Instructor Profile:

Marna Jean Davis

As long as I can remember, I have been sewing. My mother is an excellent seamstress, and I learned much from her, since she was always willing to share her sewing machine. One of my first, vivid sewing memories is "hemming" the skirt I was making for 4-H to my pants legs! Sewing wasn't my only strong feature, though. At the age of ten, at the prompting of my brother, I learned how to spin wool into yarn on a real, honest-to-Goodness spinning wheel. He thought it would be a good way to promote the sheep we raised. After I began doing handspinning demonstrations, I discovered a need for period clothing. The quality of "old-fashioned" clothing at historical reenactments and celebrations was not of the best quality! As a result of having two much younger sisters that mom needed to sew, I decided that I needed to make my own clothing. By the time I was in high school I was drafting patterns thanks to the encouragement of my Home-Ec. teacher Mrs. Prickett.

Now I create custom historical clothing from patterns I draft myself- the result of being frustrated with a hard to fit figure and a strong streak of individuality. My especial area of interest is the bustle era 1869-1889, but I love to study both the Victorian and Edwardian eras. Recently, due to Oklahoma's statehood celebration, I have also be come very interested in the fashion surrounding 1907. I have assisted many small museums with dating their clothing collections and on basic conservation practices. My clothing won many competitions, and my favorite compliment has always been, "Where did you find an original dress in such good condition?" When it comes to other living historians' clothing, I take the same views on "policing" as the military does: "Don't ask, don't tell."
However, I do my best to make sure the items I produce are ones that are true to historical form in fabric and cut.

However, I am always more than happy to share information I have gleaned from my library and the collections of "good stuff" (The aforementioned good stuff consisting of period sewing tools and drafting tools, 19th century photographs(over 4,000 and counting!) and fashion magazines, and antique clothing.). And I always do my best to lead by example. My insight and skills go beyond just putting ladies in pretty dresses; I strive to show the ladies of the mid-late 19th century as they were. Some of my hobbies/skills are riding sidesaddle, hunting, embroidery, cooking, and studying herb lore and using the medicinal herbs I grow in my own garden.

Answers to some Common Questions about me:

Yes, I do wear a corset.

Yes, sometimes those costumes are hot…but I try to be a lady.

No, I am not Amish (You wouldn't believe it but I have been asked that when walking through Wal-Mart in my "Entertainer's Dress").
AND PLEASE don't ask me to critique your dress!! My ethics require that I be honest!

I am the author of the drafting manual Le Maitresse Couturirie- The Lady's Dressmaker and a small booklet, "Buttons Bows and Cowboy Clothes." My husband Doug and I make-up "Shooting Star Enterprises," a business which provides educational entertainment in the form of first person characters (the most famous currently being Annie Oakley and Frank Butler-for which we have won numerous awards and appeared on the History Channel's series Tales of the Gun- Women and Guns episode as Annie and Frank.) We also have recently started portrayals of Theodore Roosevelt and his daughter Alice.


I also enjoy being a stay at home mom for my daughters Annie Beth and Gabrielle and am currently working on new classes( I love teaching!)and my period pattern line.
My current "pet project" is one to preserve the "everyday" woman's clothing of the 19th century. To do this I have been collecting photos of , workdresses, and tools that the ladies of the Victorian and Edwardian era's would have used.
I never cease to be enthralled by a much mended and often worn dress.

Marna Jean Davis