Posts Tagged ‘beauty salon equipment’
Tonsorial Technology…
Hairdressing in the days of yore: Ptak Science Books shares a series of photos from the late 20s [originally in The Illustrated London News, 20 October 1928, page 720]… it’s enough to curl your hair.
[TotH to Everlasting Blort]
As we wonder if Louise Brooks ever sat in such contraptions, we might wish an elegant (if slightly smashed) Happy Birthday to F. Scott Fitzgerald; the author of that seminal exploration of Twenties hairstyles, The Great Gatsby; he was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on this date in 1896. His parents named him in honor of his distant cousin, the author of “The Star-Spangled Banner,” Francis Scott Keys.
Readers can ready themselves to bid on a rare dust jacket from a first edition of Gatsby to be auctioned next month at Sotheby’s – New York; it’s estimated to fetch about $175,000. (The first edition book, worth a measly $5-7,000 is included gratis…)
Carl van Vechten’s 1937 photo of Fitzgerald (source)
Written by (Roughly) Daily
September 24, 2011 at 1:01 am
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged with Beauty, beauty parlor, beauty parlor equipment, beauty parlor technology, beauty salon equipment, Carl Van Vechten, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Francis Scott Keys, hair dressing, hair salon, hair salon equipment, hair salon technology, hair styles, hair styling, hairstyles, salon, salon technology, Technology, The Great Gatsby, The Star-Spangled Banner
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