Culture Magazine

Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on Women's New Found Sexuality, During the 1920's and 30's.

By Sharriewilliams
The horrors of the Great War lead young people to
 ''let loose'' in the 1920's and advertisers capitalized on it.
Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.The 1920's were the beginning, of liberation for women, from being thought of as child-bearers and homemakers. to co-equals with men in society.

Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.

It was the first decade to emphasize youth culture over the older generations Civil War mentality.

Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.

Young people began testing their new boundaries with more and more outrageous forms of behavior, as fast cars, short skirts and free thinking changed the rules of the game. 

Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.
Bathing suits in 1929, were made for board-thin, young figured women, who wanted total liberation, for their body as well as their mind.
Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.

Here is a photo, of my great aunt Bunny at 25, at Lake Zurich, Chicago, showing off, the art of looking feminine yet liberated, in 1929.  All these wonderful, vintage photos are from her, 83 year old album. I was lucky enough to get copies, before she died at 90 years of age.  

Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.
The Jazz Age represented, restlessness, idolization of youth, and dissatisfaction with the status quo.
Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.

My great aunt Bunny, on the right, (Nana's younger sister,) was 25 in this photo, and was beginning to develop a more womanly figure.  Fashion in the 1920's, was especially designed for girls with no breasts, hips or body fat.  Girls began to look like boys and boys like girls. 

Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.
"[The flapper] symbolized an age anxious to enjoy itself, anxious to forget the past, anxious to ignore the future." (from Jacques Chastenet, "Europe in the Twenties" in Purnell's History of the Twentieth Century)

Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.
Young women in the 1920s, didn't want the drudgery of social conventions and routine of daily life.  Of Course, the Film industry and Maybelline helped shape this idea.
Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.

Fashion and Maybelline, in the late 1920's appealed to the modern woman who wanted liberation from a repressive Victorian  past.

Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.
Single and married women in the cities and the country came to enjoy the comfort and ease, of the new relaxed style in fashion and eye make-up, that were once considered, for Flappers only.      
Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.

Advertising helped shape a new identity for the Jazz Age, generation - making it sexy, for both men and women to smoke, drink out of a flask and have the power to spend on anything they wanted, even if they didn't need it

Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.
Tom Lyle Williams shaped the new image, for a liberated woman in the 1920s, when he contracted Clara Bow and Louise Brooks, to infuse glamour intoMaybelline advertisements. 

Advertising and Fashion Capitalized on women's new found Sexuality, during the 1920's and 30's.

Sharrie Williams on Good Morning Arizona


Stop by my Hilarious 1964 High School Diary Blog called Saffrons Rule at saffronsrule.com

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