habberdasher
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- Messages
- 369
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- Mt Pleasant, SC
I get kind of claustrophobic with close-fitting wear...do you think the glasses I showed are 1920s?
habberdasher said:I have the same hat size as you-but the glasses are sliding up and not even resting on your ear in the photo!
habberdasher said:I can't buy the ones from South Dakota-They're 4.5" from rim to rim! I couldn't pull that off. Yours are 5"?
Cherry_Bombb said:Miss Bella Hell- Love those!! They suit your face really well. I wish I could wear cat eye glasses- I look ridiculous.
These are my two pair. They're very much alike- same color lenses, same shape. But the ones on my friend Jennifer are larger and seem to look like they're more sized for a man. (I'm in the middle, Jennifer's to the far right). Does anyone have an opinion on this? Were these made uni*** or were there specific sizes in this style that were made for men?
MisterGrey said:Prior to about the middle 1950s, all glasses, both for vision and for blocking out the sun, were uni***.
BellyTank said:I disagree.
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Schott 568 Vandals Jacket - $1,250 The classic Perfecto motorcycle jacket, in a very special limited-edition Schott double rider style. MisterGrey said:I'm not so certain that those were necessarily "women's" sunglasses being worn by the mourner; the 1920s had some pretty bizarre fashions, which stretched across both sides of the gender aisle.
I'll admit to standing corrected, though, insofar as those 1947 frames go. I know that women's eyeglass styles branched out of squared horn-rims and browlines, so I suppose I should correct my statement to post-WWII instead of mid-1950s.
pablocham said:Mistergrey, you would learn more about vintage clothing and fashion by spending 10 hours looking at vintage photographs than you would in a million years spent on this forum. Why don't you take a little time off from hypothesizing and postulating and generalizing and just look at photos of what people actually wore back then. Maybe you could start this process by looking for a photograph, illustration or some other worthwhile evidence of a man wearing two-tone sunglasses (or, for that matter, any glasses) with two inch wide temples during the 1930s or 1940s.
pablocham said:Maybe you could start this process by looking for a photograph, illustration or some other worthwhile evidence of a man wearing two-tone sunglasses (or, for that matter, any glasses) with two inch wide temples during the 1930s or 1940s.
Marc Chevalier said:From 1939:
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Miss_Bella_Hell said:.........no need to be a jerk, incidentally.
pablocham said:MisterGrey, you would learn more about vintage clothing and fashion by spending 10 hours looking at vintage photographs than you would in a million years spent on this forum.
MisterGrey said:I'm not so certain that those were necessarily "women's" sunglasses being worn by the mourner; the 1920s had some pretty bizarre fashions, which stretched across both sides of the gender aisle.