He employed them to supply banners, cushions, and chairs to Westminster Abbey for the funeral of Anne of Denmark, and to furnish a lodging and chapel for the Spanish ambassador Diego Sarmiento de Acuña, Count of Gondomar at Ely House in March 1620.
Cranfield's homes included Chelsea House, which he bought in 1619 and improved employing the services of Inigo Jones and Nicholas Stone, and Copthall in Essex.
His furnishings were supplied by Oliver Browne and John Baker, who had "dressed" Anne of Denmark's cabinet room in 1605,[6] and painted and gilded by Thomas Capp.
[10] Browne and Baker provided textiles for the hearse or catafalque designed by Inigo Jones in Westminster Abbey for the king's funeral.
He was still working with John Baker, and they petitioned for payment for the hire of tapestry from Oatlands Palace used to hang rooms near the Parliament Chamber.