Rosey has always enjoyed volunteering at her local church Holy Trinity Clapham, beginning with art for the children’s groups. She took part in the “Living Stones” committee to restore the church and suggested digging down and using the slice of land East of the church; which is finally reaching fruition. In order to fund raise funds, she organised a sewing group, and together they made her left-over interior design fabrics into cushions etc. and sold these at The Common Fayre. She then went on to run the dog show for 5 years. She headed up the running of an evening “Connect” service 2009-12, to provide for secondary school children and also increase the demographic of 18-30 year olds. She enjoyed inviting speakers, producing flyers and organising the band and the service itself until the numbers swelled enough to become formalised by one of her speakers - as a new vicar; he now heads up the whole church. In 2015 and 2016 she joined Kerry Astin on the Patmore Estate, Battersea, to work for FAST London in the community centre there, where she helped the women paint a mural, make cushions, aprons and iPhone cases etc. from Colefax & Fowler - who kindly donated the surplus fabrics from their ‘lock-up’ at Chelsea Harbour Design Centre. In 2017 she helped advise Holy Trinity Clapham in the refurbishment of Trinity House, where she enjoyed helping host The Robes Project. In 2019 she was asked to join a lay-led team to run the anglican service at HMP Brixton, and since the pandemic she has continued to volunteer, and helps run a bible study for 15 men from A wing every Wednesday evening as well as support the Alpha and Sycamore Tree courses when required. She is a keen supporter of Onwards and Upwards, whose first initiative is XO Bikes, which provides training in bike mechanics for ex-offenders, in order to get them back into employment. Her company has always supported the Royal Society for Blind Children. During the pandemic she ran her father’s 9 1/2” gauge railway (The Brightwalton Light Railway) for the local children. Helped by a group of volunteers, she has directed it’s upkeep, restored engines, documented and written up it’s history in 2 volumes and secured the acquisition of over 100 boxes of John Hall-Craggs’s research by the National Rail Museum. She continues to encourage young people from the village, and beyond to use the BLR as a place to learn and have fun. Since 2022, she has been an active steering group member of IDD (Interior Design Declares) - organising their 3rd birthday at the Building Centre, and has spoken at Decorex, London Build, Surface Design Show and The Big Green Day to promote sustainability in the industry.