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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]When I watch them I'm struck by Elizabeth mcgommerys beauty. I find her so so beautiful.[/quote] She was so thin by 2010s standards. Serious thinspo.[/quote] If you mean that you think women were bigger in the 60s you are wrong. Thinness have been the prevailing body aesthetic for women since the 20s.[/quote] Not really. Twiggy started the ultra-thin craze in the 1960’s. [/quote] Not really. Look at flapper fashion. Silent films of the era. Twiggy was not new. [/quote] NP here. Flappers were chubby by today’s standards. I agree it all changed with Twiggy. [/quote] Silent film stars were hardly thin by today's standards. Theda Bara, Louise Brooks, Vivian Reed, Clara Bow...none of these women were thin by today's standards. They were all fine weight and very beautiful, but not skinny women. And in the 30's curves were very much in vogue. Google Jean Harlow. Beautiful luscious curvy body, hourglass figure. Ditto the 40's pin up girls. Betty Grable for example. Jane Russell The 50s and 60s prior to Twiggy produced Jayne Mansfield and Sophia Loren and Elizabeth Taylor [/quote]
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