[1][2] They sold crafts sourced through the Rural Industries Bureau Scheme, established to support mining communities in Wales and in Durham.
[4] The notes she made of her meetings with the women from mining communities whose work she sold give insight into the social conditions of the time.
[1] The shop also sold the work of Phyllis Barron, Dorothy Larcher, Enid Marx, Catherine Cockerell, Tirzah Garwood, Katherine Pleydell-Bouverie, Norah Braden, Bernard Leach, Shōji Hamada and Michael Cardew.
[1][2] This became the Exhibition of Modern British Crafts, first displayed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York in 1942, and then around America and Canada for the next three years.
[1] Rose was one of the founders and trustees of the Crafts Study Centre, and left her own collection and archive to it.