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Alabama's HOUNDSTOOTH HISTORY

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FASHION<br />

Alabama’s<br />

<strong>HOUNDSTOOTH</strong><br />

<strong>HISTORY</strong><br />

Though they bleed crimson, many Tide fans<br />

show their true colors by donning houndstooth, a<br />

tradition that started with Paul W. “Bear” Bryant<br />

and continues in the Saban era<br />

BY MEREDITH CUMMINGS<br />

Chris Starnes sees it all the time. When he<br />

travels to trade shows to sell his houndstooth<br />

wares, he can immediately tell<br />

who is familiar with the Southeastern<br />

Conference and who is not.<br />

“I don’t have anything at my booth<br />

that says ‘Alabama,’ just houndstooth products, but<br />

when they walk by they say, ‘That’s an Alabama booth,’<br />

” Starnes says. “Then I’ll have people from Missouri<br />

walk up and go, ‘Oh. Ya’ll sell checkerboard.’ ”<br />

Starnes, who will graduate in May from the University<br />

of Alabama with a degree in business management,<br />

has seen firsthand the rise of houndstooth,<br />

from a pattern on Bear Bryant’s hat to a symbol of all<br />

things Crimson Tide. He is owner of Houndstoothhut.<br />

com and Gamedaycollection.com, and has built his<br />

business on selling houndstooth products wholesale<br />

to retailers.<br />

“It wasn’t synonymous with the university like it<br />

is now,” Starnes says of the early days of his business<br />

four years ago. “I would go in the stores and have to<br />

explain houndstooth and I would have to sell people<br />

on the fact that Alabama fans wanted houndstooth.”<br />

But in other parts of the country, it’s just an attractive<br />

pattern that sells well there, too.<br />

“This year we couldn’t keep scarves,” Starnes says.<br />

“If you wear it outside of that game-day setting, it’s<br />

still a good-looking garment.”<br />

A BEAR TRADITION<br />

Everyone knows that the university’s original affiliation<br />

with houndstooth came from Coach Paul<br />

BRYANT MUSEUM<br />

“Bear” Bryant, and two of his houndstooth hats are on<br />

Legendary Coach Paul W. ‘Bear’ Bryant started the houndstooth tradition at Alabama<br />

with his choice of headwear.<br />

display at the Bryant Museum on campus.<br />

>><br />

54<br />

crimsonmagazine.net


FASHION<br />

GREGORY ENNS<br />

Nearly 30 years after Bryant’s coaching days, two young Tide fans wear houndstooth hats to last year’s A-Day game. The hats are a common sight at Tide<br />

football games.<br />

KENT GIDLEY/UA ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS<br />

Terry Saban kept warm in this houndstooth winter coat during<br />

the Tide’s visit to the White House March 8.<br />

KENT GIDLEY/UA ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS<br />

Shonda Ingram donned a houndstooth<br />

cap during son Mark’s Heisman weekend<br />

in December.<br />

Since the Bryant days houndstooth<br />

has been a sort of unofficial symbol of<br />

UA and, to a point, Tuscaloosa. Take<br />

the Houndstooth Bar or Houndstooth<br />

Condominiums, for example. First<br />

Lady of UA football Terry Saban even<br />

donned a houndstooth-print coat for<br />

the football team’s White House visit in<br />

March to meet President Obama after<br />

winning the national championship.<br />

And Mark Ingram’s mom, Shonda,<br />

donned a houndstooth cap during her<br />

son’s whirlwind Heisman weekend in<br />

New York in December.<br />

Perhaps the best friend of houndstooth is the law. Because houndstooth<br />

can’t be copyrighted, it’s pervasive. Anyone can use it.<br />

It was actually [Gasp!] a New Yorker whom ‘Bama fans can thank for the<br />

houndstooth hat.<br />

Ken Gaddy, director of the Paul W. Bryant Museum, says Bryant had<br />

always worn fedora-style hats or a baseball hat on the sidelines.<br />

“So it wasn’t anything new for him wearing a hat,” Gaddy says. “But<br />

when Joe Namath was being sought after by the New York Jets in 1964,<br />

Sonny Werblin, owner of the Jets, was trying to get Namath to sign with<br />

them. He gave Coach Bryant that hat during that time and I don’t think it<br />

was planned, but then other people started giving hats to him. You’ve got<br />

to remember the time, so that’s what everybody would have been wearing.<br />

It was what men did.”<br />

Gaddy says people often come into the museum with hats they claim<br />

belonged to Bryant, but with no way to authenticate their stories they are<br />

turned away. Bryant’s family donated the hats on display in the museum.<br />

crimsonmagazine.net 55<br />

>>


FASHION<br />

56<br />

SCOTT BOWMAN<br />

These houndstooth hats, donated by the family of Coach Paul W. ‘Bear’<br />

Bryant, are on display at the Bryant Museum on the UA campus.<br />

“There was also a line of<br />

hats that had his name in it<br />

in 1980 to ’81 with a reproduction<br />

of his signature in<br />

the band, so a lot of time<br />

people mistakenly think<br />

that was his hat,” Gaddy<br />

says.<br />

TREND ON THE RISE<br />

Now, Gaddy adds, he<br />

sees more houndstooth<br />

sell at the museum than<br />

in years past, as both men<br />

and women pick up the<br />

trend.<br />

“You see houndstooth<br />

SCOTT BOWMAN<br />

sometimes in the fashion<br />

world. They were using it not with any connection with<br />

Coach Bryant, but you see everything from women’s headbands<br />

to rain boots and everything in between,” Gaddy<br />

says. “Houndstooth scarves were big for the last couple of<br />

years, and we’ve been selling a lot of those here. You see<br />

men wearing those.”<br />

Starnes, who started his business out of his apartment<br />

when he was a sophomore at UA, got the idea at a Tide football<br />

game. Nike had just rolled out a new houndstooth hat,<br />

crimsonmagazine.net<br />

>>


SCOTT BOWMAN<br />

Model Tiffany Chapman shows off<br />

houndstooth headwear.<br />

and it was a hit when the company<br />

gave it away to students at the games.<br />

“They gave away some in the<br />

student section, but there are people<br />

standing out there outside the stadium<br />

with $100 bills trying to buy hats off of<br />

people that Nike was giving away.”<br />

But it was the houndstooth beer<br />

koozie that really kicked off Starnes’<br />

business.<br />

“I was a rookie and really didn’t<br />

know what I was doing,” he says.<br />

“I’m sitting there hanging out with my<br />

friends like a college kid and everybody<br />

has got beers in koozies.”<br />

So he slapped a houndstooth pattern<br />

on one and starting going to<br />

stores to sell them. It was the Alabama<br />

Bookstore on the Strip that took a<br />

chance on him; when Starnes left a dozen on the counter they were<br />

sold in 30 minutes. Soon Hibbett Sports, The Trunk and other stores<br />

were on board and from there “it was really like a dream come<br />

true” for Starnes.<br />

A SCOTTISH IMPORT<br />

Houndstooth, known in the textile world as a duotone, balanced<br />

twill weave, has always been fashionable. If you wanted to avoid a<br />

fight with spears, swords and shields in old Scotland, houndstooth<br />

would have been a safe wardrobe choice. Clans registered their tartans,<br />

and anyone not allowed to wear a particular pattern would be<br />

asking for the equivalent of a bar fight today. >><br />

FASHION<br />

SCOTT BOWMAN<br />

Chris Starnes, a UA undergraduate who started an Internet business<br />

selling houndstooth products, is decked out in a houndstooth tie<br />

and pants and is holding a houndstooth hat.<br />

crimsonmagazine.net 57


FASHION<br />

SCOTT BOWMAN<br />

Koozies, key chains and headbands are just a few of the<br />

items that can be purchased in houndstooth.<br />

58<br />

Not a problem with houndstooth,<br />

though. It wasn’t registered, though<br />

it did spring from those old Scottish<br />

Lowland tartans, says Virginia Wimberley,<br />

assistant professor and curator of<br />

the Carolyn Thomas Stewart costume<br />

collection.<br />

“The houndstooth is not registered<br />

so anybody could wear it,” Wimberley<br />

says. “So you wouldn’t be illegal and it<br />

wouldn’t be a fighting incident if you<br />

weren’t entitled to wear it.<br />

“It looks a bit more complicated than<br />

it is. It’s always a two tone, but the original<br />

was white and black and it came<br />

out of Scotland. It was always done on a<br />

wool fabric, eventually, and it’s an easy plaid to do, but it looks fancier and<br />

more difficult. A lot of those plaids started to be written down in the 1700s.<br />

This one was pretty popular in the early 1800s.”<br />

Wimberley says the pattern gained popularity when Edward VIII, then the<br />

Prince of Wales, sported it in the early 20th century. The pattern, also known<br />

as Glen plaid, seems to peak each year when wool fabrics suit the season.<br />

“[President Ronald] Reagan wore it when he made the trip abroad, and<br />

people thought that he didn’t look very presidential when he wore that<br />

plaid, and they thought he was looking too casual going to Europe in that,”<br />

Wimberley says. “I’m sure if he thought the Prince of Wales wore it then the<br />

crowd would like it over there.”<br />

As for ’Bama’s connection to plaid, no one really thinks Coach Bryant was<br />

looking to set fashion trends and grace the cover of Vogue magazine.<br />

“I’m not sure he put a lot into what hat he was wearing that day,” Gaddy<br />

says. “I’m not sure fashion decision was a big part of his day. I think he had<br />

other things on his mind.”<br />

crimsonmagazine.net


crimsonmagazine.net 59

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