Five horizontal watercolor brush strokes in deep lavender, cool ash, and misted teal on white, with a Saul Bass–style ink icon of an abstract hourglass shape with two small drifting dots nearby.

Vespervague

VESS-per-vayg

Origins

From vespers, the evening hour in liturgical tradition, blended with vague for the blurred, unstructured feeling of early time.

Meaning

Vespervague is the first clean evening when the hours open up and we do not know what to do with ourselves.

Our hands keep reaching for a familiar routine that is no longer there. Attention slides off everything, then grabs too hard, then drifts again. The quiet feels bigger than it should.

We realize how much of night used to be pre-filled, and how unpracticed we are at simply being awake.

Usage

Vespervague hit at 7:30, when I realized the night was just… mine.