In the News
Outside: Women’s Workwear Is On The Rise
The need was clear, says Red Ants Pants founder Sarah Calhoun, a former trail-crew worker and Outward Bound instructor. To get women into her made-in-the-USA britches, Calhoun traveled the country with an Airstream trailer, organizing Tupperware-style parties with pants and beer
Learn moreBillings Gazette: Why Not Process Wool in Billings?
I hope there is a woman like the Red Ants Pants owner, who thinks this could turn into something, especially now that our sheep industry is coming into its own?
Learn moreBillings Gazette: Guest opinion: Love your neighbors, shop local
I have been thinking a lot about whose shoulders we have stood upon to get where we are today. I so wish I could sit down at their old farm table by the wood stove and get some advice and perspective about how we move forward in this world. I imagine Polly and Frank would say keep working hard. Keep taking care of the land. Keep an open place at the table for anyone who needs it. Keep loving a Republican. Keep loving a Democrat. Keep baking sweet rolls and share them with everyone you know. Oh, and spend your hard-earned dollars wisely.
Learn moreBozeman Daily Chronicle: Learning from ancestors will help brighten future
December 21, 2018: I sat down to write a piece about shopping local and using our powerful dollars wisely this holiday season, for they truly do count. And as much as I believe in supporting our small businesses, the thing that brings me to tears is this recipe box. It used to be my grandfather’s Guernsey cow record box, back on the dairy farm in Connecticut. I found an old recipe clipped from our hometown newspaper, faded to yellow. It was for my grandmother’s holiday sweet rolls, which had been so popular that it made it into the paper.
Learn moreCountry Woman: Gifts That Give Back
Waxed Canvas Work Apron – Made in Montana, this strong, stylish apron has plenty of pockets to hold all the tools of your trade. Plus, the company’s foundation provides grants to groups whose work aligns with its mission: to develop and expand leadership roles for women, and to enrich and supportrural communities and working family farms and ranches.
Learn moreThe New York Times: Go Home to Your ‘Dying’ Home Town
And yet I feel a fierce defensiveness for this place. Particularly since the 2016 election, I hear the national media — or even my friends back in Portland — dismiss my rural colleagues, family and neighbors as out of touch, hateful, fearful of immigrants, and doomed to a life of boredom and poverty. But they don’t know my friend Sarah Calhoun, who started a women’s clothing company and a music festival near White Sulphur Springs, Mont.
Learn moreProducts: 11 Places to Find Tough and Reliable Women’s Workwear
Red Ants Pants is both a woman-founded workwear brand and a nonprofit foundation supporting women’s leadership, working family farms and ranches, and rural communities.
Learn moreGreat Falls Tribune: ‘Exploring with Enya:’ Wandering through White Sulphur Springs
Red Ants Pants is not only a workwear provider for women, but it’s also a nonprofit “dedicated to women’s leadership, working family farms and ranches, and rural communities.”
Learn moreBillings Gazette: Billings author telling Montana stories one county at a time on radio show
August 27, 2019: There’s a large focus on revitalizing small towns in Montana, he said. For example, Sarah Calhoun who founded Red Ants Pants in White Sulphur Springs helped bring commerce into Meagher County. Local people with creative ideas can breathe life back into small communities. “There are so many examples of that around the state where one or two people or a small group of people have revitalized the community,” he said. “I think there’s a lot of focus on that in the smaller towns and recognizing they have to come up with creative ways of keeping the town alive or they’re going to lose it.”
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