Beane moved to
Washington, D.C. in the 1940s to follow her two sisters since there were more jobs available there. She married Willie George Beane in 1942, which she remarked on, at 99 years old, "I married a fellow, Willie Beane, and by my named [
sic] being Vanilla, I came up with Vanilla Beane". While working at the millinery shop she also had a job as mail clerk at the
General Services Administration. In 1975, she was inducted into the hall of fame of the National Association of Fashion and Accessory Designers, a trade group founded in 1949 in
New York City for Black fashion professionals. In 1979, when the millinery shop she worked at moved to
Gaithersburg, Maryland, she bought its remaining supplies and fixtures and opened Bené Millinery & Bridal Supplies. She continued working at her store multiple times a week even after her 100th birthday. One of her hats is in the permanent collection of the
National Museum of African American History and Culture. The NMAAHC also features a detailed
3D scan of a green velveteen wrap hat from the 1950–1960s. The government of Washington, D.C. designated September 13 Vanilla Beane Day in her honor. == Death ==