Here's something I did a few years ago for a party. I had a gas. I think our guests did, too.
We live near a state univ with a good library that anyone can get a check-out card for.
Since I was a highschooler, decades ago, I've known that they had all the issues of "Esquire" magazine from when it started (also many other mags) bound in large folio books of a whole year each.
So I checked out representative folios from the 30's, 40's, 50's, 60's and 70's.
We invited friends over for a cocktail party and I had these volumes opened up on podium-type arrangements on tables around the house.
It was GREAT FUN really. I should do it again!
There were wandering groups of people dipping into these amazing windows that opened onto amazing periods.
The *ADS* were perhaps the coolest things. And perhaps the 30's were strongest there---this was the Gatsby age of Glamor, it seemed to me. Talk about high life and elegance used in every way...always understated and artful. Clothes, furs, cars, yachts...all with grand Deco buildings in the backgrounds, all those tall ceilings and grand decor. All that understated typography.
It was also neat seeing original Hemingway and Faulkner articles as they first appeared. Later on Tom Wolfe and Norman were shaking things up.
Anyway, as we liked we could dip into Glamor, War Fever, Office Frenzy, Hippy/Pop and Disco.
I might have been celebrating my acquisition of a velvet smoking jacket...
Come to think of it, we were probably just then getting into Linda Rondstadt's Nelson Riddle albums, too.
Swank!
We live near a state univ with a good library that anyone can get a check-out card for.
Since I was a highschooler, decades ago, I've known that they had all the issues of "Esquire" magazine from when it started (also many other mags) bound in large folio books of a whole year each.
So I checked out representative folios from the 30's, 40's, 50's, 60's and 70's.
We invited friends over for a cocktail party and I had these volumes opened up on podium-type arrangements on tables around the house.
It was GREAT FUN really. I should do it again!
There were wandering groups of people dipping into these amazing windows that opened onto amazing periods.
The *ADS* were perhaps the coolest things. And perhaps the 30's were strongest there---this was the Gatsby age of Glamor, it seemed to me. Talk about high life and elegance used in every way...always understated and artful. Clothes, furs, cars, yachts...all with grand Deco buildings in the backgrounds, all those tall ceilings and grand decor. All that understated typography.
It was also neat seeing original Hemingway and Faulkner articles as they first appeared. Later on Tom Wolfe and Norman were shaking things up.
Anyway, as we liked we could dip into Glamor, War Fever, Office Frenzy, Hippy/Pop and Disco.
I might have been celebrating my acquisition of a velvet smoking jacket...
Come to think of it, we were probably just then getting into Linda Rondstadt's Nelson Riddle albums, too.
Swank!