
With the Depression and the Dust bowl making times extremely tough for so many people the bold new styles introduced by the wealthy were out of reach for most. Luckily the new fashions did not use a great deal of fabric. This made it easier for people to make their own clothes with less money because of the styles that could be made with less fabric. Inexpensive ready wear clothing became very popular and was available in a wide range of sizes as well as styles. Manufacturers began to copy the latest fashions coming out of Paris and produced cheap imitations. Those who could not afford ready wear or to buy fabric, looked to household items for make new outfits. Sheets and drapes could easily be turned into a new dress or blouse and was a mere fraction of the price to make using items laying around the house then buying a brand new dress.
1930's Sunflower Yellow Crocheted Dress 40"-28"-40" $115
1930's Tea Party Dress 33"-25"-33" $65

1930's Magenta Silk Chiffon Dress 34"-27"-38" $125

1930's Ivory Embroidered Dress and Bolero 37"-28"-46" $300

1930s Black Velvet hat with Feathers $24

"The merciless winds tore up the soil that once gave the Southern Great Plains life and hurled it in roaring black clouds across the nation. Hopelessly indebted farmers fed tumbleweed to their cattle, and, in the case of one Oklahoma town, to their children. By the 1930s, years of injudicious cultivation had devastated 100 million acres of Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado, and New Mexico."- Timothy Egan on the Dust bowl

"In other periods of depression, it has always been possible to see some things which were solid and upon which you could base hope, but as I look about, I now see nothing to give ground to hope—nothing of man."- Former President Calvin Coolidge on the Depression circa 1930's