Leana Lovings - No Reason To Leave -09.21.21- -
"No reason to leave" could be read as complacency, a surrender to what is easy. But Leana reframed it each morning as an affirmative: a decision to remain where things were known and, in being known, made beautiful. She learned to pick apart afternoons and reweave them with care. She learned the architecture of contentment: how to hang a picture straight, how to apologize before the silence hardened, how to make coffee just right. These were not insignificant acts; they were the mortar between bricks.
09.21.21 had been a Wednesday, she remembered now—the way certain numbers anchor themselves in the body like a bruise. That afternoon they'd walked without destination, letting streets stitch themselves to their pace until dusk sloughed off into neon and the air cooled enough to make the river look like a committed secret. They'd shared a sandwich from a cart that wrote its own rules in mustard and relish, and later a laugh that landed too close to something honest. At some point she’d said something small—about the color of his jacket, or the angle of the sun—something that had let him tilt toward her like a ship answering wind. She had not left that night because there was no reason to—no thunder to outrun, no instruction to retreat. There had simply been staying, which felt for a while like an act of gravity. Leana Lovings - No Reason to Leave -09.21.21-
She kept the windows cracked that September morning, the air carrying the burnt sugar of a bakery three blocks over and the distant thrum of the city waking up. Light slanted through the blinds in thin, impatient bars, laying a map of lines across the coffee table where a single photograph lay face-up: two people laughing on a porch, hair caught in motion, a Polaroid timestamped with harsh white numbers—09.21.21—like a breadcrumb left for anyone who might follow. "No reason to leave" could be read as
There were reasons to leave—travel, reinvention, the siren call of novelty. There were practical alarms that might someday make departure necessary. But for now, the day offered an uncomplicated permission: to do nothing spectacular and to be entirely satisfied with it. She stood with her cup, listening to the quiet list of the apartment—plants rustling, the radiator hissing, a distant siren—as if those sounds were a chorus praising the ordinary. She learned the architecture of contentment: how to
On the windowsill, a small plant leaned toward the light as if considering flight. She watered it and remembered the way he had tucked a stray curl behind her ear that night in September, like a seamstress who finds a way to keep things whole without fuss. She had then said nothing—no promise, no plan—only the gentle acceptance of presence. That had been the pivot.
Did you by chance buy your waxed canvas online? I’m looking for something just like that to make a new bag and it is hard to find!
Hi Mariah! I am also using waxed canvas for my next bag. I bought this piece on Etsy (https://www.etsy.com/shop/bagsupplycompany), which is okay for a yard or two. If you need a lot, you might want to contact Fairfield Textile who can sell larger quantities. Look for Martexin Original Wax. They have a cutting fee for small orders, and shipping is usually pretty expensive because it ships on a long roll. Hope that helps!
Bag making is very interesting. I saw your other bags. That’s what I do the most of, though I make clothes like a recycled denim vest recently. Have you worked with stretch fabrics yet? Pullover shirts are a breeze with a nice cotton stretch; slap on a patch pocket and I like to put an Mp3 pocket just above the waist ad off to the side where comfortable.
So I got something recently I want you to see, knowing you have your industrial machine. I got a post machine that makes chain stitches. Check it out at
http://1drv.ms/1TxUsdG
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This is a fabulous pattern. I found you on the Sew Mama Sew site. I ordered my waxed canvas at Red Rabbit Mercantile .https://www.redrabbitmercantile.com. I used leather handles – Red Rabbit was happy to put a hardware kit together for me and it arrived quickly. I love the results!
Thank you! Glad you like the pattern.
Hi Taylor,
Found you on www.madalynne.com. This is a fantastic bag. I’ve just recently started working with thicker fabrics like these. Going to need to research this. I love the weathered look it has. So beautiful.
Cheers,
Natalie