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Most recent library book: Style & Status: Selling Beauty to African-American Women, 1920-1975 by Susannah Walker.
Great read! (Though, to be honest, I browsed, more than read the book...)
I was going to stay away from skin lightening ads - and I've come across LOTS of them - but among the photographs included in Style & Status were the ones immediately below, advertising skin lightening creams and salves as a way to have pride in one's race.... which is nothing if not counterintuitive.



It's all very "Bernice Bobs Her Hair".



Poro College Representatives seemed the 1920s equivalent of what we know as Avon or Mary Kay Reps today. How progressive!
An African American hair show in the 1920s... It's no Bronner Brothers, but that hair shows even existed this early was a huge surprise to me!
No beauty school dropouts here.
I wonder if in the 1940s it was cheaper to have students do your hair, as it is now...


Skin lightening ads really rub me the wrong way. I know that they still exist, and are not limited to any one culture or era, but I wish we could all be over the idea that fairer skin is better skin, or straighter hair is better hair. Yes, straight hair and fair skin are beautiful, but just as beautiful are dark skin and curly or kinky hair.
/end rant

Makes Pete Campbell's fictional 1963 pitch on Mad Men not seem so far fetched or outrageous.








Again, Susannah Walker's book, Style & Status was a great read! I definitely recommend it to anyone interested in the Black beauty industry and the experience of Black women in the 1920s to the 1970s.
This week, on b.vikki vintage, I'll begin the Black Brides & Weddings posts, and feature some great vintage ads from Pepsi, Kodak, and more.
Thanks for reading - and a very special thank you to the 20+ new followers I gained last week!
Don't forget to visit b.vikki vintage on Etsy!
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