On the Friday night time after Thanksgiving, a resort room on the seventeenth ground of the Lodge Indigo in Downtown Los Angeles was reworked right into a leather-based dressing room. A few dozen buddies crowded round a king-size mattress, cracking open Tecates, vibing to techno home music from a conveyable speaker, and adjusting one another’s harnesses.
The flash of a digital digicam went off like a strobe as Yair Lopez documented his buddies earlier than their night time at an afterparty. They have been all there as a part of the L.A. iteration of CLAW: a nationwide leather-based and kink conference that provides workshops, events and neighborhood areas for individuals inquisitive about BDSM tradition. Based in 2002, the conference began out in Cleveland, however has additionally held occasions in in L.A. since 2021.
As others spent their Thanksgiving vacation with blood family on the dinner desk, this explicit gathering was dubbed “Leather Thanksgiving” — a celebration of chosen household, cobbled collectively from numerous corners of L.A.’s queer nightlife. For Lopez and his buddies, that sense of belonging is barely rising.
“This chain was gifted to me from a friend,” Lopez mentioned as he adjusted the silver round his neck. “Chains with a lock represent that you have a dom and the other person has the key. I’m still waiting for the lock,” he added jokingly, glancing at his boyfriend.
Leather-based lovers pre-game forward of the discharge celebration for the movie, “Encuerados,” on November twenty eighth on the Lodge Indigo in Downtown Los Angeles.
(Yair Lopez / For De Los)
It was a giant day for Lopez. Earlier he showcased three of his photographs as a part of a leather-based artwork gallery and attended a screening of “Encuerados,” a brief documentary he appeared in, which shadowed a gaggle of Latino males carving out house in L.A.’s leather-based neighborhood. An “Encuerados” afterparty would quickly observe.
For Lopez and his buddies, leather-based is much less about fetish and extra about kinship, security and visibility, in a metropolis the place queer Latino areas stay scarce.
Lopez has turn out to be a visual power in L.A.’s leather-based underground scene, constructing neighborhood by means of each his artwork and the areas he helps create. He has self-published his work by means of photographs and zines; he additionally based Contramundo, a Latino leather-based night time on the Bullet Bar in North Hollywood. His neighborhood work even led to a third-place end within the 2023 Mr. L.A. Leather-based competitors.
He began capturing a decade in the past, transferring from avenue scenes and hikes to L.A.’s queer nightlife. That work finally led him to the Eagle, the place he discovered a muse and a neighborhood he didn’t know he wanted.
“I grew up in a pretty religious Mexican household in the San Fernando Valley. I was made to feel ashamed of who I was, even my own body, so finding this felt so needed,” he recalled.
Situated in Silver Lake, the Eagle is a legacy leather-based bar that has anchored L.A.’s kink scene for many years. It is usually one of many few remaining areas for this nook of queer nightlife. And whereas Lopez did really feel seen by means of the leather-based neighborhood, there was nonetheless a chunk lacking.
“It is no surprise that a lot of gay spaces are predominantly white, so finding gay brown community is hard. But that changed when I started meeting other like-minded Latinos in leather,” Lopez mentioned.
A type of Latinos was Leonardo Iriarte, the primary Latino Mr. L.A. Leather-based and co-founder of Payasos L.A., a nonprofit that organizes occasions and mutual assist efforts to assist Latino visibility within the leather-based world.
The group of buddies bumped into Iriarte as they made their solution to the 18th ground, the place he was DJing for the night time in a big, dimly lit convention room.
Wearing black leather-based pants and boots, Iriarte had “Mr. L.A. Leather 2011” embroidered throughout the again of his vest. The Michoacán native additionally occurred to be the protagonist of the “Encuerados” documentary and host of the “” afterparty.
“When I moved to the United States in 2001, I didn’t move for the classic American dream of looking for a better life financially,” mentioned Iriarte. “My purpose of moving here was to be free as a gay person.”
Latinos in leather-based pose forward of the “Encuerados” screening throughout the CLAW L.A. conference on November twenty eighth on the Lodge Indigo in Downtown Los Angeles.
(Yair Lopez / For De Los)
And whereas Iriarte did discover that freedom he hoped for, he was not ready for the racism he would encounter within the leather-based scene — particularly after successful his title.
“I remember a hate campaign and even death threats after I won,” he mentioned. “It was scary, but it opened a door for other Latinos, and this space has grown so much since.”
Because it will get nearer to midnight, the darkish convention room swells with our bodies transferring to Iriarte’s pulsing techno. Partygoers poured in sporting leather-based chaps, chest-hugging harnesses, and even tejana hats for a vaquero-leather twist.
Lopez put down his digicam to flow into and greet buddies from over time. He ran into Orlando Bedolla, director of “Encuerados,” who first met Lopez 4 years in the past whereas filming the documentary.
“I learned about his photography, the zine he was making, all of it,” Bedolla mentioned. “I found him interesting because he is literally a Latino increasing Latino representation in the leather community.”
Bedolla recalled attending CLAW L.A. in 2021 and going to his first Latino celebration there after getting an invitation from Payasos L.A. Inside, he discovered a room stuffed with principally Latino males in jockstraps, harnesses and leather-based. He was struck by the vitality of an underground neighborhood he didn’t notice existed. That night time would turn out to be the seed for the movie.
On the dance ground, coloured lights flashed throughout Lopez’s visage as he tried to maintain observe of his room key. His buddies borrowed it to run upstairs to their shared room for extra drinks — and he puzzled aloud about how messy it might be after their two-night keep.
These areas, low-lit but overflowing with camaraderie, provide the neighborhood one thing tougher to seek out anyplace else, particularly throughout the holidays: the liberty to be absolutely themselves.
“When I step into spaces like this, I don’t just see leather,” Lopez mentioned, taking a sip of his vodka soda. “I see people reaching for some kind of joy and connection we’re constantly told is wrong. But we all want to feel touched and seen — and there’s nothing wrong with that.”

