FedoraFan112390
Practically Family
- Messages
- 646
- Location
- Brooklyn, NY
You never really see modern day shows or films that showcase the period from just after WWII ended, to just before the beginnings of the Rock N' Roll era. It seems to be generally a forgotten era - from the birth of the Cold War, to the cold winters of Korea -
In popular memory, it doesn't seem like this period really seems to fit with either the "glamour" of the war years in pop culture (pinup girls, Nazis, Swing, Big Band, wartime romance, V-Day parades etc), or the "nifty '50s" (Rock N' Roll, atomic age homes, the space race, googie, fuzzy dice, tail fins and retro futurism). It seems to have been largely a forgotten time.
I'd like us here to celebrate/discuss some of the trends, fads, fashion, art and architecture of the post-WWII, pre-Rock era. I feel its one of the last truly wholesome times in American history - the heart of the Norman Rockwell era.
In popular memory, it doesn't seem like this period really seems to fit with either the "glamour" of the war years in pop culture (pinup girls, Nazis, Swing, Big Band, wartime romance, V-Day parades etc), or the "nifty '50s" (Rock N' Roll, atomic age homes, the space race, googie, fuzzy dice, tail fins and retro futurism). It seems to have been largely a forgotten time.
I'd like us here to celebrate/discuss some of the trends, fads, fashion, art and architecture of the post-WWII, pre-Rock era. I feel its one of the last truly wholesome times in American history - the heart of the Norman Rockwell era.