Vancouver Magazine

ONE FOR AWL

Awl Together is giving local leather goods— and the entire industry—a fresh look.

- By Alyssa Hirose

while most University stUdents wait tables or work retail to pay for school, Vancouveri­te Ariss Grutter took a more traditiona­l approach to their part-time job: they started shining shoes. By the time they finished undergrad, Grutter had fallen in love with leatherwor­k. “I really enjoy how durable and environmen­tally sustainabl­e leather is,” they explain. “Every single thing I make will last for two lifetimes.”

The enduring nature of the material also made it perfect for Grutter’s first custom work. “I’m queer and trans, and I started making custom harnesses for my friends,” they say. “I want to make sure that trans people and queer people have access to apparel that fits them, that accentuate­s their gender, and that makes them feel great.”

But the male-dominated industry of leatherwor­k wasn’t exactly a welcoming community. While working in cobbler shops and doing alteration­s, Grutter struggled to find their place. “I’ve found it really hard to be trained in this industry, and for people to take

Every single thing I make will last for two lifetimes.”

me seriously,” says Grutter. “People just assume that a man should be doing this job.” So, last April, Grutter and fellow queer leatherwor­ker Tess Gobeil launched a Kickstarte­r and raised over $22,000 to launch Awl Together Leather—the only female and queer-owned leatherwor­k and shoe repair shop in Western Canada. The East Van shop specialize­s in custom work (from vests to chaps to a seven-foot leather rhino) but offers ready-made accessorie­s, too: think wallets, coasters and decorative trays. According to WorkBC, 82 percent of leatherwor­kers in the province are male, but more than half are approachin­g retirement. “The industry is changing,” says Gobeil, “and we want to lead the change in Vancouver.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada