• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Site Directory
  • Home
  • Alex’s Lounge
  • P.O.U. Health and Fitness
  • POU Comments of the Week
  • P.O.U. Daily Link Sweep
Pragmatic Obots Unite

Pragmatic Obots Unite

Shooting down firebaggers & teabaggers one truth at a time...

Tuesday Open Thread: Showstoppers! African American Milliners

December 10, 2013 by Miranda 162 Comments

Good Morning POU!

We certainly couldn’t honor the Milliners of our communities without acknowledging the creator of the fabulous designs worn by the late great Dorothy Heights! Meet her personal milliner, Vanilla Beane.

Ninety-year-old Vanilla Beane is a milliner who knows that a hat can be so much more than mere headgear.

Look no further than Beane’s favorite customer: civil rights pioneer Dorothy Height, whose hats were known far and wide as a statement of her dignity and grace.

When Height died at age 98 this spring, some of her friends and admirers — Beane among them — wore hats to her funeral as a final tribute. The audience was dotted with colorful creations and the eulogist-in-chief noted Height’s most distinctive feature in his remarks.

“We loved those hats that she wore like a crown,” President Barack Obama said.

Now one of Beane’s creations is to be immortalized in a modest memorial to Height in front of the southwest Washington building where the civil rights leader lived for 27 years: A metal replica of a Vanilla Beane original — painted hot pink — will be placed atop one of the city’s obsolete emergency call boxes this month, part of a citywide initiative to restore the 19th-century structures as works of art.

Beane, a rare practitioner of an old-fashioned art form, has her own remarkable story.

She began her hat business after retiring from the federal government, and 30 years later her creations remain very much in demand in an age when few people wear hats and many of those who do are content with mass-produced headgear from China.

Beane still works full time at Bene Millinery, her boutique in the Manor Park neighborhood of northwest Washington.

“I just enjoy being here,” Beane said recently, surrounded by finished and unfinished hats of all shapes, styles and colors. The work provided a welcome distraction after the 1980 death of her son in a boating accident and the 1993 death of her husband.

“It just helped me through these trying times that I’ve had,” Beane said.

Born in Wilson, N.C., Vanilla Powell was the youngest of seven. After coming to Washington, she met her husband, whose last name yielded the unexpected combination with her first name. (She says she didn’t even think about it until someone remarked on it about a year after the wedding.)

Beane became interested in hats when she was working as an elevator operator in a downtown building that housed Washington Millinery Supply. She liked to sew and would often stop in the shop to look around and pick up materials. In 1955, she was hired as a seamstress.

“She had very much talent, but she didn’t have the design know-how in those days,” recalled Richard Dietrick Sr., the owner of Washington Millinery Supply. “She picked it up very quickly.”

Beane eventually left the company and went to work as a mail clerk for the General Services Administration. But hatmaking continued to be her passion: She’d make them at home and sell them at hat parties.

Dietrick eventually decided to move Washington Millinery closer to his home in Maryland and focus on bridal headpieces and veils.

“You girls quit wearing hats, more or less,” said Dietrick, 85.

But hat fashion lived on in the African-American community, particularly in the churches, and Beane bought much of the store’s remaining inventory.

“Then I had to find a place to put it,” Beane said. After retiring from the government, she opened her own shop on Third Street.

The store next door is Lovely Lady Boutique, where Height bought many of her clothes. She’d stop by Beane’s to get a matching hat.

Lovely Lady’s owner, Ethel Sanders, said Beane has a keen eye for fashion and manages to make her hats up-to-date.

“There are not very many milliners around, and she happens to be one of the best,” Sanders said.

Beane, whose custom-made creations can run up to $500, said she believes hats are making a small comeback, thanks in part to church-sponsored teas and the attention paid to Height toward the end of her life and around her funeral.

When Beane is not busy working on an order for a customer, she experiments with new designs for herself.

“It’s hard for me to find a hat that suits me because I don’t like too large a hat,” Beane said. “I’m very conservative.”

Filed Under: African Americans, Arts and Culture, History, Open Thread Tagged With: Fashion, Hat Designers, Milliners, Vanilla Beane

Primary Sidebar

Recent Comments

  • People
  • Recent
  • Popular

Top Commenters

  • GreenLadyHere13
     · 221980 posts
  • Alma98
     · 205407 posts
  • rikyrah
     · 181479 posts
  • nellcote
     · 100332 posts

Recent Comments

  • GreenLadyHere13

    POU FAM♥ - - - - -Ssooo As We Inch Into FRIDAY--MAY 30, I Am Wishing- -- HAPPY- - -" Heavenly"- - --BIRTHDAY🎂🎂 2 My DEAR DADDY- 2-DAY--May 29🎂- And 2 My DEAR MOMMY- --MAY30🎂 I Ssooo...

    Thursday Open Thread: African American Military History – World War II · 3 hours ago

  • Alma98

    Evil

    Thursday Open Thread: African American Military History – World War II · 3 hours ago

  • nellcote

    https://x.com/politico/status/1928296729289384428

    Thursday Open Thread: African American Military History – World War II · 4 hours ago

  • Admiral_Komack

    …and Patti LuPone is all ass.

    Thursday Open Thread: African American Military History – World War II · 4 hours ago

Most Discussed

  • Thursday Open Thread: African American Military History – World War II

    120 comments · 3 hours ago

  • Wednesday Open Thread: African American Military History – World War II

    127 comments · 1 day ago

  • Tuesday Open Thread: African American Military History – World War II

    115 comments · 1 day ago

  • Monday Open Thread: African American Military History – World War II

    136 comments · 2 days ago

Powered by Disqus

Twitter

Tweets by @PragObots

Recent Posts

  • Thursday Open Thread: African American Military History – World War II
  • Wednesday Open Thread: African American Military History – World War II
  • Tuesday Open Thread: African American Military History – World War II
  • Monday Open Thread: African American Military History – World War II
  • Sunday Open Thread: POU Movie Day – The Perfect Guy

Tags

#HTGAWM #TGIT African American History African History Black History Civil Rights Movement Divas Forward Friday Open Thread Funk Grammy Winners Great Bands Hip-Hop How To Get Away With Murder Jazz Kerry Washington Legends Monday Open Thread Motown Records NFL Obama Biden 2012 Olivia Pope Open Thread P.O.U. Sunday Jazz Brunch POU Weekly NFL Picks President Barack H. Obama President Barack Obama President Obama R&B racism Rap Saturday Open Thread Scandal Shondaland Shonda Rhimes slavery Songwriters Soul Sports Sunday Open Thread Thursday Open Thread Tuesday Open Thread Video Viola Davis Wednesday Open Thread

Footer

A-F

  • African American Pundit
  • Afrospear
  • All About Race
  • Angry Black Lady Chronicles
  • AverageBro.com
  • Black Politics on the Web
  • Blacks 4 Barack
  • Blue Wave News
  • Brown Man Thinking Hard
  • Crooks and Liars
  • Democracy Now!
  • Democrats for Progress
  • Eclectablog
  • Extreme Liberal's Blog
  • FactCheck.org
  • Field Negro
  • FiveThirtyEight

G-S

  • GrannyStandingforTruth
  • Hello, Negro
  • Jack & Jill Politics
  • Latino Politico
  • Margaret and Helen
  • Melissa Harris Perry
  • Michelle Obama Watch
  • Mirror On America
  • Momma, here come that woman again!
  • New Black Woman
  • Obama Foodorama
  • Obama for America 2012
  • Positively Barack
  • Raving Black Lunatic
  • Sheryl Kaye's Blog
  • Sojourner's Place
  • Stuff White People Do

T-Z

  • Talking Points Memo
  • The Black Snob Feed
  • The Field
  • The Hill
  • The Mudflats
  • The Obama Diary
  • The only adult in the room
  • The Peoples View
  • The Reid Report
  • The Rude Pundit
  • The Starting Five
  • ThinkProgress
  • This Week in Blackness
  • Tim Wise
  • Uppity Negro Network
  • What About Our Daughters
  • White House Blog
  • Womanist Musings

Copyright © 2025 · Log in