Destry Workwear? Who Dat?
Destry Workwear was built out of necessity: women’s workwear has sucked for too long. We’re a Canadian-owned, Canadian-made, small family-run business that’s here to change that
Why We Built Destry?
Because women’s workwear is broken. Here’s what we kept running into:
- Poor fit — Always made for men, just sized down.
- Weak materials — Ripped seams, cheap fabrics, bad hardware.
- No range of motion — Can’t climb, squat, ride, or haul without fighting your gear.
- No durability — One season in and it’s done.
We were tired of it.
So we fixed it.
Every Destry piece is made to move with you, hold up to daily use, and actually fit the way it should — without cutting corners on design, materials, or quality.
What Makes Us Different
- Canadian Made – We manufacture everything right here in Canada. Not outsourced, not mass-produced.
- Family-Run – We’re a small business, doing everything ourselves. We’re hands-on with every product.
- Designed by Women Who Work – We don’t guess what women need. We live it every day.
- Built to Last – Durable fabrics, smart construction, and hardware that doesn’t quit.
- Fit That Works – Not “shrink it and pink it.” Fit is based on real female bodies doing physical jobs.
Our Mission
To build functional, durable, and well-fitting workwear for women who work hard. No fluff. No frills. Just gear that gets the job done.
If you’re fixing fence, saddling horses, stacking hay, or just getting shit done — Destry’s made for you.


Jesse Romo
Jesse was born and raised in Nanton, Alberta on a working cattle ranch. She grew up riding horses, training colts, fixing fence, and putting in long days on the tree farm and the ranch. The problem? Never finding workwear made for women that actually held up — stuff that fit properly, moved with you, and didn’t fall apart.
Renada Crawshaw
Renada studied fashion design and built her life around handmade clothing, sustainability, and (of course) horses. She’s spent years creating gear that’s built to last, fits real women, and actually makes sense for people who use their clothes, not just wear them.
