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Life on America's farms in the 1920s and 1930s meant hard work and frugal habits. Farm families were used to "making do" with what they had, wasting nothing that could be recycled or reused. With feed sacks and flour bags, farmwomen took thriftiness to new heights of creativity, transforming the humble bags into dresses, underwear, towels, curtains, quilts, and other household necessities.
By the 1940s the bag manufactureres were turning out bags in bright colors and printed designs. It was felt that these designs and colors would boost sales, because the woman of the house would always select the brand with the most attractive fabric. During World WarII, there was a shortage of cotton fabric for the civilian population, and the recycling of bags became a necessity, encouraged by the government.
After the war, the bags were not only a sign of domestic thrift; they also gave rural women a sense of fashion. National sewing contests were organized as a way for women to show off their skills, and manufacturers to show off their designs. Women frequently sold their surplus bags to others as a way of picking up cash to aid in running the home.
This dress was made by Mrs. G. R. (Dorothy) Overall of Caldwell, Kansas, in 1959 for the Cotton Bag Sewing Contest sponsored by the National Cotton Council and the Textile Bag Manufactureres Association. The dress is made of cotton bag fabric, with an overall design of white flowers on a brown (originally black) ground. The dress is lined with black organdy, and machine quilted with a synthetic silver sewing thread. Mrs. Overall was awarded 2nd place in the Mid-South section of the contest.
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Credit Line: Gift of Mrs. Dorothy Overall
Object ID: 1992.0102.04
Division: Division of Home and Community Life
Subject(s): Agriculture, Textiles
March 4, 2007 I was born in 1951. For the first four-five years of my life, all my dresses were sewn by my paternal gradnmother from feedsacks. she would layer the faabric two to three layers deep and cut the main dresses fromt he same pattern. She would then add different details to each dress. Some sleeveless, some with little puffy fifties sleeves, some with self collars some with contrasting solid collars. We lived in rural north GA, but none-the-less I was teased by my parents friends about my feed-sack dresses. Oh how I longed for storebought dresses. Now, oh how I long to have some of those wonderful littel feedsack dresses! They weren't thought of as precious at all, so no one ever thought to keep them! —Denise, Georgia
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