Rowan Yarns Digital Magazine Rowan Spring Summer Newsletter 2019 | Page 44
BEDECKED
IN FINERY
by Rosee Woodland
Playing with a button box is a delight for many children, and is a memory
that Judith Lewis tapped into when she founded Bedecked Haberdashery.
Rowan knitters will be familiar with Bedecked as the company that
provides the buttons for the brand’s iconic patterns.
It’s a relationship that goes back more than ten years to when Judith was
running the business out of a small shop in Hay-on-Wye.
Judith first dreamt up the idea for Bedecked after retraining in fashion as
a mature student in her late 30s. She was raising sheep on a Herefordshire
farm and looking for ways to diversify the farm’s income.
“I had started with a City and Guilds in textiles and then moved onto a
full time fashion course,” Judith explains. “And I thought back to that time
because when I came to do my final collection I couldn’t find decent
buttons or trims, and I saw a huge gap in the market.
“It was something I thought I could do from the farm but eventually I
moved to a small shop in Hay-on-Wye to run the business from there.”
After moving to Hay in 2005, Bedecked’s profile grew thanks to the
town’s annual Hay Festival, which attracts vistors from around the world
each May.
“The place was just teeming with media and Country Living did an
article on the business,” says Judith. “I also had a Rowan rep come and
visit and they went back to Rowan and said my buttons would suit a lot
of their yarns, so that’s how I started with the company.
“I was also a finalist in the Women in Rural Business awards and that
helped build up the business too.”
Judith closed the Hay shop some eight years later due to a family illness,
but kept the online business going. Eventually she decided to move
to Yorkshire to be closer to her son, and Bedecked is now based in
Barningham Park, Richmond.
A quick glance at the Bedecked website reveals just what a huge range
Judith offers. In fact, she has spent the last 15 years creating an archive of
buttons and trimmings to rival any textile museum!
“It’s taken years and years to build up,” she exclaims. “If anything were to
happen to it…” Leaving that rather alarming thought hanging in mid-air
we turn to happier talk of what it means to run a business that’s also your
passion.
“It’s a bit like someone who loves DIY going into a DIY shop and
fiddling around with all the bits and pieces!” Judith laughs. “When I had
the Hay shop all the buttons were out in little dishes and little girls would
come in on a Saturday morning and play with them and tidy them up for
me, and spend ages deciding how to spend their pocket money on one
or two buttons.”
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Newsletter April 2019 | Spring Summer
If you’re making a Rowan pattern that needs Bedecked
buttons then the information for which ones to use is
helpfully given as a code in the materials section. Simply
type this code into the search box on the Bedecked
website to find the right button. Alternatively, you can
visit the special section of the website that’s dedicated to
Rowan buttons - you’ll find the link at the end of this
feature.
Just as we tend to turn to the same yarns or designers, so
you’ll find that the same buttons often appear in Rowan
patterns.
Judith adds: “They do tend to be natural - horn or shell.
At the moment one of the favourites is a sawn horn
button from an artisan maker in Germany.”
Judith has travelled all over to find the perfect buttons
and trimmings for her customers, and sources a lot of her
products from France, Italy and Germany.
Just as with garments themselves, there are trends in
haberdashery that follow current fashions. “In the last
couple of years copper has been a more fashionable
material,” says Judith, “And copper buttons have picked
up in popularity. It’s noticeable with colours too.”
As well as looking at current trends, Judith keeps an eye
on Instagram to pick up on what’s big in the craft world.
She’s a keen knitter herself, with a particular penchant
for Rowan’s Felted Tweed. In fact, she’s just designed a
blanket in it for her dog - now that is one lucky pooch!
If you fancy paying Bedecked a visit, you can make an
appointment to stop by the Coach House in Barningham
and round off your trip with a cream tea at Coghlan’s Tea
Room, which is in the same building.
“Barningham is a beautiful village,” waxes Judith. “So
people are getting three-in-one if they come and see us
- they are getting to see a wonderful part of the country,
they can fiddle around with the buttons and then finish
up with a very decent cream tea. It’s a great day out!”
Cream teas and haberdashery - now what could be better
than that?
Bedecked Haberdashery
The Coach House | Barningham Park
Richmond | North Yorkshire | DL11 7DW
Shop visits by appointment only
+44 (0)1833 621451 | [email protected]
bedecked.co.uk/rowan-buttons/catergory/
Coghlans Tearoom
The Coach House | Barningham Park
Richmond | North Yorkshire | DL11 7DW
Open Monday to Saturday, 10.30am to 4.30pm
Call +44 (0)1833 625295
coghlanscatering.co.uk/tearoom/
Newsletter April 2019 | Spring Summer
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