Martinis at 8
Practically Family
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Great thread! Points out the need for keeping life simple.
M8
M8
?! Maybe in Japan...what's your source here?Lincsong said:I believe the average height in the 1940's was 5'3" for men and 5' for women.
***********shamus said:here's a thought on this thread... Most houses built before the 1920's did not have closets in the bedrooms. They had one small "coat" closet by the front door.
Fletch said:?! Maybe in Japan...what's your source here?
Fletch said:?! Maybe in Japan...what's your source here?
There would be a couple, wouldn't there? lolFoofoogal said:one day he finally asked me politely to please not iron his khakis. Seems in the port a potti on the construction site someone had wrote best dressed couple and put his name and someone else. :eusa_doh:
two white shirts
dhermann1 said:My mom told me that when my dad got out of the service in 1946, and started working at a commercial art studio in Manhattan, he went to Brooks Brothers and bought two suits. One was brown, the other grey tweed. They cost $45 and $60 respectively, I believe. He may have had a couple other sport coats and slacks from before the war that he cycled through, but working at a high paying office job ($7,500 a year, woohoo!) he was good with only 2 suits. In the years before the war, I think it was common for a man to own two white shirts. One to wear, and one in the wash. I think they took real good care of their clothes, and probably their washing methods made them wear out less quickly. They didn't use dryers then, it was almost all line hung laundry. Dryers destroy clothes faster than any other thing. I think also they brushed themselves off a lot. I saw a Hopalong Cassidy flick from about 1936 where Lucky brushes the dust off himself at great length before going in the house. It occurred to me that this must have been a very standard routine before coming into the house.
dhermann1 said:My mom told me that when my dad got out of the service in 1946, and started working at a commercial art studio in Manhattan, he went to Brooks Brothers and bought two suits. One was brown, the other grey tweed. They cost $45 and $60 respectively, I believe. He may have had a couple other sport coats and slacks from before the war that he cycled through, but working at a high paying office job ($7,500 a year, woohoo!) he was good with only 2 suits. In the years before the war, I think it was common for a man to own two white shirts.
John in Covina said:Most people that made it thru the Deppression and then the rationing of the war years tend to be frugal to some extent.
Here is a telling item, if you have a party and people bring food to the party in disposable aluminum oven trays, if the mom in the house lived thru the Depression those "disposable" aluminum trays are washed and returned. Born later, they are tossed in the trash.
(I can't tell you how many times I have seen this.)
Tough times don't last, but tough people do.