Health & Beauty

  • Why The Scale Lies...
  • Learn how to love your fruits and vegetables
  • The Truth About Counting Calories
  • Cooking is not hard. It is also not simple
  • What Are The Richest Sources Of Calcium And Minerals?
  • The Myth of "Just Do It"
  • Pay Attention to Pain and Soreness
  • TV couch potatoes get diabetes
  • Money can't buy happiness
  • A Health Spa: Enjoyable Ways of Reducing Stress and Relieving Sore Muscles
  • Breakfast of Champions
  • Avoid Negative Thinking; Choose to be Positive
  • Consuming Sodas Causes Osteoporosis in Teenagers
  • Value Cosmetics In The Current Economy
  • Did You Start Your Life With Enough Probiotics?
  • Natural Remedies to Cure Skin Rash
  • Have Dog Allergies And Cat Allergies And Own A Pet?
  • 8 Best brain foods
  • The Benefit of Royal Jelly
  • Different Types of Noses
  • Sarcopenia and the importance of resistance training
  • Care of Dental Braces
  • 4 Quick Tips And 4 Empowering Beliefs About Food That Help Stop Emotional Eating Dead In Its Tracks
  • The Image of a Fitness Model
  • How to Achieve Your New Year Resolutions
  • Winter Darkness, Season Depression
  • Tibetan Goji Berries Recommended In Everyone's Diets
  • Which fitness DVD will help you shift your festive flab?
  • Healthy eating for Every Body Shape
  • Fast Food & Bone Health
  • Sports Drink - Good or Bad?
  • Love Your Coffee? Effects on Belly Fat
  • The Benefits of Martial Arts
  • Low-Carb Backlash - Is the Low-Carb Cookie Crumbling?
  • Health Benefits of Almonds
  • How to stay awake?
  • Do You Need Enzyme Supplements?
  • The Nutritional Benefits Of Juicing Fruit And Vegetables
  • Healthier Skin Naturally in 7 Days or Less
  • I admit it, I'm vain!
  • The Magic Of Hair Colouring
  • Benefits Of Aerobics
  • Does Vitamin Deficiency Affect The Growth Of The Nails?
  • Simple Facial Exercises
  • Herbs That Help With Hair Loss
  • A guide to detoxification
  • Graying of Hair
  • Why Raw Food Is Best
  • Olive oil for dry skin
  • 12 Insider Secrets to Fabulous Skin, Hair, and Makeup
  • Simple Ways to Retain a Youthful Look
  • When Less is More
  • How to Make Your Lips Appear Plumper
  • Cosmetic Tips
  • Beauty Tips
  • Choosing Footwear Tips
  • Skin Habits You Can Do Without
  • Drying Your Hair without Damage
  • How Many Calories Do I Need Daily?
  • Body mass index
  • Is Tea Harmful?
  • Calcium Sources for Women
  • Vitamin C Gives Cosmetic and Skin Benefits
  • Healthy Eating
  • 7 Lifesaving Fitness Tips
  • Nail Designs
  • Stress Consequences to Your Body
  • Makeup mistakes
  • Beauty sleep: facts and myths
  • Advantages of swimming
  • Vitamins and minerals for your hair
  • 5 Steps to Starting Your Day Right
  • Enhancing Your Body Beauty
  • Permanent Makeup
  • Pedicure, How to do Pedicure at home, Pedicure Kit
  • Hair And Character
  • Become Healthier With Green Tea
  • Stress Consequences to Your Body
  • Eat late – gain weight
  • Natural = Beautiful
  • Keeping Your Youth
  • The healthy facts of walking
  • Caffeine - shall I drink a bucket?
  • Advantages of swimming
  • Scar Treatment
  • How to Get Rid of Ingrown Hairs
  • Lack Luster Skin? 10 Tips to Drastically Improving Your Skin!
  • Gillain McKeith's Top Tips to Beat Old Age
  • Be Thankful For Your Big Butt
  • Options to Get Rid of Eye Wrinkles
  • The Best Moisturizers: Myth or Medicine?
  • The truth about natural toothpaste
  • Sexy summer makeup
  • Pets are good for your health
  • Let's nail it! Make a splash with perfect hands and feet this summer
  • Summer Care - Beat the heat with Fruit Juices
  • Make a clean break from feeling guilty
  • Glamorous makeup trends: Red lips, false eyelashes
  • Get more probiotics: The bacteria that is good for you
  • Get healthy hair with herbs
  • Ways to reduce back pain
  • Secrets to smooth, sexy legs
  • Turn your stress “issues” into “non-issues”
  • Get fit with your dog! Exercise with your pet
  • Pick-me-up foods to boost your energy
  • Organize your beauty kit: Sort out your makeup and skincare products!
  • How to maintain a healthy mouth and white teeth
  • The pros and cons of hair extensions
  • How to style hair while it's growing out - Haircare tips
  • Rejuvenate your skin with IPL
  • Spring skin resolutions
  • How to blow dry your hair smooth and shiny
  • Beauty through the ages - Hollywood's Golden Age
  • Five ways to ... stay active while avoiding the gym
  • Coloring Your Hair Do's and Dont's
  • Why a lack of sleep makes women grumpier than men
  • Avoid Excessive Sun Exposure
  • From blushing to laughter fits, discover what REALLY goes on in our heads
  • Celebrity Skincare
  • The Essentials of Good Nutrition
  • Not Born Blonde?
  • How To Apply Liquid Eyeliner Flawlessly?
  • How To Remove And Prevent Whiteheads?
  • The bizarre diet secrets of the stars
  • What really stops ageing and why looking young is every woman's holy grail
  • Is Honey Beneficial For The Skin?
  • How a set of pearly whites can enhance your looks and win you friends
  • How To Make Your Skin Glowing In One Day?
  • Your Environment and Your Skin
  • What Hair Care Mistakes To Avoid
  • Facial attraction
  • The Diet of Rihanna
  • How Much Time Should We Spend in the Sun
  • Home Spa Pedicure Soak
  • Ageless Flawless and Perfectly Moisturized Neck
  • Tips for Well Polished Nails
  • Cancer Fighting Foods
  • Beauty Tips for Fine Hair
  • Colour me beautiful - Spring/Summer 08 beauty tips
  • Choosing colors that are right for you!
  • You Can Have Beautiful Skin
  • 10 Worst Foods for Your Hips
  • I've got my mind and body back... How TV presenter Melissa Porter copes with a debilitating thyroid condition
  • 7 Fastest Ways to Lose Weight
  • The benefits of massage therapy
  • Beauty supplements and wrinkle prevention
  • 9 Best Foods for Your Skin
  • Most Fashionable Nail Polishes - Top 7
  • 10 Tips for a Good Night Sleep
  • Cleansers and cleansing - a guide
  • Treatments available in a beauty salon
  • Reading makes you fat
  • Four Skin Care Myths
  • Prom dresses and makeup?
  • The right exercise for butts and thighs
  • Can a daily bar of chocolate cause brittle-bone disease?
  • The basics of tooth whitening
  • Beauty secrets of the celebrities we love
  • Tips for healthy feet
  • For better health just breathe
  • Feminine Cycle and PMS - 6 Basic Reasons for Our Monthly Suffering
  • How Long Can You Keep Makeup?
  • Power Nap Beauty Sleep
  • Meet the four extraordinary women who call themselves the MS (multiple sclerosis) party girls
  • Picture Perfect Gorgeous Women
  • 10 Best Beauty Resolution Ideas for 2008
  • Five steps to looking awake—when you feel anything but!
  • Vinegar, grapefruit essence, and yes, cookies: Diet secrets of J-Lo and the A-list revealed
  • Beauty Talk: Winter Skin Care Products
  • Women with long ring fingers could be at greater arthritis risk
  • Hangover Remedies
  • 5 Quick Steps to Soothe Chapped Lips
  • Scientists discover a way to banish your muffin top
  • Beautiful Long Lashes
  • Glam Holiday Makeup
  • Cosmetic firms mislead women over skin creams with 'sci-fi' jargon
  • Relieving Tired Eyes
  • Improving Your Body Image
  • The Quest for Perfect Lips
  • How to be beautiful like me! Janet Street-Porter's no-nonsense secrets for making the most of your looks
  • Hair Removal Methods for Silky-Smooth Legs
  • Is stress keeping you fat?
  • Lose weight for Christmas with the Lemon Juice Diet
  • A present that could leave you scarred
  • The intelligent bra that takes the jiggling out of jogging
  • Is your lipstick giving you cancer?
  • Your health destiny: How physical characteristics can predict your long-term well-being
  • The black dress body blitz: Coleen McLoughlin's trainer on how to get a celeb's body
  • Janice Dickinson: 'My life of sex, drugs and plastic surgery'
  • Beauty Digest: Are You Afraid of Aging? Do You Prefer to Believe that Aging is “Optional”?
  • The Dangers of Sugar
  • Winter Skin Care Routine
  • Needs for your Age
  • 60 Seconds To Gorgeous: Quick Beauty Boosters That Really Work
  • Five Steps to Healthy Skin
  • Smile! Scientists work out the secret to the perfect teeth
  • Coping with Stress
  • What Water Can Do For Your Body and Health
  • Causes & Solutions for Dark Circles under Eyes
  • How much do you spend to look good?
  • Would you have plastic surgery?
  • Botox in a jar: £50 'facelift' cream arrives in the UK
  • Have you got the fat gene?
  • With J-cups on the High Street, there's never been a better time to be big-breasted
  • Mineral make up
  • Makeup Bag Essentials
  • Habits like watching late-night TV and reading in bed are linked to cancer. Here's how to protect yourself
  • Give A New Touch To Your Hands
  • Mission Control - Do you feel Uncomfortable when you're not in control?
  • Tackling your trouble spots
  • Cold Weather Skin Care Tips to Try Now!
  • Grooming Goes Green
  • Dr. Mao's Secrets of Longevity
  • Does a Wandering Eye Mean a Wandering Heart?
  • Why Men Stare ... But Stay (and Should!)
  • Sleep Disorders
  • Top 10 ultra boutique hotels & SPA

Beauty through the ages - Hollywood's Golden Age

A time of glamor and blonde bombshells
Date: April 3, 2008

During the Golden Age of Hollywood, from the thirties to the fifties, all-out glamour was the trend, and every woman wanted to look like her favorite movie star. Harlow made the platinum blonde a beauty icon, while Rita Hayworth made redheads popular. But it was Veronica Lake’s peek-a-boo semi-bang that really resonated with the women of the era. It was sexy, mysterious, and powerful; trends that women of that age seemed determined to embrace.

Hairstyles in general became more feminine than they had been the decade before. The new look was long and wavy or slightly curly with loose ringlets, and updos were soft with light curls. It wasn’t unusual for women to toss their hair up loosely in order to accent their necks, and they often allowed a few stray curls to dangle in a seductive manner. But there was only one absolute requirement for the perfect hairstyle - it had to gleam and shine with radiant health.

Men’s hairstyles, on the other hand, didn’t change that much from the 20’s. They continued to go short, often slicking the hair back with oil and eventually a new hairdressing called Brylcream. Many still sported mustaches but they were now well trimmed, a la Errol Flynn.

Both men and women began to pay attention to what they ate and became more conscious of their bodies. Because many of the fashions of the day accented the arms, women worked hard to make sure that theirs were both shapely and firm. For the first time in history, it became normal for women to use light weights to build the proper muscle tone. Shapely legs were also critical so women worked hard to keep theirs looking picture perfect. Climbing stairs and walking became popular ways of maintaining those gorgeous gams. And the invention of a new stretch fabric cotton brassiere with extra padding allowed women to both shape and accent their upper torsos in a manner that made their male counterparts drool.

Men focused their exercise on weight lifting, walking, and jogging. Upper body strength became a symbol of a male’s desirability. With swim trunks now only covering the lower half of a male’s physique, most wanted to make certain the other exposed half was both tanned and toned. However, men weren’t the only ones sporting tans during this period. It suddenly became a symbol of the upper crust for both men and women to show off beautifully tanned skin. To keep it soft and silky, many used creams and lotions that helped to access those rippling muscles. It also softened the skin and allowed it to look glowing and radiant all day long.

Women’s makeup was still vibrant, but not quite as overdone as in the 20’s. A softer look that matched the hairstyles was preferred, and some women even embraced the fresh-faced, girl next door look that required little or no makeup at all. Foundations came closer to matching the natural skin color rather than the pasty white or light colors that had been popular. The accent, however, was on the lips, which were often blood red. Rouged cheeks continued to be important but weren’t quite as pronounced as in the decade before.

Of course during and even many years after the Great Depression certain luxuries like nylon stockings became scarce, so women developed the trend of wearing ankle socks even with high heels. It was a trend that carried over for a number of years, even into the 50’s. Stockings were saved for special occasions, except for lucky debutantes and Hollywood's glamour girls.

Scarves and turbans disguised roots in blond hair since hair dye wasn’t easily available. Women learned how to mend their clothing since there wasn’t a lot of extra cash for new duds. A few even learned how to sew when fabric was made available.

Trousers became acceptable for women primarily because many of them had worked side by side in factories with men during the Second World War. Cotton button down shirts with a slightly masculine look also proved to be durable and women discovered that by tying them at the waist, they could make them more feminine while also keeping them out of the way of the machinery and equipment with which they worked. Other women cut off their long pants to make shorts that showed off their well-toned legs. Each year, it seemed that the shorts became shorter and more provocative.

Men’s clothing also became more casual since the prices of those well-cut suits were out of range of the average individual. What they did have in dress clothes was saved for special occasions, while dungarees, khakis, and cotton pants became more of the norm. Long-sleeved crisp shirts were worn year round. In the summer the sleeves were rolled up for a cooler look and feel. Some men dared to go without their standard shirt; sporting only their undershirts, which were both sleeved and sleeveless. As a side benefit, this popular look accented all the hard work the men had invested in their upper bodies.

Once the war was over again, women were anxious to get back to a more glamorous look, embracing the flowing satin and silk form-fitting gowns accented with beading, feathers, and flowers with zest. However, that didn’t mean they were ready to abandon the trouser look altogether. Instead, they adopted a more functional daytime look, saving their most glamorous clothing for the night.

Women had grown to like the freedom that wearing trousers provided, so fashion designers responded by coming out with feminine looking suits that mirrored the power of their male counterparts while allowing the female of the species to strut her feminine curves. At last women had the best of both worlds!

Some suits, however, featured skirts. Some were longer, going almost down to the ankle while others were shorter; between the knee and calf. A few even had lengths that were longer in the back than in the front, allowing women to show a little more leg without being considered scandalous. Paneling became popular, as did pleating. Some were cut to be form-fitting, while others draped with elegant grace.

Chanel continued to establish top designs that were coveted by women of all ages and classes, as did her major competitor Elsa Schiaparelli. Many credit Schiaparelli with the invention of the “little black dress” because it was always a staple in her collection. However, she was actually better known for her tailored feminine suits, based on a decidedly masculine design. She invented the strong shoulder look by inserting shoulder pads into her suit jackets; some forty-plus years before they became the staple of the 80’s.

Christian Dior also made his appearance on the scene and quickly captured the hearts and minds of the new, modern woman. Madeleine Vionnet, a popular French designer, made the halter dress a must-have for the woman who wanted to look ultra chic on those rare evenings out. She was also the inventor of the bias cut and cowl necklines; two major additions to the fashion industries.

Style icons of the 30’s included blonde bombshells Jean Harlow, Carole Lombard, and Mae West, but it was also the time of feisty brunettes like Marlene Dietrich, Claudette Colbert and Great Garbo. In the 40’s, sassy redhead Rita Hayworth stepped forward, but the age of the blonde wasn’t over either - Lana Turner ensured that she remained in the limelight. Brunettes were also still going strong with the likes of Bette Davis and Joan Crawford. And for the first time, a woman of color took center stage as the stunning Lena Horne showed women how to have both sass and class.

Until television hit the scene in the late 50’s, it was the silver screen that was all the rage. It helped to establish fashion, makeup, and hairstyles for more than two decades and continues to have an impact in the world today. After all, what little girl doesn’t, at some point, dream of being a movie star? And while that dream will come true only for a small number, many can at least accomplish the look and style of their matinee idol - and that is a special gift to women everywhere because every woman deserves to feel beautiful!





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