I received several questions about the small items featured in the workspace makeover, so I put together a complete guide sourcing everything from that area of the studio. I also included a few pieces I didn’t show in the original post that I’ve since finished styling.
Below is the full source list with more photos and notes about where each item came from and how I’m using it in the studio.
The wire grid organizer is from Urban Outfitters. I actually found mine at a resale shop called Final Cut (about two hours from Atlanta, in Augusta). Final Cut stocks lots of discontinued, damaged, or overstock items from many stores—Anthropologie, Urban Outfitters, J.Crew, and more. They have a large housewares section with furniture, rugs, and lighting, plus an even larger clothing area. You’ll need to dig, but there are great finds if you’re willing to spend time looking.
The bandanas clipped to the grid are from Madewell (brown, navy, and yellow), while the long white bandana is from Coveted Things. The colorful red bandana is vintage—likely from my grandma or my mom. The straw hat I used is no longer available, but I have a comprehensive list of interesting straw hats saved in a separate post if you’re hunting similar options. The clear hanging ruler is from Fiskars.

My desk is a DIY. The top came from an old Modernica desk we’d had for years. The original legs bent during a move and we lost one more recently, so I replaced them with pastel green hairpin legs from The Hairpin Leg Co. They offer many colors and ship quickly to the U.S. despite being UK-based.
Above the desk I hung a small vintage rug I thought was too pretty for the floor—just secured with a couple of nails. The brass wall element came from a local shop, Citizen Supply, and the black-and-white piece is a DIY artwork made from a wallpaper sample. The mini rug was purchased at Paris on Ponce, a local Atlanta shop.
On the desk I keep an old terra-cotta wine bottle holder from IKEA (I use a similar shape when the original is discontinued) to store long matches, a vintage cork planter, and a woven IKEA basket with lid. The green geometric wall piece is actually a trivet I picked up on sale at West Elm.

The shelving unit is also Modernica and once matched the desk. We originally owned both in our previous home; when we moved into a smaller apartment earlier this year the shelf moved to the studio where it provides much-needed storage.
From the top shelf down: a DIY pie-graph painting we created for a holiday entryway refresh post; an older Room & Board blue vase and an older pink CB2 vase.
The next shelf holds a mint green Fort Standard standing bowl (currently storing West Elm coasters set aside for a project) and a white Pigeon Toe Ceramics bowl I’m using to stash extra roving.
A large bowl from Neighborly sits on the following shelf and is filled with skeins of yarn. There’s also a box from HAY (part of a larger set that’s no longer available) and a pink organizer from Urban Outfitters.
The lower shelves are mostly stacked books (I’ve linked some favorite interior design books elsewhere) along with more HAY storage boxes and a few from IKEA. You can never have too many boxes. A small terra-cotta pot on the shelf is from Ferm Living.


The white “bullet” planter was a gift from my mom a few years ago and originally came from DWR. The terrazzo planter that houses the fiddle-leaf fig is from West Elm—I found it on sale for $40.
The hats displayed behind the plants are mostly vintage; a few are included in my straw hat roundup referenced earlier.
That covers the items visible in the workspace photos. If I missed anything or you’d like additional details about a particular piece—dimensions, color options, or styling tips—feel free to ask and I’ll follow up.