Beach at 5, rodeo at 9: Coastal cowgirl trend comes to Calgary - Action News
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Beach at 5, rodeo at 9: Coastal cowgirl trend comes to Calgary

Sorting through a sea of online content, there's one hashtag you're bound to end up seeing: #CoastalCowgirl. And in Alberta, the trend bears a familiar look.

Urban cowboy look is having a resurgence, just in time for Stampede season

A man on the left wears a pink button up and light brown wide brimmed hat with a colourful silk scarf at his neck. A woman on the right wears a blue sued fringe jacket over an orange fringe top and orange zebra pants, belted with a cowboy print belt. She stand in front of racks of clothing for sale.
Jamaal Mwangi, left, runs the Like New Vintage shop, and Marissa Myers was operating the booth for Change is Good at the Vintage Rodeo event in Calgary. (Jennifer Dorozio/CBC)

Sorting through a sea of online content, there's one hashtag you're bound tosee: #CoastalCowgirl.

With the original tag being used more than 137-million times on TikTok, it's variationslike #CoastalCowgirlOutfit, #CoastalCowgirlAesthetic, #CoastalCowgirlspring, are no less popular and have been used millions and tens of millions of times.

Coastal cowgirlcan be defined a few ways. It's a fashion trend (thinklinendresses, knits and florals,paired with cowboy boots), a design sensibilityand sometimes it's even referenced as a way of life.


  • LISTEN | Calgarians define coastal cowgirl:

The trend has shown up commercially in retail spaces filled with cowboy boots, long flowing skirtsand Old Westtchotchkes.

But in southern Alberta, home of several rodeos,the famous Calgary Stampede and rural industry rooted in farming and ranching, western wear never really goes away.

So what happens when the popular trend comes to Cowtown?

The Vintage Rodeo

At the Vintage Rodeo pop-up market last month, there was a line stretching down the block in anticipation of the opening.

"It was actually insane," said Marissa Myers, who was running the booth at the local vintage resale shop Change is Good.

"[Coastal cowgirl]was a trend that came out obviously like on TikTok, where I feel like everything is starting these days," she said.

"It's kind of like the easy breezy sort of like clean girlcowgirl that's coming out. So there's definitely a lot of people that are looking for that estheticas well going into Stampede and also coming to events like this."

People at the market define it in a few words as "Beach at 5 p.m., Rodeo at 9 p.m."

Like most fashion trends, the urban cowboy trend is cyclical, withJohn Travolta largely being credited for its emergence in the early 1980s.

Riding the urban cowboy trend in 1980

44 years ago
Duration 5:17
A Winnipeg bar offers a weekly "cowboy night" that proves popular with men and woman alike. Aired Sept. 2, 1980 on CBC's This Week on the Prairies.

Myers said their booth saw dozens of boots sold within the first hour of the market opening.

People were eager to nab items they can work into their everyday looks, beyond the 10 days of Stampede.

"It's not, yeah, just one pair of boots isn't enough anymore. Like, you need multiple for like your different personalities," she said.

Jamaal Mwangi co-hosted the eventfor the second year running. The outdoor market hostsdifferent thrift and resale vendors all showcasing vintage and second-hand clothing and accessories.

"Western wear is so popular, especially this time of year, because it's stylish, handmade you just can't find anywhere else," said Mwangi, who operates the shop Like New Vintage and Thrift.

Mwangi says the appeal of vintagewestern wear is in itssustainability and"because it is really cool."

Old meets new

At the Alberta Boot Company showroom in downtown Calgary, CEO Eytan Broder says western wear has been trending for the past two years, and it's good for business.

"We call it sort of the Yellowstone effect maybe, and that's been great for our business as we sort of reinvigorate and reinvigorate and re-energize our brand. It's been great timing for us."

A workroom with cowboy boots displayed on tables and people standing around talking.
Eytan Broder is pictured inside the Alberta Boot Company, a Calgary businesses that has been handcrafting cowboy boots for about 50 years. (Logan Bryce Photography)

The company has been handcrafting boots for about 50 years. It also makes the Royal Canadian Mounted Police uniform boots, and it's the official boot provider of the Calgary Stampede.

"[Calgary Stampede] is kind of Super Bowl season for us," he said.

Beyond Stampede, Broder says the company is tapping into new markets and new consumers, even shipping several pairs of boots to South Korea that morning.

He says thecompany hastwo types of customers, typically.

"We have sort of our traditional customer who really, you know, doesn't just put it on for Stampede but lives it. And then we have a customer who is sort of that urban cowboy or sort of Stampede-time relationship."

At the Vintage Rodeo Market, mini donut vendor Alexis House has a theory about why cowboy culture draws such a crowd.

"I honestly think it's this kind of wildness inside all of us and it kind of comes out during Stampede in all forms. It could be within our fashion or our activities, if you will, but it's begging to come out."