UK Claire Fitzsimmons UK Claire Fitzsimmons

Luminary Bakery

A bakery with a purpose, Luminary offers second chances and hope along with those cinnamon buns.

When you enter that door you will experience love, kindnesses and respect. You will never be the same. If you are broke they will glue all your pieces back in a way that won’t be broken again. Luminary will give hope. They will give you strength.
— Luminary graduate

What is it: Cinnamon Swirls. Carrot Cake. Vegan choc chip cookies. Lattes from New Ground. And behind it all an award-winning social enterprise offering socially and economically disadvantaged women a better future. 

What you need to know: A bakery with an impact, and some serious fangirls. Founded by Alice Williams as a baking course in 2014 in a Bethnal Green Church for the women in her community severely impacted by poverty and violence, Luminary Bakery has now grown to two London café bakeries (in Stoke Newington and Camden) and an endorsement from Meghan Markle in her guest editorship of Vogue. Over the intervening years, and still very much today, Luminary’s courses, support programs, work experience, community infrastructure, and employment have provided both a safe space and a second chance to women in London who are in situations of “multiple disadvantages”, such as gender-based violence (domestic abuse, prostitution, sexual exploitation, human trafficking and honor-based violence) and experiences of homelessness, mental health issues, substance abuse and the criminal justice system.

What they offer (online and off): If you live locally, make it your go-to café. Further away, support their work through donations to campaigns such as #shareherfare — reallocating the money you may be saving not commuting towards the cost of travel for their trainees. Or buy one of their cute aprons, tote bags and the Rising Hope cookbook which includes recipes and inspirational stories from the courses. A favourite idea is to order Letterbox Brownies delivered to a friend’s door (only UK for now). Or if you want to get even more involved, offer your skills to become a mentor or volunteer. 

Why we think it’s special: The things that build our days, the tiny rituals like ordering a coffee, can build the lives of others. That’s from who gets to be employed as baristas and bakers, to sourcing ethically, to being a vital contributor to a local community. Luminary works on all those levels going beyond the café/bakery model to transforming the lives of the people in the neighborhoods that it serves. Our daily rituals can make a difference in our communities – that daily coffee, even those special occasion orders (wedding cake anyone) – can benefit others in ways that Williams has already imagined for you.

In founder Alice Williams’ words: “Meeting women experiencing extreme poverty, disadvantage, and violence was the inspiration for starting Luminary. Too often, violence and trauma isolate us from community, when that is the very thing we need most. Every woman has shown immense courage to survive her circumstances alone, but it is only when others embrace her that she can really start to fulfill her potential. Luminary is more than a bakery; it is a community and a sign of hope for so many.” 

One piece of advice to do where you are: Ok we have two: One is general: Think about how you can ‘foster a culture of second chances’ in your own world. And two, much more specific: seek out their densely packed Resource Packs on Self-Care or Safety Planning for when home doesn’t feel safe or dealing with the impacts of the pandemic as a mum.

To find out more: Website / Instagram / Facebook / Twitter

If you’ve visited Luminary Bakery, or you have other businesses with a purpose that you’d recommend, tell us about it at hello@ifloststarthere.com.

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Scrappy adventures at home

This weekend we brought the outside world indoors. Now we’re trying to bring the magic of the undomestic world home.

In a creative outburst (or desperation on day 40 of lockdown), we pitched a tent in our living room and went camping. We blew up the deluxe mattress, brought down our duvets, and hung a super bright lantern. The six-year-old asked for spooky stories, the eleven-year-old asked for more bouncing on that deluxe mattress, the forty-four-year-old husband gave up and headed for an actual bed, alone. As I fell asleep with the kids, we looked at the sky and trees through windows, snuggling into the warmth of indoor camping and our even cozier imaginations. 

As we’re increasingly longing to be out in the world, we’ve also starting to think about how we can bring our favorite places indoors. We’re learning in our very scrappy way how to recreate a little of our former world’s magic in our domestic unbliss. Thrown together with whatever we have lying around the house, our manifestations at home are ungainly, un-Pinterest worthy recreations, but somewhere in our souls, they are filling an ever-growing need to be somewhere else, with you in the world outside. 

We’ve noticed on social media the creeping in of festivals, discos, museums, into our living rooms, gardens, kitchens. We’re seeing a blending together of before and now, and a relentless hope that once was will come back again. For now, our attempts at capturing the spirit of where we once gathered will have to do. 

Here’s our rundown of what we’re missing and how we’re, and you perhaps, are bringing places out there in here. 

Cafes: Missing, missing, missing. We admit to buying a coffee maker as Step 1 of our lockdown journey (not sure there was a Step 2) and have since spent way too much time working out how to make an oat milk latte with froth (who needs to write the next NYT bestseller?). Add in Spotify’s Coffeehouse playlist, find a quirky chair at home, and nurse that coffee for 3-4 hours while trying not to make eye contact with anyone else. Maybe even throw $7 in the bin if you live in the Bay Area. You are almost, almost there. 

Festivals: Can of wine, loud music, and deck chair on whatever outside space we can find. Kids running wild. We’ve nearly nailed it. The only things left are to throw mud at our tent, find the wellies, and start smoking. 

Bakeries: A friend is baking cookies and cakes for distraction. Actually, everyone is baking cookies and cakes for distraction. There’s a run on flour and yeast and cultivating a sourdough starter has just become the new learning a language of lockdown. We’re also opening cookbooks like “50 most calorific things you can cook today with real sugar”, rather than “The Joy of Kale and Brown Rice”. Scents of bread baking, old school achievement, something to eat that isn’t from a can or cereal. Also comfort eating – it is a requirement to comfort eat right now. Pairs well with white wine at the end of the day. This is not the moment to diet, numb feelings yes with carbohydrates and alcohol. No one can see you anyway.  

Coworking: If you live alone, sorry this one is going to be tough; you could make cut out figures as today’s art project and prop them next to your laptop while smiling at them occasionally. If you live with other people, just find any table, crowd around it, write an aspirational saying like ‘We work best together’ somewhere on a wall, and occasionally high-five each other. Points for adding name tags. 

Indie cinema: Just switch out Netflix for National Theater Live, add in posh popcorn and a vodka tonic, and you’ve got the vibe. 

Museum: Entry-level efforts, hang all the new creations you’ve been working on with everyone else on a wall in a pretty way. Add wall labels with cute names and give the whole thing a title (no, “Untitled” is cheating). Even better hang them on a wall outside and call it ‘Public Art’. But if you want to take it seriously, and you do, because you know ‘Art’, then follow the lead of New Jersey resident Teresa Mistretta. If you want to get super fancy, make your home into one of those experiential museums – paint your walls candy-colored (you need a DIY project right now). Even better, make merchandise in said theme to sell back to yourself.

Library / Bookstore: Those books on your shelves at home you’ve been meaning to read, now is the time to actually read them, not just wave at them. That might mean pulling I Could Pee on This off your shelves, but hopefully, you have something lying around like Joan Didion’s The Year of Magical Thinking. If going for the library vibe, post them back through your front door for added return affect. If indie bookstore, make cute piles randomly around your house. For either, go crazy and curate subject areas, that only you understand – brave princesses who’ve learned to say no, self-help for the days you hate everyone, chick-lit which you basically see as the great American novel but are too ashamed to say so. You could also print a cool Indie Store name on the side of a paper bag and shop your shelves. We always wanted to own a bookstore.   

Lecture series: You can be inspirational too. Watch something by Brene Brown or Elizabeth Gilbert or Glennon Doyle, then hold forth at dinner about the value of vulnerability, creativity, love. Your co-lockdown companions will appreciate your Ted Talk at the kitchen table. They might even take notes. 

Safari: If you have pets, just follow them around the house for an hour, narrating their escapades. Maybe even give them a backstory that adds drama – you need an arc for this one to work. Make sure to practice a Megan Markle narrating Elephants range of emotion.

Retreat: Basically, lockdown with some sort of epiphany and hiding alone in your bedroom trying not to talk to anyone. 

Places in the world – we miss you. And though our attempts to make you real in our living rooms and gardens may be naff, they’ll have to do for now. One day when we visit you again, we will shower you with love and attention and never take you for granted again. We Promise. 

 

 

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RISE

Somerset’s RISE is both a place to come together and a modern day twist on traditional church.

A place to relax, play, work, eat. A place to be together

Above the entrance is a simple sign that says ‘Rise’. This sets the tone for all that goes on inside: a café, bakery and play space, an active calendar of workshops, events and activities, office space for socially-minded businesses, and a contemporary art gallery that shouts out local and national talent. Here, in a sensitively converted church, are all those components that once made this space so appealing to the congregation it previously housed: community, positivity, hope and connection. 

Three years ago, Io Fox and Ed Roberts, a former teacher and nurse, bought this church, originally built in the early 1800s. It had fallen in recent years on its own hard times. The congregation of the United Reform Church had been dwindling for a while, so much so that the building was put on the market. But rather than shape this space into luxury apartments or private offices, the new owners did something remarkable. They shifted the emphasis to a wider purpose, giving a modern spin to the architecture, history and ideals this church once offered. Through their renovations, they weren’t intent on erasing what had once past, but rather building on it. Everywhere there are traces of what the building was before: etched arched windows, stone plaques, a working organ that dominates the main space. Keeping the look and feel of the place, they acknowledged its abiding history, and even embraced its former community and intent (a couple has since got married here). 

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They also did this, they allowed the community in which it sits in Frome, a small town in Somerset known for its creativity, a say in how this project evolved. They kept those long-time hallowed doors open to whoever needed them in maybe a different way, inviting in businesses, practitioners, parents, and charities who were seeking space to develop initiatives of their own. They welcomed everyone, with the aim of similarly nurturing people within its walls, so that Rise could truly reflect the community in which it is situated. And the local people that it served, answered the call, creating a new sense of life in this space, forming and shaping its content, giving this building new and more relevant purpose. 

Three years on, Rise is now a buzzing multi-use space. The central atrium has been given over to Rye Bakery which runs a friendly café incorporating local suppliers, simple food and organic sources where possible. On Friday it hosts community building pizza nights. There’s also a play space (Alfred’s Tower) for the little ones, which has a handmade feel to it, a nice antidote to the bright plastic that usually comes with the kid’s area, and a sweet reading space. Most laudable though is the stunning woven nest space, a semi-private huddle for nursing moms and for smaller gatherings. 

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The mezzanine space where the congregation would once have sat, has become an increasingly well regarded contemporary art gallery, The Whittox Gallery, curated by Sara Robson. It shows local and national contemporary artists and designers in an exhibition program that roams across all media.

Sort of behind the scenes, The Old School and The Sun Room, have become spaces to hire by anyone, for private and public events. The downstairs offices and work spaces have been rented out to socially-minded organizations, like OpenStoryTellers, a charity that aims to empower people with learning disabilities and autism.  

Across all these spaces are an active range of classes, workshops and events for all ages, abilities and backgrounds such as yoga classes, wellbeing sessions (like one on unleashing creative genius), exercise groups (see the popular Mojo moves and hoop dances), art and science clubs. A therapeutic choir just started in the space.

Rise is a modern-day church without really being a church at all. It works within that rich history of places where people gather, connect and believe, and gives those very fundamental human needs a thoroughly modern-day twist. In its name and its mission, Rise uplifts those who work here, engage here and play here. There’s a reason churches were once the heart of the community, and there’s a reason why Rise has become a space that local people flock to again.

To find out more: Website / Facebook / Twitter / Instagram

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