Rodeo Tailors at Country Music Hall of Fame Online Show

Rodeo Tailors at Country Music Hall of Fame Online Show

Spotlight: Rodeo Tailors at Country Music Hall of Fame, follow News Without Politics, NWP subscribe here, unbiased fashion news, no bias, online show

Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum spotlights rodeo tailors in online show.

The two online exhibitions are accessible to all via the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s site.

The following written content by Rosemary Feitelberg 

Spotlight: Rodeo Tailors at Country Music Hall of Fame, follow News Without Politics, NWP subscribe here, unbiased fashion news, no bias
A stage costume designed for Hank Snow by Nudie’s rodeo tailors. Photo by Bob Delevante/Courtesy of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

NASHVILLE OR BUST: Country music fans can get a jump on Sunday’s Academy of Country Music awards by perusing two online exhibitions.

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum is drawing back the curtains on the heritage of rhinestone cowboy fashion. There is no admission fee for the virtual shows, “Suiting the Sound: The Rodeo Tailors Who Made Country Stars Shine Bright” and “Dylan, Cash and the Nashville Cats: A New Music City.” The former explores the Western-wear designers who helped create the indelible “rhinestone cowboy” image. The multimedia exhibits are the first to be made exclusively for the museum’s site.

The phrase “rhinestone cowboy” was coined by Larry Weiss, who wrote and first recorded the song that Glen Campbell made famous. After being released in 1975, it was a hit with country and pop music fans. The phrase was meant to “capture the sense of nostalgia he felt when thinking back to childhood heroes like Roy Rogers, Lash LaRue and Gene Autry,” according to a spokeswoman for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum.

Spotlight: Rodeo Tailors at Country Music Hall of Fame, follow News Without Politics, NWP subscribe here, unbiased fashion news, no bias

The rhinestone cowboy look emerged in the 1940s and 1950s, stemming from the tailor shops of Eastern European Jewish immigrants, who carved a niche by embracing America’s fascination with cowboy culture and the Western imagery. “Rodeo Ben” Lichtenstein, Nathan Turk and Nudie Cohn are among those whose designs continue to influence talents today.

Two of Cohn’s former apprentices, Manuel Cuevas and Jaime Castenada, relocated to Los Angeles from Mexico for their work. A Manuel jacket with fleur-de-lis embroidery and rhinestones designed for Rosanne Cash, a Cohn-inspired cowgirl costume that was worn by Country Music Hall of Fame-er Patsy Cline and designed and sewn by her mother Hilda Hensley are on view. There is also a Union Western rhinestone-covered mask that was made in response to the pandemic. A two-tone wool gaberdine outfit with chain-stitch embroidered flowers is also on view. Read more from WWD.

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