History
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    These days, you can find the Double D Ranch collection in stores across the country and you’ll see Double D Ranch in national publications like Cowboys & Indians, Marie Claire, New York Times, Texas Monthly, and Mountain Living.
    
    The apparel line has been called Western haute couture. But think about these humble beginnings and decide for yourself just how haute these four girls from Yoakum, TX really are.

THE MEXICAN BUS TRIP
    It all started with the McMullen sisters and a rickety bus ride filled with chickens and dogs from Laredo, TX to Taxco, Mexico in search of authentic silver buttons, then sending a check for $5,000 to that shady button merchant who could very well have taken the money and run, to landing in New York at 3 a.m. with $200 in your purse, no place to stay and no idea who could put an Indian blanket design on wool.

    How haute is this? Riding spread-eagle on the back of a pickup, holding down bundles of cut Indian blanket coats as you drive through San Antonio going from the cutter to the sewing factory.

GIRLS JUST WANT TO HAVE FUN
    Today, when you stop by the Double D Ranch corporate offices in Yoakum, TX, you won’t find the stereotypical fashion house. Cheryl has her bare legs propped up to the design table sketching a new collection. Margie will be fresh out of her garden thumbing through invoices, but already
        









planning what she’ll serve the office for lunch. Hedy might be buried under a shipment of fur, sorting out the pieces that don’t meet her standards. And you’ll find Audrey in a fitting session, scanning the month’s order forms, while seamstresses tuck and pin around her.

    They’re just four regular girls from Yoakum, building on their hard working Texas roots and a childhood spent in the Southwest. They don’t care how things are done in New York. They’ve managed to build a fashion and furnishing company deep in the heart of Texas and they wouldn’t have it any other way.

    Double D Ranch started in 1989 as Double D Ranchwear. The Double D stands for Doug and daughters. The “wear” was dropped when they added the home furnishings collection. The business was born out of Cheryl’s inability to handle the thin air atop the mountains at a resort in Angel Fire, New Mexico, where the whole clan had gone on a ski trip. Cheryl spent the day shopping in Taos, where she spotted a man wearing a coat made from a Pendleton blanket. She stayed in Taos and found the little shop where a man took custom orders and made the coats one at a time. She ordered one for herself.

SEARCHING FOR THE NEXT BIG THING
    Back home Cheryl and younger sister Audrey, ran an interior design business in Yoakum, Texas. The sisters made their way to the Dallas Market Center looking for some interior ideas and found that they couldn’t get through a hallway without being asked about Cheryl’s new coat.
    Audrey recalled, “One lady even stopped the bus we were on to find out where Cheryl got the coat. We finally had to check her coat in, because we couldn’t get anything done”.

BE CAREFUL ABOUT WHAT YOU WISH FOR
    The sisters told their dad about the attention the coat drew and he suggested they make the coats and sell them. “We thought, let’s make a few, and maybe well make enough money to go snow-skiing again”, Audrey said. Coming up with samples was a tough mission, but ingenuity and luck paid off and they made it to their temporary booth at the Dallas Market Center with the first Double D Ranchwear collection. Retailers came into the booth saying “I’ll take 2,4,4,2”. Cheryl and Audrey wrote down the numbers although they didn’t have a clue what they meant. They had to go to another booth to find out the person was ordering 2 extra small, 4 small, 4 medium, and 2 large jackets.

    The good news was they left the market with $150,000 dollars worth of orders. The bad news, they knew it would cost $170,000 dollars to make them. But mother and dad’s philosophy was, if you say you’re going to do something, then do it. Audrey said, “We are going to lose money, but we’d said we’d make them, so we did.”

    Margie said, when they first started making broom skirts; they would fill the 10-gallon trashcans with water and liquid starch out in the front lawn. They would take each end of the skirt and twist. To relieve boredom of the job, they would race to see which team of two could twist the most skirts the fastest.
     Once they twisted the skirts, they slid the skirts into women’s hosiery to hold the twist, and then hung them up. “People driving by thought we were selling sausage” Margie said.

    The McMullen’s didn’t plan to embark on a large business venture, but Cheryl had been romanced by the beauty and culture of the Southwest during summers spent in New Mexico. She began to envision clothes with a historic flair that would reflect the spirit of the American West. She came up with the Scout Jacket, a fitted, military style jacket that has become Double D’s signature item. A variation of the jacket is included in every fall line. Cheryl also uses velvet, wool, suede and leather. “Cheryl takes current trends and interprets them in her own way” Audrey said. Everything Cheryl does has so much research. “We find the fabrics and designs she naturally enjoys and loves sell the best.”

    Cheryl’s workspace is the loft of an 1800’s building in downtown Yoakum that’s been a harness and buggy shop, a hardware store, and a J.C. Penney store. A tour of the loft reveals a library of fabrics and various items she has picked up at antique stores. She enjoys wandering through museums across the southwest soaking up the original clothing and art of the Pioneers, Native Americans and Western cultures. Snapshots and vintage pieces are scattered around waiting for their moment to come back to life in a new jacket or as part of the expanding home collection.

    The Double D Ranch home furnishings collection came about because Cheryl couldn’t find fabrics