habberdasher
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 369
- Location
- 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 unisex 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 unisex.
BellyTank said:I disagree.
B
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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:
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.