Maybelline ad, 1936 |
Tom Llye Williams, believed that a woman’s greatest asset was her ability to capture a man’s imagination through her expressive eyes.
Empowered for the first time since the Victorian era, women discovered a passion for imitating stars who exuded sex appeal on the screen.
Maybelline provided an inexpensive eye beautifier that enhanced a woman's sex-appeal while movies mirrored celluloid forgeries professing nonconformity with old world standards. As Movie stars became models for America's changing values, Tom Lyle threw Maybelline in the dime stores in 1933. As startup-cosmetic-companies failed, or were bought up by Tom Lyle, Maybelline became the undisputed giant in its field, during the Great Depression and still is today, 103 years later.
1933 Maybelline Ad. |
Tom Llye Williams, believed that a woman’s greatest asset was her ability to capture a man’s imagination through her expressive eyes.
Empowered for the first time since the Victorian era, women discovered a passion for imitating stars who exuded sex appeal on the screen.
Maybelline provided an inexpensive eye beautifier that enhanced a woman's sex-appeal while movies mirrored celluloid forgeries professing nonconformity with old world standards. As Movie stars became models for America's changing values, Tom Lyle threw Maybelline in the dime stores in 1933. As startup-cosmetic-companies failed, or were bought up by Tom Lyle, Maybelline became the undisputed giant in its field, during the Great Depression and still is today, 103 years later.
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