Lily Marsh facing the camera in her workshop, a respirator round her neck and a dummy mallet held against her body, the carving studio behind her.
Makers

Lily Marsh

Stone Sculptor

Stag Works, Sheffield

Documentary Archive · June 2026

I came to Sheffield to photograph one maker and walked out having met two - a sculptor and the letter cutter whose room she shares, both of whom arrived at stone the long way round.

Name Lily Marsh
Trade Stone Sculptor
Region South Yorkshire
Location Stag Works, Sheffield
Category Makers - people whose knowledge lives in their hands and cannot exist anywhere else
Session June 2026
Status Working practitioner · carving since 2013
Studio Stone, Letter and Sculpture Studio, shared with the letter cutter Steve
Archive ID MK-0034

The Address I Couldn’t See

I had come up to Sheffield to meet Lily Marsh, and before that to meet Timothy, from the British Artist Blacksmiths Association, who had said he would see me at Lily’s and hang around while I worked. So I walked into Stag Works - the old run of workshops where Lily carves - and found three people standing by an open doorway, plainly makers, and started scanning the place for where her studio might be. It was right in front of me. The painted sign over the arch reads Stone, Letter and Sculpture Studio. Timothy was the one who said, “Mash,” and waved me over while I was still looking past it.

We had a few laughs about that, which is the best way any of these mornings can begin.

The street frontage of the Stone, Letter and Sculpture Studio at Stag Works in Sheffield - a brick archway beneath a hand-painted sign, a half-carved white stone standing on a wheeled trolley just inside the open doorway, a wooden pallet and a sack truck on the ground outside.
The Stone, Letter and Sculpture Studio at Stag Works, Sheffield. The address I walked straight past with three people standing in front of it. IM-1027

Then I went into my monologue - the one I give at the start of every session, about what The England Archive is and how I came to be standing in their workshop with two cameras and a notebook. They listened to it intently, all three, which does not always happen. Timothy and I laid out a plan for a session of his own, with him and his boys at the forge, and a few others he said he would introduce me to. Then he had to go. Nice to have met him; the blacksmiths will keep.

Three people standing inside the workshop around a tall block of white stone on a wheeled trolley - Lily Marsh at left in a work apron, a man in a cap with a respirator round his neck at centre, and a bearded visitor in a dark hooded top at right, brick walls and crowded shelving behind them.
Lily, Steve, and Timothy from the British Artist Blacksmiths Association, gathered round the block while I went into my monologue about what I was doing there. IM-1028
Lily Marsh standing by her bench with a rucksack in her hands, looking off to one side, a dummy mallet and a chisel resting on a shelf in the foreground, the crowded workshop behind her.
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Lily Marsh mid-conversation, holding her glasses in one hand, the roughed-out white stone rising in the foreground and a large paper template pinned to the brick wall behind.
Listening, before the work started. She had done psychology, then a stretch working in a prison, before she ever came to stone. IM-1018

With Timothy gone, I turned to Lily, and the morning settled into the thing I had come for. She is easy company - quick, warm, and as it turned out one of two people I would be photographing rather than one. But that comes later. First she talked, and I listened, and I learned that the woman carving a six-foot block of stone in a Sheffield workshop had come to it from a long way off.

Lily Marsh in profile, hair tied back, talking with her hands raised, the bare brick wall of the workshop behind her and a maker working at the right edge of the frame.
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Lily Marsh mid-sentence holding a chisel loosely in both hands, the white sculpture catching the light at the right edge of the frame, shelves of tools and bottles behind.
Lily started carving in 2013, after a two-year diploma. She had always been the one drawing and painting; stone was the creative outlet she had been missing. IM-1020

At the Stone

Lily read psychology at college, and afterwards went to work in a prison. It did not last, and she is candid about why: it was not the life she wanted, and the thing she had always actually been was creative - the one drawing, the one painting, the one who needed to make something with her hands. So she did a two-year diploma in stone carving and started, in 2013, doing the thing she had been circling all along. The diploma brought a few early commissions. The commissions brought her here.

You can see all of that in the way she works. She picks up a dummy mallet - the round, soft-faced wooden one stone carvers swing - and a chisel, and leans in.

Lily Marsh in a respirator and glasses, leaning into the work, a round-headed dummy mallet raised in one hand and a chisel held to the pale stone in the other, the tall carved form rising on the right.
Mallet in one hand, chisel in the other, the same motion thousands of times over. The stone gives up its shape a few grams at a time. IM-1031

The block she was on stood taller than her waist, a leaning, tapering form that she was bringing up out of the stone a few grams at a time. The mallet does not so much hit as nudge - a steady, patient tapping, the chisel walked across the surface, the waste falling away as pale grit onto the floor. She wore a respirator over her mouth the whole time she cut, and pushed it down to her chin the moment she stopped to talk, which was often.

Close view of Lily Marsh carving, respirator over her mouth and glasses pushed up, both hands working a chisel against the stone, the wooden mallet blurred in motion.
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A tight study of Lily Marsh’s hands - one fist gripping the chisel against the worked face of the stone, a ring on her finger, the round wooden mallet caught at the top of the frame, her jeans behind.
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Lily Marsh carving out in the works yard, bent low over the stone in a respirator, mallet and chisel in her hands, the long brick range of Stag Works receding behind her.
Out in the yard, where the dust can blow off and the light is better. IM-1023

I got in close on the hands, because the hands are where the whole craft lives. There is no machine here doing the deciding. Every blow has a target the eye has chosen, and the carver reads the stone the way the basket maker reads a hazel rod - the grain, the soft spots, the place a careless tap would shear off more than she meant. When the dust got thick she carried the work out into the yard, where the air moves and the light is honest, and knelt down beside it on the cobbles of Stag Works.

Looking down over Lily Marsh’s shoulder at the head of the sculpture - the chisel biting into a band of rough tooled texture, a smooth dressed facet alongside it, the contrast between worked and unworked stone clear in the raking light.
The tooled texture and the dressed facet side by side. Everything you see is decided by hand, blow by blow. IM-1033

Looking down over her shoulder you could see the two languages of the surface side by side: a band of rough tooled texture where the chisel had been walking, and beside it a smooth dressed facet, polished flat, catching the light. That contrast is the sculpture, really - the decision about where the stone stays raw and where it is brought up to a finish. It is the part she loves, the creative outlet she said she had been missing through the psychology and the prison and all the years before she let herself do this.

Lily Marsh kneeling beside the finished standing stone in the yard, mallet raised, a pallet truck behind her, the sculpture lit so its leaning, polished crest catches the daylight.
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The Surprise

I had planned for one maker. The room had two. The other was Steve - a letter cutter and stonemason, and Lily’s collaborator - and he turned a portrait of a sculptor into the record of a partnership. He came to stone the long way round too, and his turn was sharper than hers. In 2008, in the same month, he lost his job and broke his leg. Laid up and recovering, with nothing to do but think about what came next, he started looking at the trades.

Lily Marsh in a respirator working at the roughed-out stone while Steve stands a few feet away in a cap and a respirator round his neck, hands at his sides, watching; a hand-painted carved sign reading ‘songs in tongues’ propped on the bench behind.
Steve, watching the work. He is a letter cutter and stonemason, and the surprise of the day - I had not planned for a second maker. IM-1029

He took courses in stonemasonry and letter cutting, won a place through a trust that funds people into the lettering and masonry trades, and did the training meaning only to try it. He liked it too much to stop. That was 2009, and he has been at it ever since - now working on council-driven projects, public artworks and lettering cut in stone for the city. The hand-painted carved sign propped on his bench, all songs in tongues, old and new, is the kind of thing the work turns into.

Lily Marsh bent over the stone with a chisel while Steve sits with his back to the camera working at a sink-side bench, a small carved stone sheep sitting on the floor on a wooden pallet between them.
The two of them at work in the same room - Lily on her sculpture, Steve at the bench. A carved stone sheep waits on the pallet. IM-1030

The room is his, originally. He had a workshop on the other side of Sheffield before this one, and when Lily took on a project that needed real space, the two of them came together and he invited her to share. It is a decent size - not big, but enough for the two of them - and it suits the way they work. Sometimes it is the same commission: Steve cuts the lettering, Lily makes the sculpture, and the piece leaves as one thing made by two pairs of hands. Sometimes they are simply two people getting on with their own work in companionable earshot of each other.

Lily Marsh and Steve standing together in the middle of the workshop, facing the camera - Lily at left in a dark jumper, Steve at right with a full beard and cap, the bench and racked stone slabs around them.
Lily and Steve. They share the room, and often the same commission - his lettering, her sculpture. IM-1036

Steve has a beard you could photograph all day, and the easy warmth of a man entirely content with what he does. He is the sort you would happily count as a friend by the end of a morning, and so is Lily. I did not press either of them much about home or family - that was not what the day was for - but you do not need to, to see that the second act each of them found in stone is the one that fits. Both of them love the work. It shows in everything.

Lily Marsh leaning against her bench with her arms crossed, smiling sideways, while Steve stands beside her laughing, a large dark artwork of an eye and antlers on the wall behind them.
Warm people, both of them. The kind of pair you would happily count as friends by the end of a morning. IM-1037
Lily Marsh and Steve standing side by side in the workshop, both turned to the camera and smiling, tools and shelving crowding the frame around them.
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The Two of Them

Out in the yard, near the end, I got the frame that holds the whole day: Steve at his stone cutting letters, Lily at hers carving form, a few feet apart in the same light. Two people who each arrived at this trade by accident, or near enough - a broken leg and a lost job for him, a prison job that did not fit for her - working the same material in the same room, and glad of it.

Steve and Lily Marsh working out in the yard at Stag Works - Steve at left cutting a stone sign that reads ‘songs in to…’, a respirator on his face, Lily at right kneeling and carving her standing stone, the long industrial range behind them.
The trade, side by side in the yard. Steve cutting letters, Lily carving form. IM-1034
Lily Marsh standing in the middle of the shared workshop holding a dummy mallet and chisel, a large stone template with a blue drawn outline propped at her left, the crowded studio around her.
IM-1035

I asked Lily to stand for a proper portrait before I packed the cameras away, mallet in hand, the respirator round her neck where it lives between cuts. She is an easier subject than most, because she does not perform for the lens; she just is, the way she is at the stone. I had come to Sheffield to photograph one maker and met two. That is the kind of mistake worth making.

Lily Marsh smiling at the camera in her workshop, holding a respirator and a dummy mallet against her chest, glasses on, a large artwork of an eye and antlers on the wall behind her.
Lily Marsh, Stone, Letter and Sculpture Studio, Stag Works. IM-1025

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