January 19, 2006
Elizabeth Johnston models of the her innovative work clothes designed specifically for women who work in the construction trades.
Construction fashions for women
TORONTO
Entrepreneur Elizabeth Johnston, proprietor of Toronto’s Working Woman Workwear, has come up with a better mousetrap: coveralls and other protective clothing specifically designed for the female form.
“Companies tend to buy unisex protective workwear — essentially patterned after the male body with some minor adjustments,” she says. “But women’s bodies are different from men’s.
“Women tend to be larger than men in the hips and bust, but smaller in the waist. Consequently, they have a hard time finding coveralls that fit right.”
Johnston, the founding president of the Toronto chapter of the National Association of Women in Construction, launched her company in 1990 after completing courses in designing and pattern-making at Toronto’s Seneca College.
She sells coveralls, pants, shirts and smocks to individuals as well as corporate purchasing departments. Coverall purchases can be made on line at a special e-commerce site, www.CharmandHammer.com.
Clothing is available in poly/cotton twill or 100 per cent cotton, in light or heavy-weight fabrics, in navy or spruce green. Additional colours are available by special request.
Johnston, who worked for her now-retired husband’s general contracting firm for more than 15 years doing accounting, estimating and costing, has made sales to the city of Toronto and heavy-water treatment plants, among others.
“I was selling to some government agencies and individuals, but never on a large scale,” she said.
Johnston now is putting a push on, targeting large companies in different industries, including construction. She also would like to arrange a distribution deal with Mark’s Work Warehouse.
Construction companies, she says, are a tough nut to crack.
“The problem is that there are so few women (in the industry) compared to men,” she says.
“A lot of men think that if they order unisex workwear, that’s fine for us (women). I have to crack that thinking.”
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- New technology allows concrete to come clean
- Ontario architects, general contractor associations issue joint HST bulletin
- WSIB report a clear response to ideas we submitted, Ontario General Contractors Association chief says
- Ground broken on the Cathedral Centre in Toronto
- Highway construction crew uncovers ancient B.C. glacier
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 342 projects with a total value of $2,911,425,288 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on yesterday.
SUBWAY STATIONS, BUS TERMINALS, SUBWAY EXTENSION
$500,000,000 York Reg ON Prebid
$112,000,000 Ottawa ON Prebid
CONDOMINIUM, RETAIL & HOTEL DEVELOPMENT
$100,000,000 Burlington ON Prebid
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Fraud charges laid against former head of Quebec labour union
- Pursuit of LEED could result in professional negligence, insurance executive warns
- Province holding information sessions on new Ontario accessibility standard
- Work continues on Market Wharf condo in Toronto
- Chilliwack Cultural Centre project sets tilt-up concrete record
- WSIB report a clear response to ideas we submitted, Ontario General Contractors Association chief says
- SNC-Lavalin subsidiary Profac under scrutiny over federal contract billing
- As prices surge, China may raise interest rates
- Canadian soldiers repair blown-up bridge in Afghanistan
- Canadian Mechanical Contracting Education Foundation offering Gold Seal course for supervisors
- Slovak construction minister sacked amid corruption scandal
- Historic Kingston Dry Dock restored, enhanced
- Centre for Energy Innovation in Windsor, Ontario built using Termobuild HVAC system
- Canadian Standards Association parking garage standard gets tougher
- Accelerated schedules a challenge for vinyl flooring
- Good materials, shoddy workmanship produces poorly performing floor
- Government takes over Northwest Territories P3 bridge project
- Canadian construction experts visit earthquake-ravaged Haiti
- Winnipeg gets new water treatment plant
- Weighing in on the Tercon Contractors appeal decision
- Construction restarting on hospital in Fort St. John, British Columbia
- In new movie, Hamilton construction worker becomes ‘Defendor’ at night
- ‘Quality product cannot come from cutting corners on safety’
- Shop owner suing VANOC over pre-Olympics road construction disruptions
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- A dozen incredible measurement sets on Canada’s changing ethnic mix (March 9, 2010)
- How fragile is recovery around the world? (March 3, 2010)
- The world financial crisis goes into extra innings (February 25, 2010)
- More







