndipitous® is not any single choice.
It’s intention.
Intention is what turns fairy lights into an invitation rather than a decoration. It’s what turns a candle into a threshold rather than an accessory. It’s what tells the room — and yourself — this space matters.
In a SewEndipitous® sewing room or tiny space, intention isn’t about rules or routines. It’s about presence. It’s the quiet act of entering the room with care. Of adjusting a lamp instead of flipping on harsh light. Of lighting a candle, not because it’s time to work, but because it’s time to arrive.
The Muses notice this.
They don’t require ceremony, but they respond to attention. When a space is treated with reverence — even gentle, playful reverence — creativity feels respected. And when creativity feels respected, it shows up more fully.
Small Rituals, Big Welcome
Ritual doesn’t have to be elaborate to be powerful.
It might be as simple as straightening a stack of fabric before you begin. Turning on music before you touch the machine. Sitting for a moment in your chair with a bag of snacks before deciding what comes next. These small acts mark the transition from the outside world into the creative one.
Over time, the room begins to recognize these cues. And so does your body.
You may notice that ideas arrive more quickly. That resistance softens. That making feels less like effort and more like conversation. This is not accidental. It’s what happens when intention is allowed to lead.
A Room That Meets You Where You Are
One of the quiet gifts of an intentional sewing space is that it adapts.
Some days, you arrive eager and full of ideas. Other days, you come tired, uncertain, or carrying more than you meant to. A SewEndipitous® room makes space for it all.
It does not demand productivity.
It does not judge unfinished work.
It does not insist that you feel inspired before you sit down.
It simply holds the door open.
The Muses understand that creativity is not a constant state. They respect ebb and flow. When intention is present, even a short visit — even a moment of sitting quietly — becomes part of the creative process.
Leaving the Door Open for Magic
A magical sewing room is not something you finish.
It evolves. It shifts with the seasons. It gathers layers the way quilts do — slowly, imperfectly, lovingly. It reflects who you are now, not who you think you should be.
In the world of SewEndipitous®, we believe creativity thrives where unexpected happiness is found in every stitch. That happiness doesn’t come from perfection (oh, that ugly word again), productivity, or beautifully styled rooms. It comes from spaces that feel welcoming. Spaces that allow you to linger. Spaces that honor both the maker and the making.
You don’t need to chase inspiration.
You don’t need to summon the Muses.
Just make a room where they’d like to stay.
Light a lamp. Drape a quilt. Pull up a chair.
Let your sewing room become a quiet companion — one that listens, waits, and gently reminds you why you fell in love with making in the first place.
That is the heart of a SewEndipitous®-y space.
And that is where the magic keeps finding its way back.
1 Comments
Linda Gibbons
Ahhhh!! Thank you, Steve! I felt a sense of calm just reading this! I have a few small lamps in my studio, and I love it when I can just use them! Most of the time, I need the overhead brighter lights, but there is certainly a different feel to the room when I just use the lamps. I also have a chair and scents... I love it! Thank you for putting all of this in words!!!
Steve Baker
Oh Linda! Your comment warms my heart (but you always have a way of doing that). Yes, versatility in lighting is so important depending on the tasks you're doing at the time. What you're surrounding yourself with absolutely impacts your creativity and mindset. I'm so glad you found this helpful and intuitively were already doing some of these magical and fun things. - Steve
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