Scanned from Taschen's "All-American Ads of the 20s". Click image for 622 x 879 size.
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1 week ago
During the 1910s young girls wore big bows on their hair that fell onto the head, and so they became known as "flappers". The name would stick with this generation, as they grew up in the 1920s.
Scanned from Taschen's "All-American Ads of the 20s". Click image for 622 x 879 size.
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4 comments:
Hi, I have been in love with this illustrators work for many years; but have not been able to find much out about him/her. Do you know anything at all about the person who did these great ads?
Thanks for posting them...some I have never seen.
Hi! I don't know anything about the illustrator either. I've made a set on flickr with all the images I could find of his/her work. You can see it, if you like, by following the link underneath the image to my flickr photostream. Have a nice holliday!
Marjorie Cleora Woodbury, b. 1888, Massachusetts, d. 1960 Massachusetts. Studied at MA Normal Art School (now MA College of Art & Design). Illustrated for the McCallum "you know she wears them" campaign fr about 1917 through about 1922. Illustrated for Amory, Browne & Co. fr about 1918 through about 1922. Illustrated children's books. Married Pliny M Smith in 1918 in MA and had children.
Thank you very much, Roberta! :)
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