In Toronto they rented a studio-home that occupied the top-floor above a carpenters shop at the corner of Church and Lombard Street called Hunters Inn.
In addition to being their studio-home, The Church became the official head office for the Sculptors' Society of Canada and a gathering place for Toronto's artistic community.
[10][5] In 1960, works by Loring along with those of Edmund Alleyn, Graham Coughtry, Jean Paul Lemieux and Albert Dumouchel represented Canada at the Venice Biennale.
Loring also created a portrait of Prime Minister Robert Borden in bronze and various war memorials in Cambridge, Ontario.
While their intention was to leave all their money from estate sales to support a new generation of Canadians sculptors by buying their sculptures and displaying them in public galleries across the country.
The fund has "had a significant impact on the art of sculpture in … [Canada] and continues to inspire both admirers and artists alike".