Dandy & Rose

Bespoke Western Shirts, Handmade in England


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Home from Nashville

It’s been a while since my last post!

I guess I must have been in recovery mode after my very exciting trip to the Americana Music Association Festival and Conference in Nashville back in September. And I’ve been catching up with shirt orders (photographs to follow!) as well as working on some features for Country Music People magazine.

It was my fourth AMA week and as always, it was jam-packed with goodies! It’s always a brilliant, inspiring musical week and though I come back exhausted, the memories make up for it. My report on the event will be in November’s Country Music People magazine.

http://www.countrymusicpeople.co.uk/

Quite apart from my journalistic duties, I got to go to the Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum to see their wonderful Bakersfield exhibition, where amongst many other things, the cream of their collection of clothes made by the great western tailor Nathan Turk were on display. Turk is a little neglected – sidelined by his more flamboyant contemporary, Nudie – but his work is truly beautiful.

Here’s the ‘Grapes of Wrath’ suit he made for Fred Maddox of The Maddox Family Band – known in their day as ‘The Most Colorful Hillbilly Band in America.’

fred grapes of wrath

With my Dandy & Rose hat on (what does my Dandy & Rose hat look like? I must work on that) I got to make some new friends,  and to see my very special customer Jim Lauderdale host the AMA Honors and Awards Show at The Ryman Auditorium while wearing one of my shirts. From the collection I had taken along, he chose this one in the Liberty fans-and-ribbons print, ‘Wendy Woo’:

Just between you and me, I was hoping ruffles would be involved, but when I saw Jim onstage wearing his choice of shirt under a beautiful blue embroidered Manuel suit, I was not disappointed at all. He looked great. Not sure what makes that suit fabric so lustrous, but I am guessing maybe a touch of silk in the weave.

He was kind enough to pose for this picture after the show, too:

Photo by Rick Diamond, Getty Images

Photo by Rick Diamond, Getty Images

The Awards show is held in The Ryman Auditorium – the building known as ‘The Mother Church of Country Music’ – which was the home of the iconic radio show The Grand Ole Opry from 1943 until 1974. Many a western tailored suit has graced that stage, most of them festooned with embroidery and glittering with rhinestones. And yes, that means that Hank Williams stood there when he made his Opry debut in 1949 singing the hit ‘Lovesick Blues’. Did he really  have to reprise it six times at the demand of the crowd, or is that just an ole country music myth? Who cares? It may not be a literal truth, but it says it all about Hank’s famous charisma.

So just sitting in the audience at The Ryman is an experience full of resonance for any fan of country music. And to see something I made in my little workroom in Lewes up there, being worn by one of my favourite artists – well, I think my face says it all.


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New collection

I’ve been working hard over the last few weeks on a new collection of shirts.  The Dandy & Rose style has been evolving and I think these five new shirts capture it perfectly.

Joy and Sorrow

This dandy ruffled shirt is made from a stunning fabric from Liberty’s Autumn/Winter collection called ‘Joy and Sorrow’. Liberty say that the collection was inspired by William Morris’ poem ‘The Earthly Paradise’ and explores the senses that inspired Morris as he took in the world around him. Then – and this is a bit of a leap that I’m not sure about – this particular print is at least partly designed by the tattoo artist Mo Capoletta. Morris and tattoos are not something that I normally associate with each other, but anyway the print is exquisite. It’s a darkly gothic contemplation of the Liberty style that incorporates peacock feathers, strings of pearls and alarmed looking, but stunningly coloured, birds on a midnight blue background. I love it.

Instead of the usual snaps, I have used grey pearl buttons as a fastener, to reflect the pearls depicted in the print.

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Wendy Woo

I’ve posted about this print before – it’s a real favourite, featuring fans, ribbons and birds. These two new shirts are given an extra twist by the perfect pattern matching (no really, it was nothing!)

The blue shirt has double rows of stitching to help you know the yokes and pockets are there. I’ve kept it simple apart from the three coral snaps at centre front.

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Its grey partner is piped in softest dove, with facings and smile pockets in the same colour.

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Amelia Star

A few weeks ago, I posted pictures of a shirt I made in the grey colourway of this print. I had spotted this purple and lime version in the shop and couldn’t get it out of my mind. In the end I just had to buy a piece and here’s the result. Again, pattern matching, double topstitching and, this time, two contrast snaps.

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Storm

Finally, this powerful print took my eye – and my breath – when I was buying fabrics recently. Designed for Liberty by the graphic artist Storm Thorgerson for their 2011 range, it was based on his  cover art for the Australian band Powderfinger’s 2009 album  ‘Golden Rule’. Thorgerson, who died earlier this year, was perhaps best know for his design for Pink Floyd’s ‘Dark Side of The Moon’. Liberty also have a design based on its iconic prism design. Hmmmm…

There are no western details on this shirt and it fastens with simple matt black buttons. The print is so strong, I felt that all I wanted to do was ‘frame’ it with black button bands, collar and cuffs.

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David’s shirt

This print ‘Amelia Star’ is one of Liberty’s seasonal prints from a couple of years back, but it’s new to me. I stumbled on it because David Liston, who manages the legendary Ernest Tubb Record Shop in Nashville, asked me for a shirt in black and white…. when we spotted this sixties looking ‘shades of grey’ print, we knew it was the right one!

david liston


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Stevie’s dress

For a long time I’ve been thinking about adapting the Dandy & Rose style to make a shirtdress.
It was Stevie Freeman, co-owner of Lewes’ very special americana-themed shop, Union Music Store, who gave me the spur to get on and do it. Here’s Stevie posing inside her shop for The Observer earlier this year.

stevie in shop. jpeg

In my fabric store we found some dark blue polycotton chambray with a soft drape and a lovely sheen which was perfect for the job. Then Stevie picked out Liberty’s classic stawberry print ‘Mirabelle’ as the contrast yoke.

mirabelle

She wanted a truly western look, so I suggested piping the yoke. Later on, I couldn’t resist adding the collar and front band to the ‘to be piped’ list. I used Liberty’s plain cherry red lawn to make the piping – extravagant, but worth it to get that special colour, especially as it exactly matched the pearl snaps I had in stock.
I based the dress on McCall’s 6506 – perfect because it has a proper collar stand and button band, both essential for a western look.

M6506

I cut the yoke from one of my favourite vintage patterns, again by McCalls .

McCalls1297

But hey, I only made the dress. It’s Stevie who wears it with absolute yee haw!

stevie in dress


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A touch of the psychedelic

no sleeves

I’m really loving working with this print on my new project… it says groovy 60s psychedelia to me. It’s called ‘Amelia Star’ and this colourway is ivory with loads of shades of blue-grey. I can’t help thinking of the Kinks!

The customer specified ‘loads of piping’ – so that what he’s got! Yokes, collar, front bands, pocket flaps and later today, cuffs. Best get on!


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More ruffles…

A couple of weeks ago, I posted photos of a ruffled paisley shirt that I had for sale on the Dandy & Rose etsy.com page. It was snapped up the same day so, because my mission is to bring paisley and ruffles to the world, I have made another one.

This one is in the Liberty of London classic paisley, Bourton. Find it for sale at

https://www.etsy.com/uk/listing/157565538/hand-made-one-of-a-kind-ruffled-shirt-in?ref=shop_home_active


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Trial and error

The other day, someone hit this site as the result of a Google search for ‘how to make a Nudie suit’.

I must admit I smiled and thought, ‘If I only knew…’

The suits produced by Nudie Cohn for Nudie’s The Rodeo Tailors, and these days by Nudie’s former head tailor, Manuel Cuevas, are way off the scale of my skills.

Then I remembered how, back in my bold, brash youth, I had a go at making a jacket for myself based on this beauty,  worn by Dwight Yoakam  on the cover of his 1987 second album,  Hillbilly Deluxe.

dwight-yoakam-hillbilly-deluxe-vinilo-lp-usa-nuevo_MLA-F-3432562941_112012

Doesn’t he look fetching?

The whole outfit –  white dress  shirt; grey boots; hat; torn boot-cut Levis  with silver conchos, hand made in Mexico, running down the side – was put together with more than a touch of genius by the great Nashville-based hillbilly tailor known as the ‘Rhinestone Rembrandt’, Manuel.

It is currently on display at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville.  The jacket is short, in the Hispanic style, and made from a vivid turquoise wool. The piping around the yoke and cuffs, handmade from strips of bias-cut wool, is off-white. There are two ‘smile’ pockets and two piped ‘arrows’ (are they functional darts? Maybe. But there are two darts in the front anyway.) The silver horseshoes on the yoke and sleeve are appliqued; next to them is an embroidered gold lasso. Rhinestones, which in Manuel’s workshop are attached with a press like this one that I photographed in the workshop of Jaime Castenada in North Hollywood, are sparingly scattered around the design.

  DSCF2498

Dwight’s jacket fastens with oblong shaped turquoise buttons and is edgestitched by hand.

I thought it was beautiful the very first time I saw it and I still think so now I’ve had a really good, close-up look at it, and that 26 years have passed.

The skill – and talent – required to make it is immense and honed over decades of practice.  I took this photo of Manuel at work when I visited his workshop in 2010. When I asked him how he was going to make this collar, which had been cut a bit short, fit, he brushed my question aside with, ‘This is not my first rodeo!’

first rodeo

The hands of the master: Manuel working on a jacket in his workshop, September 2010

By contrast, when I decided, back in 1988, to make myself a jacket based on the ‘Hillbilly Deluxe’ masterpiece, it was, more or less, my first rodeo.

I don’t think I had ever piped or embroidered anything before, but if you don’t try, you don’t learn, that’s my motto. I don’t know why people hesitate over sewing projects – I mean what’s the worst that can happen? You put it in the bin.

Obviously, if you put on a disaster and go out in it, total humiliation can ensue, but I have a long history of being oblivious to that.

My  jacket was made from navy blue cotton drill – best not to spend too much when experimenting – and piped with lilac. This was in my mid-eighties lilac phase. I adapted a commercial jacket pattern, shortening it and adding a yoke. I piped the darts, which seemed like a good idea at the time. Having no idea about how to embroider arrowhead tacks, I made teeny tiny fabric arrowheads and stitched them on. Over many evenings, I embroidered the horseshoes by hand; in place of the claw-set rhinestones on Dwight’s jacket, I used humble sequins and beads. The lining was, of course, lilac.

The construction process provided lots of entertainment to my kitten, Patsy.

patsyjarmhole

The only time I remember going out in the jacket was when the Judds played The London Palladium. I was probably on my way there when this photograph was taken.

May 1988

May 1988

Two women in the queue for the ladies’ room complimented me on it and asked if I had made it myself. As all you seamstresses out there will know – this tolls the death knell of any garment. I mean, how did they know it was home made? What was wrong with it, huh?And why didn’t they ask me, ‘Did Manuel make that?’

In truth, compared with Dwight’s Hillbilly Deluxe jacket, mine was a bit rubbish. But I had great fun making it and I was still proud of it. The first time I visited Manuel’s shop, he pointed out a jacket that was on display. It was, he said, the first garment he had made completely alone – for Little Jimmy Dickens – after joining Nudie’s in the mid-1950s. He had cut, sewn and embellished it. He explained that, although he could make better jackets now, he still cherished that one because he had done the very best he could at the time and it captured a moment of achievement.

Sadly, I’m not able to get out my jacket and feel proud, or even smile indulgently at its clumsiness. At some point, I lent it to a family friend who line danced, asking her to return it when she had finished with it. Instead, she sent it to a charity shop, so now it’s lost forever. At the very best, some other line dancer is enjoying wearing it.

I must admit that when I first discovered its fate, I sat down and cried, but honestly, it doesn’t really matter. In a way, I still have it, in the form of the skills it helped me develop. And anyway, as soon as I get a breather, I plan to make myself a western-tailored jacket – no embellishment, just a lot of sharp piping and arrows.

Because if you don’t try, you don’t learn.


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Are you dandy enough, cowboy?

It’s just a personal thing, but in my view there is nothing sexier than a ruffled cuff resting on a manly hand. Except possibly a paisley western shirt. So I’ve made this.

Last time I listed a paisley ruffled shirt on etsy, it was snapped up within days. So it can’t be that much of a personal thing.

 

Find this shirt in Liberty’s Olympic-themed paisley ‘Lagos Laurel’ for sale:

https://www.etsy.com/uk/listing/156712475/hand-made-one-of-a-kind-ruffled-shirt?ref=shop_home_active


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Collars and bands

‘Patience is a virtue’ Grandma Beattie used to chant if I was restless, waiting for my mum to come and collect me. ‘…. possess it if you can. Seldom found in a woman, but never in a man.’

Not the most PC of sentiments, so we will pass over the gender stereotyping and just reflect on the patience required by the average seamstress. There are a lot of painstaking steps in shirtmaking, and collar application is one of the trickiest. Once the collar is on, I feel a shirt is really on its way.

Today I have been putting the collar onto my latest project, a gold-piped paisley.

The first step is to prepare the collar – I use a non-woven fusible interfacing in a medium weight. Once I have stitched the collar to its facing, I reinforce the corners with a second row of stitching. There’s nothing more irritating than making a perfect collar then having the corners fray out when you trim and turn it, and I find this reinforcement puts a stop to that.

Then I turn, press and topstitch the collar. I like to use this presser foot – it’s meant for embroidery stitches really, but it runs neatly along the edge of the fabric, and I de-centre the needle to get it 1/8 of an inch from the edge.

Once the collar is made, I attach the interfaced half of the collar band to the wrong side of the shirt. It’s really important that the first stitch is really accurately placed on the edge of the front band, because that will be my guide later… you’ll see. Then I turn over the shirt and pin the band facing to the other side. I turn it back to attach it, though, and use the previous stitching as a guide. Then check that everything has gone on smoothly and that there are no tucks in the shirt.

Now for the tricky bit. Holding the band and facing apart, I roll back the shirt front to tuck it out of the way of the seam I’m about to sew.

I pin the band and facing together and lower the needle to the exact point where the shirt front meets the collar band. Then I move it a millimetre to the left. If I don’t do this there will be a bobble where the band meets the front and that’s the kind of thing that keeps me awake at night. Then I sew a lovely curve to the point on the band where the collar will attach.

Turn it and press it, and now it’s time to attach the collar. I sew it to the interfaced part of the band, then trim the seam and corners.

pin collar on

I press the seam toward the shirt, then fold the uninterfaced part of the band towards the collar and tuck the seam allowance under, glue basting it over the seam. This special water soluble glue is a god send – it’s perfect for any edge that you need to be really crisp.

When everything is firmly held, I topstitch the lower edge of the collar band. Then in one action, I topstitch up one  edge of the shirt front, along the collar band and down the other side.

 

Et voila!

 

collar on