I'm not much of a hat wearer.
In Washington, Mrs. Beane worked as an elevator operator in a downtown building with a hat store called Washington Millinery Supply. She was enamored by the intricate hats and the craft of making them, so she bought some supplies and began making them herself. (Source: Washington Post)
Elevator operator was, of course, one of the few jobs open back then to "colored women." When I was a kid, the nice department stores in downtown Worcester had elevator operators, all smartly dressed Black women who wore white gloves. They pressed the button for the floor you requested, and opened and closed the elevator grate. Each car had a little fold down seat in it, where the operator could sit if she wasn't operating the elevator. I was quite fascinated by these little seats for some reason. I'd look at them and think what a wonderful job elevator operator must be.
Eventually she showed her hats to the store’s owner, Richard Dietrick Sr. “She had very much talent, but she didn’t have the design know-how in those days,” Dietrick recalled later. “She picked it up very quickly.”
Mrs. Beane eventually began working for him, and when he moved his shop to Gaithersburg, Md., she bought his supplies and, in 1979, opened her own store. She was a shrewd businesswoman, convincing Ethel Sanders, the owner of Lovely Lady Boutique in Bethesda, Md., to move her store near Bené Millinery.
Mrs. Beane’s hats, which she had designed and fabricated at the BenĂ© Millinery and Bridal Supplies shop on Third Street NW, were featured on postage stamps and in collections at the National Museum of African American History and Culture. Every hat was one-of-a-kind.
“Nobody wants to walk into a church and see someone else wearing their hat,” she once said.
Poet Maya Angelou wore one of Mrs. Beane’s millinery creations. Civil rights activist Dorothy I. Height donned them for meetings with presidents and other officials. “Hats give me a lift and make me feel real special,” Height explained — a sentiment shared by the countless others who shopped at Mrs. Beane’s store.
In addition to folks who wore Mrs. Beane's creations, there were those who collected them. Sherry Watkins was one of the collectors. She owns 75 Beane creations. (I was going to say Beanies, but these hats are obviously so much more.)Mrs. Beane made her hats the old-fashioned way, wetting buckram — a stiff cotton — into molds decorated with all manner of fabrics. Keeping her fingernails cut short, Mr. Beane made tams, turbans, panamas, sailors and cloches. Decades of the repetitive fashioning turned her fingers stiff and rough.
“They look like I have been digging potatoes,” she said.
“Don’t match the hat to the outfit,” Watkins recalled. “Just buy a hat you like and the outfit will come. Never wear your hat more than one inch above your eyebrows. Slant it to look more interesting and possibly even risque.”
Love that first bit of advice. Right up there with 'don't buy a work of art because it matches your couch.'
In addition to her obituary in the WaPo, Vanilla Beane's death was also noted in USA Today and on NPR, among other sites.
Not bad for a girl who once picked tobacco in North Carolina.
Visiting the National Museum of African American History and Culture is on my bucket list, and seeing some of Vanilla Beane's works of art is now on my bucket list within a bucket list.
Hats off to Vanilla Beane! They don't make 'em like they used to: hats, or folks like Vanilla Beane.
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