Black bag
Ever since I started drawing, I've carried around a shoulder bag of some kind or another with at least a sketchbook, pencils, pens, and hand sharpener in it. I used them all the time. When I was in my earlier teen years, it was an army surplus canvas bag, and often as not, I also carried an old fishing tackle box with crayons, charcoal sticks, kneaded erasers, and other stuff that made me feel like I was an artist. It didn't matter much when I was out in the fields behind our house, but it must have looked geeky as hell when I was walking around in public. When I visited my grandfather in Japan for the first time as a sixteen year old, I bought a larger vivid dark olive green bag with imitation leather straps and a front pocket, and used it until I was most of the way through my first stint in college. Then came a succession of day packs, and they followed me through later sporadic episodes in design and architecture school, as well as serving as my substitute for a briefcase when I was Director of Design for a Lancaster county cabinet manufacturer. That one was a neat black ballistic nylon bag with some really cool compartments, stowable straps, and a zippered flap sleeve. When the zippers failed and I started feeling like I'd stretched the college kid image as far into my thirties as I could, I finally broke down and took a trip to an upscale leather shop with my son Gabe, who was four years old at the time. He still remembers the occasion, twelve years later. I paid an outrageous $400 for a supple black leather shoulder bag from Coach with a front flap compartment and a single large zippered cavity with a few leather pockets sewn into it. It was a real extravagance - elegant and sophisticated, and meant to be pampered. But I didn't do that. I beat the daylights out of it, never once used any of the leather conditioner, and it has gradually worn into a pleasantly battered state of appearance. For years, I used it to tote a laptop computer that barely would fit, but now I have a more purpose built bag for that. Since it has been retired from daily business duty though, I once again keep a sketchbook, pencils, a nifty hand sharpener from Staedler, and a pipe or two inside it. I think it's happier this way. And once again, I'm back to using that sketchbook all the time.
Reader Comments (1)
This is one of my favorites of your sketches. Really captures the essence of something well-used.