Bring back some good or bad memories


ADVERTISEMENT

October 3, 2024

Jon Bon Jovi and Diane Lane Having Fun in 1985

Diane Lane has spent her entire life immersed in the entertainment industry, crediting her vulnerability as an essential quality to her Hollywood success. She secured her first major film role at 14, and by the time she turned 20, she crossed paths with the budding rock music icon Jon Bon Jovi. During their relationship, Lane was already a prominent actress, while Bon Jovi was just starting their ascent to stardom.

The pair began dating around 1985 — Bon Jovi’s debut album had been released the previous year and Lane was perhaps best known for her role in The Outsiders. While the exact circumstances of Bon Jovi and Lane’s introduction are unclear, we can deduce that the two young, hot, famous people shared some mutual friends and VIP invitations.

Lane has been complimentary whenever her relationship with Bon Jovi is broached in interviews. In 2017 the actress told Watch What Happens Live host Andy Cohen that she and the rocker dated for “five months, I was 20,” noting that “every girl should have such a wonderful experience when she’s that young.”

Recalling the brief period, Lane said, “I have some photos of him packing for the tour … Just all the jockstraps were lined up on the floor for the whole band to get through the whole tour. An ocean of jockstraps.” That is some vivid imagery.

In 1989, Bon Jovi told Rolling Stone that his short time with Lane and the reunion with his high school sweetheart Dorothea Hurley “say everything about my career with this band.”

“It took us some time to find ourselves, in our personal lives as well as our career,” he explained. “So I did that. I went out and had a … whatever you want to call it. I went out with a girl for ten months, a year maybe.” It’s unclear whether Bon Jovi is referring to Lane, considering she’s said they were together for five months on multiple occasions. “You come to terms with who you are and what you’re about. That lifestyle is not for me,” he continued.






22 Adorable Childhood Photos of Gwen Stefani From the 1970s

American singer and songwriter Gwen Stefani rose to fame in the 1990s as the lead singer for the rock-ska (Jamaican urban pop music) band No Doubt. She then started a successful solo career.


Gwen Renée Stefani was born on October 3, 1969, in Fullerton, California, and raised Catholic in nearby Anaheim. She was named after a stewardess in the 1968 novel Airport, and her middle name, Renée, comes from the Four Tops’ 1968 version of the Left Banke’s 1966 song “Walk Away Renée.” Her father Dennis Stefani is Italian American and worked as a Yamaha marketing executive. Her mother Patti is Irish American and worked as an accountant before becoming a homemaker.

Stefani’s parents were fans of folk music and exposed her to music by artists like Bob Dylan and Emmylou Harris. Stefani has two younger siblings, Jill and Todd, and an older brother, Eric. Eric was the keyboardist for No Doubt before leaving the band to pursue a career in animation on The Simpsons.

She attended Loara High School, where she graduated in 1987. After high school, she attended Fullerton College and Cypress College. She then transferred to California State University, Fullerton, but dropped out to pursue her music career. Here, a collection of 22 adorable photos of Gwen Stefani when she was a kid from the 1970s:






Della Oake: The Enchanting 1950s Model

Della Oake (1929-2022) was a British model who started her career as a supporting artiste for the movies. She was discovered backstage at Shepperton Studios by Cecil Beaton, who describes her in his customarily unkind fashion: “I noticed a picture of misery sitting on a packing case. She was wearing tawdry finery supplied by wardrobe and a tired cotton camellia on her partly dyed head. I realized that this extra had something extra.” He went on to recall that Della “gave a refinement and delicacy to everything she wore, until she was claimed in marriage by an American tycoon.” He was exceedingly proud of his discovery and she was one of his very favorite models.

Della Oake in the 1950s

Della Oake is immortalized in hundreds of dramatic photographs taken by the best in the business: Cecil Beaton has her in dramatic butterfly sleeved Schiaparelli in 1951, and the same year Norman Parkinson snapped her clutching her ballgown outside a stately home, looking like Cinderella pausing while running from the ball. Lee Miller showed her haloed in steam and immaculately glamorous at a train station for a story about fashion for traveling for Vogue.

These photographs are in the collection of the National Gallery, amongst others. Della, who was the first British model to be featured on the cover of American Vogue, is the quintessential porcelain skinned beauty of the 1950s, fine boned with blonde hair and large, icy blue eyes and as poised as a princess.

Della Oake in bloused, belted jacket in black-and-white rayon basket weave pattern with huge sleeves over black wool dress by Hardy Amies, black wide brimmed hat by Erik, photo by Richard Dormer, Harper's Bazaar UK, March 1950

Della Oake in elegant day suit by Peter Russell, photo by Lee Miller for the Picture Post, "London Says Dress To Suit Yourself", August 1950

Della Oake in elegant suit by Spectator, Harper's Bazaar UK, October 1950

Della Oake in lovely dress by Spectator Sports, Harper's Bazaar UK, June 1950

Della Oake in unpublished photo by Lee Miller for British Vogue, Chiddingly, East Sussex, May 1950.

Tighten Your Belts: Fiona Lewis Photographed by Eva Sereny for The Sunday Times Magazine, October 1972

At the Paris winter collections no-one seemed to have any scruples about cribbing from the Fifties. However, Dorothée Bis, one of the most influential ready-to-wear designers, did it better than anybody else because the clothes managed to look far sexier than they ever did at the time.

Big baggy men’s department sweaters; jackets and coats, swagger-backed or lumberjack style, in cloth or fake fur; tight skirts hobbled over seamed lurex tights – in fact, everything that could be worn with a waspie belt like the one shown here, giving more shape tot he shapely and hope to the straight. On the cover and on these pages actress Fiona Lewis shows how she wears waist-clinchers.

Sweater by Biba and belt by Fenwicks

Sweater and belt from Biba

Sweater is model’s own, belt from Biba

Waspie from Escalade

Waspie and felt skirt by Biba

Sting of The Police Photographed by Lynn Goldsmith in London, 1982

When photographer Lynn Goldsmith met Sting, he was a 20-something in an unknown British rock band called The Police who hadn’t yet released an album.

As a favor to a friend, the famed rock photographer met the trio for a shoot in New York in 1978. She soon found herself chronicling a band on a meteoric rise to rock stardom. Through The Police’s entire creative life through 1983 and through their five studio albums, Goldsmith had unfettered access in the studio, on the road and at home.

She also co-wrote a song with Sting, which she recorded in 1983 as Will Powers. The track, “Adventures in Success,” got a belated global boost in 2018 when it was featured in a Squarespace Super Bowl advertisement (it features Keanu Reeves singing along to the motivational Goldsmith/Sting tune while standing atop a speeding motorcycle).

On a visit to Sting’s London home in 1982, she created a shirtless portrait of the singer and bassist lying in the grass. During the recording of “Ghost in the Machine” in 1981 at Montserrat in the Caribbean, she recalled, she summoned the band outside for a sunset photo and Sting intuitively grabbed a saxophone to use as a prop.

“He had a sense of style and a sense of himself,” Goldsmith recalled. “I don’t have that with 90 percent of the artists I work with, where I have to direct and pick clothes and position someone. I’d be making pictures of Sting and he’d take his shirt off or whatever, like he did on stage. He was a great subject.”








(Photos by © Lynn Goldsmith)

30 Amazing Photos That Show Home Interiors in the Late Victorian Era

In the late Victorian era, home interiors were characterized by a blend of ornate elegance and eclectic styles. This period reflects a greater emphasis on comfort, the incorporation of new materials and technologies.

Deep, saturated colors like burgundy, dark green, and navy were popular, often paired with softer pastels for balance. Elaborate wallpapers featuring bold patterns, often with floral or damask designs. Wainscoting and decorative plasterwork added texture.

Furniture was typically large and heavily carved, often made from dark woods like mahogany and walnut. Sofas and chairs were designed for comfort, with deep seats and plush upholstery, using luxurious fabrics like velvet, damask, and brocade.

Late Victorian interiors encapsulated a rich tapestry of design influences, creating spaces that were not only visually stunning but also warm and inviting. The era’s emphasis on craftsmanship and detail continues to influence interior design today.

Take a look at these amazing photos to see what home interiors looked like in the late Victorian era.






October 2, 2024

Oct. 2, 1984: Papa John’s Pizza is Founded by John Schnatter in Jeffersonville, Indiana, And Here Are Their Early Photos

Did you know that Papa John started his pizza business in a broom closet in the back of his father’s tavern? In 1984, Robert Schnatter gave his son, John, free use of that little closet; and 40 years later, Papa John’s is one of the largest pizza chains worldwide.


As a high school student working at a local pizza pub in Jeffersonville, Indiana, John Schnatter realized that there was something missing from national pizza chains: a superior-quality traditional pizza delivered to the customer’s door. His dream was to one day open a pizza restaurant that would fill that void.

In 1984, “Papa” John Schnatter knocked out a broom closet located in the back of his father’s tavern (Mick’s Lounge), sold his prized 1972 Z28 Camaro, purchased $1,600 worth of used restaurant equipment, and began selling his pizzas to the tavern's customers. The customers loved the pizza so much that John was able to expand by moving into adjoining space, eventually leading to the opening of the first Papa John’s restaurant in 1985. In 2009, Schnatter bought the Camaro back after offering a reward of $250,000 for the car.

Today, Papa John’s boasts nearly 3000 restaurants in 49 states and 20 international markets. Papa John’s also owns or franchises 100+ Perfect Pizza restaurants in the United Kingdom. More importantly, Papa John’s remains committed to its heritage of making a superior-quality, traditional pizza. Below are some of their early photos from 1984-85:









FOLLOW US:
FacebookTumblrPinterestInstagram

CONTACT US

Browse by Decades

Popular Posts

Advertisement

09 10