Pink Lenses - Marcelle Turner

Jun24

vintage, advertisement, way back wednesday

Wonder Sauna Hot Pants


Okay, I’ll admit it. I want these. I can see it now…

I come home from a long day at work. Get tackled by my boys as I walk in the door, pet the dog, kiss my husband and head to my bedroom to drop my purse and laptop bag. It feels good to be home. I slip off my shoes, take off my jewelry and head to the kitchen to make dinner. Cook. 4th grade geography homework.Cook. 2nd grade spelling test. Serve dinner. Clean kitchen. Bathe kids. Teeth. Jammies. Reading. Tuck tucks. Lights out.

Now it’s “my” time. Movie or workout? Why choose! I have Wonder Sauna Hot Pants. Queue up the DVR and let’s get skinny. It’s brilliant.

Image Source: martinklasch.blogspot.com

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Posted by Marcelle Turner on Jun. 24, 2009

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Those would be awesome on cold days on the motorcycle. Probably more comfortable too!

Posted by Art on 07/04/2009 12:19 PM

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Jun17

vintage, advertisement, way back wednesday

Sugar is Good for You


Bottom Right Note on the Ad: “Note to Mothers: Exhaustion may be dangerous - especially to children who haven’t learned to avoid it by pacing themselves. Exhaustion opens the door a little wider to the bugs and ailments that are always lying in wait. Sugar puts back energy fast - offsets exhaustion. Synthetic sweeteners put back nothing. Energy is the first requirement of life. Play safe with your young ones - make sure they get sugar every day.“

Not really sure where to start with this one, there are just so many angles! Let’s start with the good: the subject (sugar) is very clear, the call to action can’t be missed (“serve some”,) and it’s clear that this is a campaign against artificial sweeteners which plays to the “natural” benefits of the product. The bad (from a 2009 point of view): supporting the dependency on sugar in children. I’m not going to go off on a tangent about nutritional management as we all know what it takes to eat healthy, but I will say that I doubt this type of copy would fly these days. That’s part of the fun of looking at these old ads!

P.S. Replace the word “sugar” with “speed” in most of the copy and it still works.

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Posted by Marcelle Turner on Jun. 17, 2009

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IMHO sugar is not so bad , it is cheap genetically engineered glucose fructose that has replaced sugar in almost all foods that is really really bad for you. Sure bring back real sugar! And enjoy the…

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Posted by @roberge on 06/24/2009 06:08 PM

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Jun16

photography, perspective

Fallen Princesses




Photographer Dina Goldstein presents a modern take on iconic fairytale princesses. Beautifully staged and lovely storytelling! VIsit her listing on jpgmag.com for the entire collection.

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Posted by Marcelle Turner on Jun. 16, 2009

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Great pics. They really struck up a lot of dialogue too. Wow!

Posted by melinda on 06/18/2009 11:25 AM

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Jun15

architecture, design, europe

Galicia, Spain’s “City of Culture”


Photo courtesy Eisenman Architects

The Discovery Channel show “Build it Bigger” has my attention. Boyishly geeky host and architect Danny Forster treks around the world bringing his viewers to some of the world’s most difficult and colossal engineering projects. Not only does the show provide insight into each project’s architectural significance, but Danny gets down and dirty with the crew spraying cement, hanging drywall and constructing steel framing as these marvels take shape. (This job might be cooler than Samantha Brown’s travel gig.)

A recent show explored Galicia, Spain’s “City of Culture”, a complex series of buildings built on the site of a famous medelival pilgrimage destination on a small hill overlooking Santiago de Compostela. According to ARCspace.com, “The design evolves from the superposition of three sets of information. First, the street plan of the medieval center of Santiago is overlaid on a topographic map of the hillside site (which overlooks the city). Second, a modern Cartesian grid is laid over these medieval routes. Third, through computer modeling software, the topography of the hillside is allowed to distort the two flat geometries, thus generating a topological surface that repositions old and new in a simultaneous matrix never before seen.“

The Facts

Location: Santiago de Compostela, Spain
Architect: Peter Eisenman
Tenants: Museum of Galician History and the New Technologies center, the Music Theater and Central Services building; and the Galician Library and Periodicals Archive
Status: under construction
Groundbreaking: 2000
Estimated Completion: 2010-2011
Size: one million square feet
Museum of Galician History: 172,000 square feet
New Technologies Center: 135,000 square feet
Music Theater: 220,000 square feet
Galician Library:122,000 square feet
Periodicals Archive: 86,000 square feet
Central Services building: 50,000 square feet
(Source: http://dsc.discovery.com/fansites/build-it-bigger/project-pages/spain/spain.html)

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Posted by Marcelle Turner on Jun. 15, 2009

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Jun10

vintage, advertisement, way back wednesday

Pink is For Girls




Caption: “That’s why Lustre-Creme is pink. Because it’s made just for girls. If you don’t believe it, just breathe in Lustre-Creme’s pink fragrance. See, it’s a little too delicate for anyone but a girl! Now shampoo with pink Lustre-Creme and feel how truly soft your hair can be. So soft, it says “touch me.“ And he will!“

“Pink fragrance?“ Really? What does pink smell like?

A few years ago I started collecting old posters in shades of pinks, creams and browns. My intention was to decorate my guest room and the adjoining guest bathroom with a modern interpretation of a romantic, old-fashioned Valentine’s Day chocolate box. Can you picture it? Rich matte caramel-colored walls, sleek mahogany carved furniture, a silky off-white fainting couch, and little pops of pinks, whites, silver and gold. The bathroom would be drenched in warm creamy colors with an understated crystal chandelier, lots of candles, and vintage prints (like this one I found in a shop in New Orleans) to add some fun.

I’ve got all of the decor pieces I think I may need someday if I ever decided to create this room with the exception of one thing…Lustre-Creme Shampoo. How cool would it be if my female guests could have soft, pink-smelling Lustre-Creme hair?

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Posted by Marcelle Turner on Jun. 10, 2009

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Jun03

vintage, advertisement, way back wednesday

Why you need a kitchen extension phone

image

Close-up: Kitchen_Extension_Phone.jpeg

Adorably-dressed toddler sitting on the counter unsupervised next to an electric appliance, angelic schoolgirl mixing batter in a pretty red dress, and Mom in a pressed white apron and pencil skirt chatting on a bubble-gum pink telephone that matches her drapes. EXACTLY my life in an opposite alternate universe (LOL.) 

What I appreciate most about this ad is the copy. I know from movies, my education and real-life experience that the “Leave it to Beaver” lifestyle has it’s own set of assumptions, but this copy sounds like it was written for helpless damsels and not a head of household. Running a family is a full-time career, and looking good while doing it is a gift. I’m sure if this darling Mom could dress her children, bake a cake, start another one, do her hair, dress like a lady and keep a clean kitchen that she could also manage a stroll into the living room to co-ordinate a phone call to her repairman. Give the gal some credit! Love the ad, and the idea of convenience, but am sure thankful I’m living in the here and now. Image Source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/pinkponk

“Way Back Wednesday”
This is the second vintage ad post for Pink Lenses, so I’ve decided to make Wednesdays “Way Back Wednesdays”  when I will post and comment on an old school advertisement of some sort (#WBW for Twitter followers.)  If you have a favorite vintage ads please share!

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Posted by Marcelle Turner on Jun. 03, 2009

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This is a great idea. There is always items we can learn from the past. I always laugh at the Super Polident commercials with the big mouth. But in hindsight-it was brilliant. Too this day when I…

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Posted by Derek on 06/11/2009 01:24 PM

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