The Farmers Mart Aug-Sep 2018 - Issue 58 | Page 27

THE GREAT YORKSHIRE SHOW 27 • AUG/SEP 2018 WOOL IS MY BREAD – ALISON O’NEIL WHILST at the Great Yorkshire Show, I (editor) managed to catch up with a rather busy Alison O’Neil, known in the online world as Shep- herdess, a hill farmer and clothing designer, specialising in producing wool tweed products using fleece from her own flock. Alison was at the Great York- shire Show, showcasing her new collection at this year’s catwalk. I managed to squeeze in a chat between shows with her to discuss hill farming and her clothing com- pany, ‘Wool is my Bread’. Alison is a one-woman farmer, who has farmed at Shackla Bank for the last 20 years, it’s a small traditional hill farm of 40 acres. Her family have been farming in the Yorkshire Dales for several gener- ations, though she left the Dales for a period of 15 years, travelling to see if the other side of the fence was greener. She returned to the Dales, probably discovering the grass is never greener than it is in Cumbria. The sheep she runs on the farm is a closed flock of Kendal Rough Fell, Swaledale and Herdwick sheep. She chose them because the breed suits the terrain well and she has a love of native breeds. Alison’s works with the flock is to produce meat for 5-star Michelin restaurants, using the wool fleeces to produce products for her brand ‘Wool is my Bread’ as well as selling quality gimmers to other breeders. With no previous experience in fashion, and just a passion for clothing and wool, Alison set up her clothing brand ‘Wool is my Bread’. She designs functional everlasting traditional clothes similar to those worn by her parents and grandpar- ents. The designs are well cuts with classical lines in a warm woollen material, spun from her own wool. Her inspiration comes from the environment around her, the landscape is her colour palette, the weave of the tweed replicates the physical nature of where she lives, the drystone walls and hedgerows, where the herring bone pattern is inspired from mowing the mead- ows. From sheep to finished tweed material takes a year, it’s a long process, but the quality of the end product speaks for itself. As I mentioned earlier I met up with Alison at the Great Yorkshire Show’s catwalk, or as her collection was called ‘The Sheep Walk’. It was the first time she had showcased a collection on the catwalk, and she was slightly nervous and excited. “I was nervous, excited and scared but rose to the challenge for this amazing opportunity I had been given. It was a fabulous ex- perience, and so well received, a huge hit and it’s created so much business interest as well.” Recently ‘Shepherdess; Seasons of my Life’ book, featuring stun- ning photography of Alison by Ian Lawson, was produced that tells the story of Alison, its an account of Alison’s day to day life, living alone and making her way in the world. Alison wrote the narrative and hopes to follow up this coffee table book with her autobiogra- phy in a couple of years. Alison’s plans going forward, is to push the brand onwards and up- wards, taking her passion for wool and clothing with total provenance to the fashion industry. “I’d love to showcase at London Fashion Week or be recognised by ‘The Cam- paign for Wool’ but both of those seem like tough nuts to crack.” We wish Alison all the best and fingers crossed she gets to show- case her work at London Fashion Week one day. https://shop.shepherdess.co.uk/