In an interview with film historian Kevin Brownlow, Louise Brooks claimed that director Richard Rosson didn't want to direct the picture, and in fact didn't really want to be a director at all: "He'd been Allan Dwan's assistant, and it was an assistant that he wanted to be. During [this picture] he sat sweating, with a trembling script. There wasn't enough Bromo-Seltzer to float him out of his chair."
This film is presumed lost.
The four lead actors in the film: Richard Arlen, Louise Brooks, James Hall and Nancy Phillips were touted by the studio as "The Paramount Junior Stars of 1927" in publicity for the film. Of the four, only Nancy Phillips was the true newcomer with Rolled Stockings being her film debut. While Arlen's, Brooks' and Hall's careers would continue with varying degrees of success and longevity, Phillips appeared in only one other film, The City Gone Wild (1927) (also starring Louise Brooks), before disappearing from the film industry.