amylsacks' photos with the keyword: cigarette

Salem Cigarette Ad, 1957

25 Sep 2023 1 3 138
Yeah, I'm like this, too. Whenever I see a lovely green space I immediately want to strew cigarette butts all over it. :/ From the April issue of Everywoman's magazine.

Herbert Tareyton Cigarette Ad, 1953

14 Aug 2022 1 123
No, I don't know why there's flowering shrubs and Autumn foliage in the same shot. It could be a nicotine-induced hallucination, I guess...? From the May 9th issue of The New Yorker .

Pall Mall Cigarette Ad, 1961

10 Feb 2022 133
Every college kid knows that you can fill a whole melon with vodka. But infusing it with nicotine afterwards? Was that ever popular? From the September issue of Field & Stream magazine.

Chesterfield Cigarette Ad, 1942

19 May 2011 155
So... she's symbolizing the basketball hoop here? Never mind. Maybe I don't want to know. From the March issue of American Home magazine.

Quick Tricks (2), 1956

24 Aug 2011 175
The lavender sachet necklace looks practical. No more toting around perfume with you at formal parties. And speaking of toting, I always thought that whole point of a handbag was to prevent the world from seeing all the stuff you walked around with. Never mind.

Philip Morris Cigarette Ad, 1955

19 Sep 2011 183
What's weirder here: the imminent burn on the tip of Mrs. America's nose, or her oneness with the wrought iron chair? From the September issue of Everywoman's magazine.

The Feminine Touch, 1953

29 Jan 2012 367
"Here are five illustrious ladies, all of whom are in the class known as Peerless Performers. All are so expert at 'tickling the ivories' that they have won important places in the honor roll of American jazz. They are, to put it concisely, Queens of the Keyboard. Each one has her distinctive style, yet all of them have that pianistic manner which is characteristic and non-masculine..." Blah, blah, blah... Seriously, the whole back cover of this Decca 10"/EP drips with reassurance that women aren't stealing away Men's Sacred Manly Magic by daring to play jazz. Gah. Anyway, it's a lovely design, though it has diddly to do with the styles of music actually on the record. YouTube can help you hear what these talented women sounded like, all except Ann Jenkins. Sadly, there seems to be nothing readily available about her on the 'net. More details about the record can be found here.