As Advent is rapidly approaching, here's a festively snowy shot of a 10m² Arctic Bar from Arctic Cabins for the Friday Finery slot.
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As Advent is rapidly approaching, here's a festively snowy shot of a 10m² Arctic Bar from Arctic Cabins for the Friday Finery slot.
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Continuing our weekly Thursday series highlighting shed-based Christmas cards with a garden office flavour, here's Santa's Shed, a 3-D pop-up card from Me & McQ. Click on the link and you can rotate it online - it's very smart indeed and highly recommended for the sheddie in your life.
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Pictured above is a one-of-a-kind curvaceous garden studio in Hampstead, London, from Rise Design Studio. In particular, it takes in the mature trees of the build site which adds a very definite 'garden' element. It's a multi-functional space with birch plywood interiors and curved glass walls to be used as additional accommodation (with bathroom) and also a games room. Other features include extremely insulated walls, and two roof lights.
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Another Place Press was set up nearly a decade ago by Iain Sajeant as a small independent publishing press based in the Scottish Highland which concentrates on high quality contemporary photobooks. Pictured above is a lovely recent shot of its garden office headquarters.
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As the winter chill starts to bite, here's a slightly frosty yet fully insulated garden office from Green Retreats with a splendid path to boot.
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As we head towards December, many of you will be considering sending Christmas cards. We'll offer up a few shed-based suggestions in the coming weeks, starting with this one from Versus Arthritis, the UK's leading arthritis charity. Available locally hopefully but if not from the charity's shop here, each pack of 10 costs £3.99.
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Large congratulations to Shrewsbury Men’s Shed for winning the 2024 UK Men's Shed of the Year trophy (Shedworking is particularly pleased about this since it's the birthplace of it's Head of Content). Here's what their shortlisting says about them:
Shrewsbury Men’s Shed has achieved a huge amount in their three years. The Shed are a real community space, hosting other charities and organisations regularly, offering their space and friendship to people with dementia, men with cancer, woodturners and a horticulture group. The Shed have undertaken some huge projects, like restoring Percy Thrower’s greenhouse and even building and running a ferry service, providing a connection to town that previously didn’t exist. The Shed are currently supporting the Afghan families located at a nearby army camp by welcoming them to their Shed for cooking and craft, and are even supporting the development of two Sheds for Afghan men and women at the army camp. The Shed aim for all they do to benefit their Shedders, their community, and their environment.
Also a big well done to the following:
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Oh dear. No walking to work today.....
— Ken W Tayler (@kennywt.bsky.social) November 19, 2024 at 9:22 AM
[image or embed]
It's that time of year again when the snowy sheds come out to play. Over on Bluesky, Andrew Wilcox (better known to many of you as Uncle Wilco, founder of the Shed of the Year competition) is compiling overnight examples.
This is a good time to mention that Shedworking has abandoned Twitter/X - for all the obvious reasons - and can now be found on Bluesky under the same name so please do follow us there.
A very personal piece about garden offices and having a room of one's own by writer Joanne Harris at Certain Age in which I'm delighted to read she's planning a shed calendar. Here's a snippet:
My husband built me a shed at the top of the garden; a designated workspace of a kind I’d never had, built to my specifications, and free from the distractions of phones or random callers. It was lovely – stone-built, with beams of green oak, and even now that scent brings me back there cleanly and effortlessly.
You can read her interview with Shedworking about the same subject here.
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Ease yourself into the weekend with this tranquil setting of a Garden Affairs Linea model among its horticultural peers.
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It's hard to imagine a timber painting studio which allows more light in than this fine example underneath a large eucalyptus tree from architects Hugh Strange. Because of the tree, the foundations have been carefully managed to avoid damaging any roots. Features include The studio the Douglas Fir studio frame, rainwater harvesting system (to help feed the tree's roots) and sliding doors. Lots more images of the build, the foundations, and how it looks now at the architects' site here.
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Pictured above is the new studio and annexe design which Booths Garden Studios have been working on for most of the last year. It has a number of improvements - particularly in terms of strengthening the structure, a new flyover design, and smaller bits and bobs such as clever lighting - and these have been thoroughly documented in a series of useful short videos (something Booths is particularly good at), the first one of which you can find below and then follow the links to the rest.
The new studio models are now called the QCB4 and the QC7 as Booths no longer supplies the QCB2, or QC6). All the improvements have been incorporated into both designs and the only difference between the QCB4 and the QC7 is that the roof of the QC7 can accommodate downlights in the ceiling and the roof has an overhang around the studio.
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The Office for National Statistics' latest survey makes for interesting reading about the types of workers most likely to be following a hybrid working pattern and how they spend their time.
According to its Opinions and Lifestyle survey, more than a quarter of working adults in Great Britain (28%) were hybrid working this autumn (slightly surprisingly, the trend in working only from home has fallen since 2021). Hybrid working is more common among those aged over 30, parents, those working as managers or professionals, and those in industries that require less face-to-face contact. Those with higher qualifications were also more likely to hybrid work. Pictured top is the percentage of working adults by working arrangement in Britain between January 2021 to October this year.
Those working from home saved an average of 56 minutes that day from not commuting, and findings suggest that some of that time was spent on rest, exercise, sports and well-being.
People who worked from home on a given day spent an average of 24 minutes more on ‘sleep and rest’ and 15 minutes more on ‘exercise, sports and well-being’ on the respective day compared with those who worked away from home. Indeed, 'Improved staff well-being' has continued to be one of the most frequently reported business reasons for using or intending to use increased hybrid and homeworking, according to the ONS's Business Insights and Conditions Survey.
Of people surveyed between April 10 and 30 June 2024, 29% of workers aged 30 years and older followed a hybrid working pattern, compared with 19% for those aged 16 to 29 years old. Working parents were more likely to hybrid work (35%) compared with working non-parents (24%). And male working parents were more likely to hybrid work than female working parents (41% compared with 30% respectively).
Close to half (45%) of those in more senior occupations e.g. managers, directors and senior officials followed a hybrid working model, compared with 27% of all workers. Workers with a degree or equivalent qualification were 10 times more likely to hybrid work than those with no qualifications (42% compared with 4% respectively).
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Malvern Garden Buildings offer a premium collection of garden buildings, displayed at 11 UK showsites.The new issue of the Idler magazine is out now. In my regular shed/garden office column I look at the remarkable inviduality on show on the interiors of garden buildings, including the recent winner of Shed of the Year (away from the world of sheds my column on Idler Heros looks at the diaries of the chap who inspired Withnail in Withnail and I). Available all over the place but ideally via a subscription - details at the link above.
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This week's finery ushers in the weekend with this idyllically-placed writer's hut from shepherd's hut specialists Plankbridge.
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Could HS2 have built the most expensive shed ever? According to Si Jon Thompson, HS2's chair, who was talking at the Rail Industry Association conference today about the costs of the whole project, a kilometre-long 'bat shed' had to be erected in woodland alongside the new high-speed line in Sheephouse Wood, Buckinghamshire to save a colony of Bechstein’s bats. While Shedworking is very much on the bats' side, Thompson admitted that the shed - which cost north of £100m - had been built without any evidence that bats were actually in danger. And indeed Natural England has said it did not stipulate such a structure was vital. Plenty of media have covered this story, including the Guardian here, if you'd like more details.
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This lovely oil painting by Scottish artist Alberto Morocco of a lido beach hut recently sold at auction by The Cotswold Auction Company for £12,000.
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If you like the shepherd's hut vibe but don't want to go full shepherd's hut, then perhaps something like this from East Yorkshire-based My Garden Studio might suit. It has all the normal must haves, but what the Shedworking staff like in particular is the curved roof line. There are several sizes on offer, though there is also a fully bespoke service - this one pictured is 2m x 2m but there is an even smaller 1.4m x 1.4m option if you are really pushed for space.
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Malvern Garden Buildings offer a premium collection of garden buildings, displayed at 11 UK showsites.An unusual artist's garden studio case study on Malvern Garden Buildings' blog focuses on Sal who uses her Studio Pavilion model from the supplier's range to produce unique art as the piece explains:
Sal once worked as a housekeeper in a stately home, dedicating her spare time to painting. She drew inspiration from her imagination, creating artworks that depicted female servants from a bygone era as they went about their daily tasks.
Interestingly, it wasn’t until Sal exhibited some of her paintings that a local recognised one of the characters as a former servant from the very house where she had worked. To this day, Sal continues to use this same creative process, allowing her figures to emerge from the canvas, often adorned in Edwardian hats, petticoats, or uniforms typical of life below stairs.
The garden office's features include two double cupboards with a glass top used as a palette, and built-in storage shed. Lots more photos at the Malvern site here.
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This week's Finery focuses on Silver Leaf Garden Rooms' intriguing design for the Sounds of Adventure wins at RHS Hampton Court Palace Garden Festival earlier this year which won the Best Construction prize. It was designed by Nic Howard and sponsored by Exodus Adventure Travels, with the building 'hovering' above the garden, supported with ground screws.
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