Just some additional thoughts and observations from my cellar.
Have the stud work away from the wall and floor (as Mike suggested) and ventilate the gap, either passive or forced with fans. If all the ventilation pulls up from floor level around the whole work area the damp should be controlled, even from the floor. And whatever heating you have will not then be blown straight out.
An old fridge or freezer, with the door left open will make a really cheap dehumidifier (good for your budget). You would need a sump attaching that you can empty.
My tools and stuff stored in well ventilated stay rust free, things piled up in corners are worst, cupboards with a good gap behind them aren't bad. Anything hung on the brick walls is terrible. Storing timber down there in stacks near the floor is no good. On racks at the ceiling level is OK for a bit.
For temporary cheapness on the walls how about "corex" corrugated plastic, like estate agents signs. Light, white, non rotting and cheap.
Andy
Have the stud work away from the wall and floor (as Mike suggested) and ventilate the gap, either passive or forced with fans. If all the ventilation pulls up from floor level around the whole work area the damp should be controlled, even from the floor. And whatever heating you have will not then be blown straight out.
An old fridge or freezer, with the door left open will make a really cheap dehumidifier (good for your budget). You would need a sump attaching that you can empty.
My tools and stuff stored in well ventilated stay rust free, things piled up in corners are worst, cupboards with a good gap behind them aren't bad. Anything hung on the brick walls is terrible. Storing timber down there in stacks near the floor is no good. On racks at the ceiling level is OK for a bit.
For temporary cheapness on the walls how about "corex" corrugated plastic, like estate agents signs. Light, white, non rotting and cheap.
Andy