Group employed in construction of the Apollo program space suits
The ILC Dover seamstresses were a group of women who worked for the International Latex Corporation (now ILC Dover). The seamstresses played a key role in the construction of the space suits for the Apollo program. Employed as skilled garment workers, these women were responsible for sewing along with executing the complex cutting, glueing, molding, and latex processes that went into the construction of the Apollo space suit.[1]
Some of the women had been recruited from the Playtex division of ILC, while other came from nearby clothing and luggage manufacturers. Many had learned the sewing trade from their mothers or in high school home economics classes.[2] However to succeed at ILC, the women had to be willing to learn new sewing techniques, perform their tasks at a slow pace, work with novel textiles, and perform to exacting standards.[2][3]
The space suits functioned as individual, personalized space crafts designed to keep a human alive in the environment of space or the lunar surface. The production line at ILC followed NASA-mandated engineering guidelines that were significantly stricter than typical clothing manufacturing processes. Tolerance for variation in the stitches were less than 1/64 of an inch from the seam.[3]
Women known to have worked on the Apollo space suits
^ abcdDe Monchaux, Nicholas. Spacesuit: Fashioning Apollo. p. 193.
^De Monchaux, Nicholas. Spacesuit: Fashioning Apollo. p. 213.
^ abDe Monchaux, Nicolas. Spacesuit: Fashioning Apollo. p. 212.
^ abAyrey, Bill. Lunar Outfitters: Making the Apollo Space Suit. p. 125.
^Ayrey, Bill. Lunar Outfitters: Making the Apollo Space Suit. pp. 121–22.
^ abcDe Monchaux, Nicholas. Spacesuit: Fashioning Apollo. p. 208.
^Photograph with caption "Henrietta Crawford, seated at sewing machine, assembling suit pieces on the Apollo A7L space suit production line at International Latex Corporation (ILC), Frederica (Dover), Delaware. Released may 14, 1968." Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. Object ID: NASA-68-H-441.
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, Archives Division. See photographs of women working on the Apollo A7L spacesuit at the International Latex Corporation (ILC) Federica (Dover), Delaware that were released in 1968.
NASA. Moon Spacewear (video). 1971. National Archives and Records Administration, Records of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NAID 4148157.