Between sessions
In the Maboneng studio there's a mug that always sits on the drawing table, between the ink jars and Koko's sewing needle that Nala doesn't use but won't move. It's a rooibos mug. Rooibos with nothing — no sugar, no milk. She makes it when she arrives at the studio at three in the afternoon, before cleaning the table and reviewing the day's designs. She drinks it in the first forty minutes. After that, between clients, she refills it. The rooibos goes lukewarm because Nala has no microwave in the studio — she has a lamp rescued from a dumpster at Arts on Main, a chair from a Jeppestown barbershop, a dentist's table, and a tattoo machine worth more than everything else combined. But no microwave.
The lukewarm rooibos is part of the ritual. Not the pretty ritual people talk about on Instagram: the one that means stopping three minutes between a dotwork session and the next, stretching the fingers, drinking something that isn't cold water, letting the hand rest before going back to puncturing skin for three hours. Nala caps her sessions at three hours. Never more. The aardwolf doesn't destroy the termite mound — it harvests and lets it grow back. Nala does the same with the bodies she tattoos and with her own hands.
The ceramicist two doors down sometimes brings her rooibos already made on Sundays. They don't talk much. Sometimes not at all. They sit at the studio door and drink in silence while Fox Street goes quiet. That's Maboneng on a Sunday afternoon: a place of light with no one watching.







