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March 22, 2026

The Making of Princess Soraya’s Wedding Dress for Her 1951 Marriage to Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran

The wedding dress worn by Princess Soraya (Soraya Esfandiary-Bakhtiari) for her 1951 marriage to Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran is widely considered one of the most opulent and heavy haute couture creations in history. Designed by Christian Dior himself (with some accounts attributing the actual drafting to a young Yves Saint Laurent, who was then working at the house), the gown was a feat of both engineering and artistry.





Christian Dior was commissioned to create a masterpiece that would reflect the immense wealth and prestige of the Iranian monarchy. The final design was an architectural marvel of the “New Look” era.

It was crafted from approximately 37 yards (34 meters) of silver lamé, creating a shimmering, metallic effect. The gown was lavishly hand-embroidered with 6,000 diamond pieces, thousands of pearls, and intricate gold thread work. A staggering 20,000 marabou stork feathers were used to trim the dress, adding a soft, ethereal volume to the skirt and train. 

The sheer volume of materials made the gown incredibly heavy. It reportedly weighed between 20 and 30 kilograms (44–66 pounds). It required the work of roughly 20 tailors and seamstresses at the House of Dior to complete the intricate hand-detailing in time. On the wedding day, Soraya was still weak from a bout of typhoid fever. The weight of the 20-meter train was so immense that she struggled to stand or walk.

The dress was so heavy that a last-minute adjustment was necessary just before the ceremony began. To relieve Soraya of the crushing weight, the Shah and his aides reportedly used scissors to cut 8 meters (about 26 feet) off the train so she could walk down the aisle. Because the palace was freezing in the February cold, Soraya wore a woolen vest and socks hidden beneath the magnificent silver lamé. 

Decades after her 1958 divorce and subsequent life in exile, the dress reappeared in the public eye. After her death in 2001, her belongings were auctioned in Paris, where the iconic Dior gown was sold for $1.2 million. It remains a symbol of both the pinnacle of 1950s fashion and the “sad-eyed” princess’s tragic royal tenure.





Danielle Darrieux: The Eternal Face of French Cinema

Danielle Darrieux (1917–2017) was a true legend of French cinema, whose career spanned an incredible eight decades and redefined the image of the “French ingénue.”

With her porcelain skin, expressive eyes, and natural elegance, Darrieux became a global star in the 1930s, transitioning effortlessly from lighthearted comedies to intense, sophisticated dramas. She possessed a rare versatility, captured perfectly in her collaborations with legendary directors like Max Ophüls in The Earrings of Madame de....

Beyond her acting prowess, Darrieux was a talented singer, adding a layer of lyrical charm to many of her roles. Even in her later years, she remained a beloved figure, proving that her timeless grace and artistic depth were far more than just a fleeting trend of the Golden Age. Take a look at these beautiful portraits to see the timeless elegance of a young Danielle Darrieux.






Tsar Nicholas II’s Daughters Proudly Showing Their Bald Heads in 1917

During World War I, the four daughters of Tsar Nicholas II — Olga, Tatiana, Maria, and Anastasia — contracted measles in early 1917, which caused them to lose their hair. They shaved their heads as a practical response to the hair loss caused by the illness.

This happened during an already tumultuous time: the family was under enormous strain as the war dragged on and revolutionary pressure mounted in Russia. The girls were photographed bald, and these images became some of the more striking personal records of the Romanov family in their final years.

It was a fairly common practice at the time to shave the head when recovering from illnesses like measles or typhus, as it made caring for the patient easier and avoided the patchy, uneven hair loss that the fever caused. The photographs, taken by their French tutor Pierre Gilliard, show the princesses looking quite cheerful despite everything. In his diary, Gilliard noted that the sisters typically wore scarves to hide their heads, but on this day, they playfully whipped them off at a signal from Olga to surprise him and their parents.

By the time the family was executed in July 1918, their hair had grown back to roughly shoulder length.



The Golden Age Begins: 40 Vintage Film Posters of the 1930s

The 1930s represented a “Golden Age” for vintage film posters, characterized by a transition from simple advertisements to true works of atmospheric art. During this era, studios relied heavily on stone lithography, a process that gave posters rich, saturated colors and a unique textured depth that modern printing cannot replicate.

Whether it was the haunting, shadow-filled imagery of Universal Horror classics like Dracula or the elegant, sophisticated Art Deco lines of Hollywood romances, these posters were designed to sell a dream. They often featured hand-drawn illustrations of stars with dramatic, oversized typography to capture the grandeur of the silver screen.

Take a look at these artworks to see the cinematic glamour of the 1930s.

Berättelsen om jämtlandspojken som besegrade trollen-fattigdomen, 1930

Det Stulna Ansiktet (The Stolen Face), 1930

Metropolis, 1930

"Frankenstein", The Man Who Made a Monster, 1931

Dracula, 1931

50 Extraordinary Photos of Françoise Dorleac as Teresa on the Set of “Cul-de-sac” (1966)

In Roman Polanski’s Cul-de-sac (1966), Françoise Dorléac delivers a performance that is as mercurial and volatile as the North Sea surrounding the film’s isolated castle setting. Playing Teresa, the young, bored, and disenchanted wife of the retired George (Donald Pleasence), she serves as the film’s chaotic center. Her performance as Teresa is considered by many to be the crowning achievement of her tragically short career.

Unlike the typical “damsel in distress” roles of the era, Dorléac’s Teresa is portrayed as the strongest and most resourceful character in the film. She is manipulative, often ridiculing her husband and exerting control over him through his emotional dependency.

Critics have compared her performance to a “panther in the night,” noting that she isn’t afraid to make the character unlikable while remaining consistently charismatic. She is depicted as a “wild creature,” frequently seen walking barefoot or roaming their isolated island fortress in a state of boredom and rebellion.

One of the film’s highlights is a continuous eight-minute take where Teresa swims nude in the freezing background while the men bicker. The filming was so grueling that Dorléac reportedly came close to hypothermia. Her character is known for “questionable morale,” often drinking homemade vodka with the invading gangster and digging graves, symbolizing a kind of raw, honest liberation within the film’s absurdist world.

Many consider this to be Dorléac’s greatest and most compelling performance. It showcased a darker, more intelligent edge than her more famous, “candy-coated” role alongside her sister Catherine Deneuve in The Young Girls of Rochefort.

In a haunting coincidence, Dorléac's character in Cul-de-sac faces a burning car in one of the final scenes; she died in a real-life car accident only a year after the film's release at the age of 25.






March 21, 2026

Sharing a Cigarette During the Tour de France, ca. 1927

During the Tour de France in 1927, a captivating moment was captured as two cyclists shared a cigarette amidst the grueling race. At a time when the race was known for its extreme physical endurance and challenging terrain, the image of these athletes casually taking a break to smoke highlighted a stark contrast to the modern image of sports professionalism. Back then, cyclists were not the well-conditioned, highly trained athletes we think of today, but often worked with fewer resources and a less scientific approach to training.


The cigarette break served as a small, humanizing moment in the midst of the grueling competition. The riders, caught between moments of exhaustion and the fleeting respite, were sharing a brief pause from the intense race. The casualness with which they lit up during such an intense event shows how much the culture of competitive sports has changed over the years, with the focus now on optimal health and performance.

This iconic photograph from the 1927 Tour de France is a reminder of the past and how far the sport has evolved. It symbolizes a different era in cycling, one where athletes could share a smoke as easily as they shared the road. Today, the Tour de France is synonymous with elite athleticism, but this picture offers a rare glimpse into a time when the race was less about perfection and more about sheer will and grit, with moments of levity in between the fierce competition.

’90s Cool: A Nostalgic Look at Teenage Boys’ Styles

The 1990s was a decade of bold experimentation and cultural rebellion for teenage boys’ fashion, heavily influenced by the rise of grunge and hip-hop.

In the early years, the “Seattle sound” brought oversized flannel shirts, ripped denim, and combat boots into the mainstream, signaling a move toward a more relaxed, “anti-fashion” aesthetic. As the decade progressed, the influence of streetwear took over, featuring baggy cargo pants, graphic oversized tees, and iconic windbreakers in vibrant neon colors. Accessories like backward baseball caps, chain wallets, and chunky sneakers became essential staples of the everyday high school wardrobe.

Ultimately, ’90s style for boys was defined by a sense of effortless cool, prioritizing comfort and individuality over the rigid trends of previous generations. Take a look at these portraits to see what teenage boys looked like in the 1990s.









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