Bring back some good or bad memories


February 25, 2022

Gaucho Pants of the 1970s

Gaucho pants are wide-legged trousers for women with a cuff that ends around mid calf. Taking their name from pants once worn by South American cowboys, they were in style for a brief period in the early to mid-1970s. They were similar to the culotte short or skort, but gauchos were longer and meant to serve as a more formal, workplace-friendly alternative to skirts and slacks.


French designer Yves Saint Laurent was the first to popularize a more masculine look for women’s wear. His trouser suits and le smoking tuxedo jacket quickly caught on with fashion-conscious women after 1968. Over the next few years sales of trousers skyrocketed over dresses and skirts. The boom was helped by the women’s liberation movement, with its acceptance of unconventional roles for women. Bans against wearing pants to formal events and in the workplace declined considerably, making room for gaucho pants. The pants were borrowed from the costume of the pampas cowboy in Argentina and Uruguay. These cowboys, called gauchos, achieved mythic status for their riding skills and fierce independence in the 18th and 19th centuries. Though somewhat unusual in cut, gaucho pants reflected the growing interest in ethnic looks and world cultures in the late 1960s and 1970s. Fashion writers praised them as one of the new, modern alternatives to skirts.

Gauchos first made an impact in the fall of 1970. American designer Anne Klein offered gray flannel gauchos that appeared in an August 30, 1970, issue of the New York Times Magazine’s twice-yearly fashion supplement. They soon caught on with the mass-market apparel sellers. Often they were shown with boots, another new trend in women’s wear of the era. Within a few years, however, gauchos had declined in popularity. The mid-calf length broke the line of the leg, and they seemed to give the wearer a wider silhouette, or shape, than desired. Unflattering to most, they eventually became synonymous with some of the decade’s more ill-advised fashion fads.










February 24, 2022

Larry Page’s Business Card, ca. 1998

Here’s Google co-founder Larry Page’s business card from 1998:


The card surfaced on a Reddit thread as a response to the question, “What’s the most expensive mistake you’ve made at work?” A Reddit user, Zestyping, that posted this card replied:
“I met both Carl Page and Larry Page at a party hosted by a Stanford friend of mine in 1998. Carl gave me his card for eGroups and said “we’re hiring”. Larry gave me his card for Google—a flimsy bit of paper obviously printed by bubble jet—and said “we’re hiring”. I said, “Nah, who needs another search engine?” and went to graduate school. I still have the card.”
While in the Ph.D. program in computer science at Stanford University, Larry met Sergey Brin, and together they developed and ran Google, which began operating in 1998. Larry went on leave from Stanford after earning his master’s degree. He was Google’s first CEO.




Amazing Black and White Photos of Gärdet Music Festival in 1970

The party at Gärdet, Gärdesfesten or Gärdetfestivalen was a free music festival that was arranged at Gärdet in Stockholm on two occasions during the year 1970.


The first party at Gärdet was organized between 12 and 14 June 1970, inspired by the Monterey Pop Festival and the Woodstock Festival as a cultural-political manifestation. The festival was organized without applying for a permit. Bands such as Gunder Hägg, Träd, Gräs och Stenar, Solen skiner, Gudibrallan, Love Explosion and Arbete & Fritid played. The party at Gärdet came to function as something of a unifying starting point for the left-wing progressive music movement that has come to be known as the prog.

The second party at Gärdet was organized between 20 and 23 August the same year, and in addition to many of the bands that have already participated in the first party, bands such as Turid, Fläsket brinner, Samla Mammas Manna, Södra Bergens Balalaikor, NJA-group (later Fria Pro ), The Basics of European Dissatisfaction.

These amazing photos were taken by Sten-Åke Stenberg that show the Gärdet music festival in Stockholm in 1970.










Living Mannequins on London’s Carnaby Street in 1966

Lady Jane was the first women’s fashion boutique on London’s Carnaby Street. It was opened by Henry Moss and his partner Harry Fox in April 1966.

On May 11, 1966, Fox had a pair of models take part in a risqué publicity stunt in the boutique’s window. The two models, Diane James and Jina Baker, became living mannequins by changing in the shop window for three days.


The shop gained great publicity from the national press, and attracted the attention of crowds of potential customers by having models changing in the shop window for three days. Henry Moss was quoted as saying “Then I got arrested. I thought it was for indecency, although the girls were wearing underwear. I was tried at Gt. Marlborough Street Court and fined £2 for obstructing the highway.” A visit by Jayne Mansfield garnered further publicity.

Take a look at the publicity stunt through these vintage pictures below:








Vintage Photos of Girton School For Girls in the 1910s

The Girton School for Girls was a boarding and day school for girls located in Winnetka, Illinois from 1901-1919. Eventually boys were admitted to the lower school. In 1919, the school was closed, and the campus became the new home of North Shore Country Day School. Many students continued on at North Shore.

These photos from the North Shore Country Day School Archives captured students of the Girton School for Girls during their performances in the 1910s.

Girton School for Girls May Revels celebration, circa 1910-15

Alice Quan Rood '15 dressed as Stark for the Girton School's 1914 performance of "Sanctuary: A bird masque" by Percy Mackaye

Girton School for Girls May pole at the May Revel celebration, circa 1910-15

Girton School for Girls May Revels, 1914, heralds- Florence Tyden and Pricilla McIlvaine

Girton School for Girls May Revels, 1914, The Pageant





February 23, 2022

Your Child’s Portrait in a Doll, 1938

Portrait dolls, modeled after children or adults by Dewees Cochran, New York painter and sculptress, reproduce all the details of features, hair, and complexion found in the original.

Supplementing conventional sculptor’s tools with dental instruments for fine work, Miss Cochran models the amazingly lifelike figures from real life, or from written descriptions and photographs, one full face and one profile. The doll head is first shaped in a claylike material. From this a plaster mold is made in which the head is cast in a virtually unbreakable substance that simulates actual skin texture.

Hair closely matching the original is used to fashion a realistic wig, and the face is tinted to the correct flesh tones. Bodies are fashioned from another unbreakable composition material, while the hands are made of hard rubber. A skilled seamstress turns out diminutive clothes that are perfect miniature reproductions of the costumes worn by the actual model.

The portrait dolls, which require about five weeks to complete, are made in proportion to the size of the child or adult, running from fourteen to twenty-four inches in height. When a photograph of the child is compared with a similarly lighted photograph of the portrait doll, it is almost impossible to distinguish between the two.

Dewees Cochran painting eyebrows on a doll head modeled from a real child. Reproducing features, expression, complexion, and even freckles, the doll’s face presents a remarkable likeness.

The young subject and her finished doll are. Note how the artist has captured the personality of the child in a tiny figure less than two feet tall.

Dressing the doll. Every detail of the sitter’s costume is copied in the diminutive garments, which are specially made for Miss Cochran by a skilled seamstress.

Working from photographs, the artist first models the head in clay. In this process she uses several dental tools, in addition to scalpels and regular sculptors’ aids.

When the clay model is completed, it is used in making a plaster-of-Paris mold as seen at the right. The mold is being filled with the special composition material from which the head is to be cast. This produces a virtually unbreakable head.

Fresh from the mold, the head is sandpapered to a skinlike texture and painted to match the natural complexion of the subject before hair is added.

The body is formed of unbreakable composition material and the hands of hard rubber. Dolls are from fifteen to twenty-four inches high, depending on the size of the child.

The finished doll.




Fiat X1/23: The Concept of Child-Size Electric Car From 1972

The Fiat X1/23 is a concept car originally shown in 1972 at the Turin Motor Show and in 1976 as an electric car by the Italian manufacturer Fiat. Designed by Centro Stile Fiat, it is a small two-seater city car, unlike any Fiat produced at the time.


The 1976 X1/23 is fitted with a 14 kW electric motor driving the front wheels and equipped with regenerative braking. Batteries are located at the rear. The X1/23 has a top speed of 45 mph (72.4 km/h) and a claimed range of about 50 miles (80.5 km). Despite its diminutive size, the car weighs 820 kg (1,810 lb), 166 kg (366 lb) of which was due to the battery.

The measurements led people to believe that Fiat made the car for kids. Its length reached only 2.64 (8.66 feet) meters! For comparison, it was three times smaller than the popular Fiat 124 sedan which was 4.03 meters (13.22 feet) long.

The car had an electric motor that spun the front wheels. Back then, vehicles run by electricity in Europe seemed utopian, like from a fantasy movie. That’s why when Fiat introduced tiny X1/23, many were impressed by the idea of owning a car that is so cheap to maintain.












FOLLOW US:
FacebookTumblrPinterestInstagram

CONTACT US

Browse by Decades

Popular Posts

Advertisement