Maybelline founder Tom Lyle Williams

Showing posts with label 1950's women's high fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1950's women's high fashion. Show all posts

Christian Dior and Maybelline High Fashion in the 1950's


the New Look of Maybelline, 1952.
Christian Dior was Responsible for dramatically changing the style of the 1950s.  Dior created the” new look” which used lots of fabric and exaggerated the hourglass shape of the female figure. The new look was in direct contrast to the frugal and plain styles during the war, but women and the fashion industry embraced the move back to glamour. 




New Look became revolutionary and strongly popular, influencing fashion and other designers for many years to come. Prominent Hollywood figures and the European upper-class became instant clients. Paris, which had fallen from its position as the capital of the fashion world after WWII, regained its esteemed position due in part to the attention it gained form Dior's New Look.





Maybelline represented high fashion since the 1930s, but when Dior became the mark of excellence, Tom Lyle introduced one of television's most beloved and fashionable stars of the 1950s. 

Maybelline Eyes, late 1950's 

Including Loretta Young who starred in The Loretta Show in the 1950's.  He was a major influence on what the middle class housewife considered high fashion.

My Mother, Pauline Williams, in her
 Dior and Maybelline 1955


Goodbye Norma Jean, scenes from Casa De Guillermo's.

Misty Rowe stars in Goodbye Norma Jean, filmed at my father's estate in Palm Springs, in 1975.




Here are some views of Casa Guillermo, inside and out. 
Read all about the filming of the movie at the Casa with all my family and friends as extras, in The Maybelline Story and be sure to get a signed copy of my book...

CHRISTIAN DIOR AND MAYBELLINE - 1950's.

 In the post-war 1950's, high style and
fashion returned with the help of Christian Dior, while Maybelline continued to  personify "beautiful eyes." 
the New Look of Maybelline, 1952.
Christian Dior was Responsible for dramatically changing the style of the 1950s.  Dior created the” new look” which used lots of fabric and exaggerated the hourglass shape of the female figure. The new look was in direct contrast to the frugal and plain styles during the war, but women and the fashion industry embraced the move back to glamour.


New Look became revolutionary and strongly popular, influencing fashion and other designers for many years to come. Prominent Hollywood figures and the European upper-class became instant clients. Paris, which had fallen from its position as the capital of the fashion world after WWII, regained its esteemed position due in part to the attention it gained form Dior's New Look.


Maybelline represented high fashion since the 1930s, but when Dior became the mark of excellence, Tom Lyle introduced one of television's most beloved and fashionable stars of the 1950s. 


Maybelline Eyes, 1950's style.
Including Loretta Young who starred in The Loretta Show in the 1950's.  He was a major influence on what the middle class housewife considered high fashion.