chanteuseCarey
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,962
- Location
- Northern California
Hello ladybrettashley!! Yeah, I'm one of the probably VERY few ladies here on FL that wear NOT 50s eyeglasses. I don't do 50s, I'm a 40s lady! And even further back I've always loved the Edwardian (Gibson Girl, and "Room with a View") era. - I got the name of Allyn Scura from ladies in my local Art Deco Society and the vintage dealer I work with out here. Do check out their website... http://www.allynscura.com/ Look at their antique frames pages.
Here is a good current closeup head shot showing my vintage American Optical 40s eyeglasses. I must say that having the vintage eyeglasses really does help 'make' the true vintage look!
I talked with Allyn herself Sunday the 5th at the Alameda Flea Market where I ordered these reproduction Farnsworth to be made as sunglasses (bottle green lenses) with my prescription. These are a very good repro they are having produced for this period - as Allyn Scura and her partner Scott work so much with the vintage eyeglasses, they really know their stuff!
I recently did find a pair of real 40s tortoiseshell sunglasses (very Kate Hepburn!) on eBay, but when I took them to my local optician they told me these particular ones could not work to have prescription lenses fitted for them. So they go to our daughter- they look real good on her-lesson learned. That is why I am going with these repros from Allyn.
I also bought from Allyn on Sunday a pair of small gold frames for me that I will soon have lenses made by Allyn for use at Edwardian/Titanic/WWI era events.
Our son has a slight prescription at this age in mainly one eye. AS he has the makings of being a Deco Dandy, someone in the deco group suggested a monocle for him. Allyn had one at the Flea Market, (Daniel was with me) and at his age it could be very workable, for earlier periods she also suggested Pince-Nez frames for him- he tried on a coupla pairs and they look GREAT on him and FIT his face, but not a good fit for my face. If more Edwardian events happen to fill our family's vintage lifestyle the one best pair of Pince-Nez will probably get bought and set aside to be done for Daniel later down the road. He can always have lenses redone as he gets older (I asked Allyn about doing that ) and they will fit him for quite some time.
My husband will at some point soon get a pair of Glenn Miller style golden era 40s vintage frames- and maybe WWII Army pilot green lens sunglasses too- we'll be getting them all from Allyn. I now have Allyn Scura on my "team" of and suppliers/sources for vintage goods! Excellent customer service is extremely important to me, those that have it and work well for us are the ones that get our family's repeat business.
Sorry for taking so long to get to your question- from what I've seen people wearing at vintage events the eyeglasses do have a pretty unisex STYLE (and these people from these groups are very serious about their vintage, many of them wear eyeglasses). The ladies on the 4th of July wore eyeglasses and sunglasses that looked much alike in frame style to what the men had on. What SIZE frame fits on a lady's face compared to a man's face is of course another matter altogether. You need to know what frame size fits best for your own face. I think 40s and back further the frames may have been generally smaller as the many of the people were smaller then. Looking at LOTS of vintage archival photos online, it seems the mens and ladies frames through 1900s-WWII were the same. Certain DECADES had certain kinds of eyeglasses shapes and styles associated with them. A pair of Pince Nez don't work for 40s for example. Look at pics of Theodore Roosevelt's era, and then Franklin Delano Roosevelt's in the late thirties and WWII.
Here is a good shot of a lady that I took a picture of on the 4th of July wearing her WWI era eyeglasses with an amazing Titanic era vintage gown. She is petite as is her husband (he's in the WWI uniform).
Here is one of the BAWMHRS members wearing his WWII eyeglasses with his Navy green uniform.
Check out the WWI Red Cross nurse's little sunglasses in this shotfrom the SF Presidio on Memorial Day- our son is the boy at the end of the row...
Here's two gents in eyeglasses at the same 4th of July picnic- both are fairly small gentlemen (like a size 36 or 35 even probably). The man in the white Palm Beach suit, his eyeglasses are on the smallish size frame wise. Oh, and he had the most cool yellow lens for vintage looking sunglasses clip ons that he wore most of the day over his eyeglasses. Both of these gents eyeglasses could certainly work for ladies as well.
Here is a good current closeup head shot showing my vintage American Optical 40s eyeglasses. I must say that having the vintage eyeglasses really does help 'make' the true vintage look!
I talked with Allyn herself Sunday the 5th at the Alameda Flea Market where I ordered these reproduction Farnsworth to be made as sunglasses (bottle green lenses) with my prescription. These are a very good repro they are having produced for this period - as Allyn Scura and her partner Scott work so much with the vintage eyeglasses, they really know their stuff!
I recently did find a pair of real 40s tortoiseshell sunglasses (very Kate Hepburn!) on eBay, but when I took them to my local optician they told me these particular ones could not work to have prescription lenses fitted for them. So they go to our daughter- they look real good on her-lesson learned. That is why I am going with these repros from Allyn.
I also bought from Allyn on Sunday a pair of small gold frames for me that I will soon have lenses made by Allyn for use at Edwardian/Titanic/WWI era events.
Our son has a slight prescription at this age in mainly one eye. AS he has the makings of being a Deco Dandy, someone in the deco group suggested a monocle for him. Allyn had one at the Flea Market, (Daniel was with me) and at his age it could be very workable, for earlier periods she also suggested Pince-Nez frames for him- he tried on a coupla pairs and they look GREAT on him and FIT his face, but not a good fit for my face. If more Edwardian events happen to fill our family's vintage lifestyle the one best pair of Pince-Nez will probably get bought and set aside to be done for Daniel later down the road. He can always have lenses redone as he gets older (I asked Allyn about doing that ) and they will fit him for quite some time.
My husband will at some point soon get a pair of Glenn Miller style golden era 40s vintage frames- and maybe WWII Army pilot green lens sunglasses too- we'll be getting them all from Allyn. I now have Allyn Scura on my "team" of and suppliers/sources for vintage goods! Excellent customer service is extremely important to me, those that have it and work well for us are the ones that get our family's repeat business.
Sorry for taking so long to get to your question- from what I've seen people wearing at vintage events the eyeglasses do have a pretty unisex STYLE (and these people from these groups are very serious about their vintage, many of them wear eyeglasses). The ladies on the 4th of July wore eyeglasses and sunglasses that looked much alike in frame style to what the men had on. What SIZE frame fits on a lady's face compared to a man's face is of course another matter altogether. You need to know what frame size fits best for your own face. I think 40s and back further the frames may have been generally smaller as the many of the people were smaller then. Looking at LOTS of vintage archival photos online, it seems the mens and ladies frames through 1900s-WWII were the same. Certain DECADES had certain kinds of eyeglasses shapes and styles associated with them. A pair of Pince Nez don't work for 40s for example. Look at pics of Theodore Roosevelt's era, and then Franklin Delano Roosevelt's in the late thirties and WWII.
Here is a good shot of a lady that I took a picture of on the 4th of July wearing her WWI era eyeglasses with an amazing Titanic era vintage gown. She is petite as is her husband (he's in the WWI uniform).
Here is one of the BAWMHRS members wearing his WWII eyeglasses with his Navy green uniform.
Check out the WWI Red Cross nurse's little sunglasses in this shotfrom the SF Presidio on Memorial Day- our son is the boy at the end of the row...
Here's two gents in eyeglasses at the same 4th of July picnic- both are fairly small gentlemen (like a size 36 or 35 even probably). The man in the white Palm Beach suit, his eyeglasses are on the smallish size frame wise. Oh, and he had the most cool yellow lens for vintage looking sunglasses clip ons that he wore most of the day over his eyeglasses. Both of these gents eyeglasses could certainly work for ladies as well.
ladybrettashley said:There are some wonderful glasses on here! And, Carey, those frames rather remind me of the ones my mom wore when i was a kid. I was just wondering, were glasses fairly unisex? Most of the posts here have been by men, and i'm curious if i ought to be looking for something significantly different (if i'm looking for glasses from before cat-eyes came in style ) I'm afraid it won't be much longer before i need new ones, but these styles seem like, even in a smaller size, they would be so big on me (i currently wear children's glasses for that reason).