Friday, January 3, 2020

Dress Like a Cowboy

by Patti Sherry-Crews

Happy New Year to all the followers and my fellows authors over at Cowboy Kisses! 2020. I'll be honest with you my first Friday of the month posting sneaked up on my while I had my back turned this time around. We're still getting back to routine here after the holidays, and I'm going to blame a late Thanksgiving  for shortening my prep time and putting me behind the eight ball. I'm going to fall back on that late 2019 Thanksgiving excuse for the remainder of 2020.
Anyway, I am looking  forward to this coming new year. I have a full length historical western romance coming out for the series Women of Destiny for Prairie Rose Publications. Expect this story to be released in July. I had fun creating the characters for this one and I think it's a good read. Besides that, I have a few ideas taking shape in my head for other possible stories, so look for future blog post perhaps inspired by my research and endeavors in that direction. 
In the meantime, enjoy an old post from September, 2017: Dress Like a Cowboy! 

What's in your fifth pocket?

That little pocket on your jeans. Have you wondered what the heck it's for? If you're like me you thought that pocket was to store your emergency quarter in the event you got in trouble and needed to phone home--back in the day before cell phones. Turns out this pocket is called the watch pocket. When Jacob Davis and Levi Strauss patented the design for jeans in 1873 with miners in mind, they included a handy place to keep a size 16 pocket watch. They also put in rivets at stress points so heavy tools didn't ruin the pants. Even today the belt loops are spaced to take the watch clip. This style of pants designed for miners was quickly picked up by ranchers. Why dark blue? The color does the best job hiding dirt.

Learning I've been walking around with a watch pocket for decades made me wonder what other vestiges of bygone days are hidden in my wardrobe. It also got me curious about western wear in general. I did a little research on some of the mainstays of this fashion and discovered it's a marriage of function and style, which has not only lent much to the fashion of future generations of non-cowboys, but it's also a style with an interesting history.

If western wear had a family tree, it's roots would originate with the cattle herders of 12th c Spain, the old Castille region to be specific. Low-crowned, wide-brimmed hats, spurred boots, tight pants, bolero jackets, and a sash were the herders costume.

Vaquero in Spanish California, 1830's

When the practice of cattle herding moved to the new world, the costume changed to adapt to new landscapes. In the American west, slabs of cowhide were hung from the saddle to protect the rider's legs from brush and cactus--and so chaps were born. Chaps with the hair left on are called "woolies."

Chilling in his woolie chaps

Every piece of a cowboy's wardrobe has a function story as well as a style story. Because he had to travel light, articles of clothing had to prove its worth. Take for instance the bandana. This square piece of cloth used to keep dust and sun off the neck can also be used as a potholder, a first aid item, ear muffs, a filter to strain the bugs and dirt out of your water, and if you're up to no good, a disguise. Bandana comes from the Hindi word bandhnu, meaning a tied cloth. Martha Washington, our first, first lady introduced the bandana to America when she commissioned one to be made with the image of her husband on horseback, starting a popular souvenir trend. The most recognizable bandana pattern which is still made today is a paisley design from Kashmir called by cowboys, the "Persian Pickle". The paisley pattern comes in every color under the sun, but red is probably the most popular.


The "Persian Pickle" pattern
The cowboy shirt as we know it today with its pearl snaps, pocket flaps, and triangular yoke is largely the design of tailor Jack Weil in the 1940's. Seeing that cowboys often function one-handed, Weil came up with the brainstorm of using snaps instead buttons (what a cowboy is doing with one hand while he needs to rip his shirt off in a hurry, I do not know). He reinforced the parts of the shirt that take the most strain by adding the distinctive yoke. He put flaps on the pockets so all your hoofs picks and what have you don't fall out when you bend over. We can also thank Weil for making the shirts form-fitting to prevent them from getting caught on things. Thank you, Mr. Weil.

The western style shirt has some interesting antecedents. As well as having roots in the vaquero tradition, the cowboy shirt gives a nod to Civil War uniforms. The bib or shield front, which I associate with John Wayne, comes from a Union battle shirt designed by Custer, who in turn borrowed the design from early firefighters' uniforms.

The Duke in a Bib or Shield Front Shirt 

And from the other side of the Mason Dixon line comes some of the more flamboyant features of the cowboy shirt. The fancy piping, contrasting yokes, ruffles, plaids, and decorative embroidery draw from the Confederate battle shirt. Yes, that's right. I was surprised by that too, but after spelunking into the depths of the Cave of Pinterest for a good part of the afternoon, I saw some amazing designs. The ladies who sewed the shirts for their loved ones going off to fight, sent them off in style.

Example of a Confederate Battle Shirt
In the early days, western headgear was no different than what folks covered their heads with elsewhere in the country. Picture the cowboy in a bowler hat, for instance. Then in 1870 John Stetson moved to the west for his health. He noticed the wide-brimmed Spanish style hats worn in the area and fashioned a hat for himself. Stetson further looked to the Union Calvary's blue kepi for design elements to complete his protype. When a cowboy admired Stetson's hat, he sold it to him for $5. Hello cowboys in Stetsons!

Ad for Stetson Hat

Like other items in the cowboy's wardrobe, the Stetson isn't just for looks. The hat is multi-functional. Stetsons are made of such a tight weave they can even be used as a bucket. The wide brim afforded protection from rain, sun, and snow. The high crown provides an air pocket that helps insulate the head in cold weather, and in hot weather the hat can be soaked in water to cool the hot cowboy. The v-shaped dip in front of the brim shields the eyes when riding into direct sunlight at certain times of the day, while leaving vision clear either side of it. And in the days of limited means of communication, waving your big hat was a way to signal across vast spaces. 

And, finally, speaking of buckets, the term Ten Gallon Hat doesn't have anything to do with how much water a hat can hold. Can you imagine how large a hat that holds ten gallons would be? Try walking around with ten jugs of milk stacked on your head. The term probably comes from the corruption of the Spanish phrase tan galán, meaning something like "so handsome". Or more likely the name comes from the braids on Spanish-style called galóns. A hat with a brim wide enough for ten braids was a ten galón hat.

P.S., I'm not forgetting cowboy boots and belt buckles. I'm deliberately avoiding them for the moment.

Find my books, both historical and contemporary at http://pattisherrycrews16.wix.com/author-blog

3 comments:

Andrea Downing said...

Thank you for assuring me that my memory is not going as far downhill as I thought. But I love this piece and can read it again...and again. Also thanks for setting a trend for repeating posts in 2020. I'll no doubt take advantage of that. I wonder if the Confederate influence on shirts is because most of the cowboys--men who came west after the Civil War--were originally from the downtrodden South. Thanks Patti for a good one to read again. :-)

Patti Sherry-Crews said...

I think you're right about the southern men heading west and bringing their pretty shirts with them. I hope you do repost some of your gems! Cowboy Kisses has many new readers who missed out on some of the older posts. Thanks for stopping by Andi and a Happy New Year to you.

kathleen Lawless said...

I'm new here and really enjoyed this post. Some things I knew already, others were new information.