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June 27, 2026

Vogue Studio Photography From the Late 1940s and Early 1950s

Vogue studio photography in the 1940s and 1950s marked a golden age of fashion imagery, transitioning from dramatic, theatrical setups to minimalist, graphic modernism. Driven by legendary photographers and post-war cultural shifts, the controlled environment of the photo studio became a laboratory for high art, haute couture, and innovative lighting.

The late 1940s moved away from wartime fabric rationing toward Christian Dior’s extravagant “New Look” of 1947, featuring ultra-feminine, cinched-waist silhouettes that required wider, more grand studio framing. Compositions shifted away from the cluttered, theatrical prop sets of the 1930s toward clean, minimalist paper backdrops that emphasized pure silhouette, form, and line.

Photographers heavily experimented with optical illusions, mirrors, sandwich printing, and avant-garde darkroom techniques to turn clothing into abstract art. While black-and-white dominated serious photography, Vogue pioneered technical masterclasses in early color processing, utilizing rich palettes to capture the luxurious textiles of haute couture.

While the studio remained the anchor for pristine couture documentation, the early 1950s laid the groundwork for a major industry shift. Photographers like Norman Parkinson and later William Klein began spilling out of studio confines onto bustling city streets and New York rooftops, blending high-fashion elegance with raw, spontaneous photojournalistic realism.

Lucky is wearing a coat and hat by Balenciaga, photo by Vogue Studio, Vogue, Paris, November 1951.

Jackie Stoloff is wearing a beautiful evening dress of shirred, black chiffon and overlaid with black lace by Paquin, photo by Vogue Studio, Vogue, Paris, September 1950.

Model is wearing a short jacket and hat in chestnut Astrakhan fur by Jacques Heim, photo by Vogue Studio, Vogue, Paris, September 1950.

Régine Debrise is wearing a tailored suit from Hermès, hat by Legroux Soeurs, photo by Vogue Studio, Vogue, Paris, April 1950.

Régine Debrise is wearing a Lesur wool coat by Jacques Griffe, photo by Vogue Studio, Vogue, Paris, April 1950.

34 Amazing Photos of Isabelle Adjani on the Set of “The Story of Adèle H.” (1975)

On the set of The Story of Adèle H. (1975), 20-year-old Isabelle Adjani delivered a hauntingly intense, consumed performance that director François Truffaut described by saying, “She acts as though her life depended on it.” Filming the real-life descent into madness of Victor Hugo’s daughter, Adjani’s raw vulnerability and the demanding atmosphere of the production created a legendary, yet deeply exhausting, on-set experience.

Filming occurred from January to March 1975, primarily on location in Guernsey (Channel Islands) for the Halifax scenes, with Barbados sequences shot on Île de Gorée in Senegal. It was an intense shoot.

Adjani was known for her dedication and method-like approach. She reportedly screamed in the shower at night to strain her voice for the role and immersed herself fully, often avoiding rehearsals. Truffaut described the experience as challenging, calling it “daily suffering” for him and “almost an agony” for her due to her intense commitment (he also developed feelings for her, which she rebuffed). He praised her genius and total devotion to the craft.

The production emphasized close-ups on Adjani’s face and expressions, with cinematography by Nestor Almendros creating a moody, intimate atmosphere (often dark or earth-toned lighting to match her character’s turmoil).

Photos from the set typically show a young, strikingly beautiful Adjani with long dark hair, often in period costumes (Victorian-style dresses, bonnets, or simpler attire reflecting Adèle’s declining state), alongside Truffaut directing. She appears focused, ethereal, and sometimes haunted even off-camera, embodying the role’s emotional weight.






Annette Stroyberg: The Seductive Danish Blonde of 1960s European Cinema

Annette Stroyberg (1936–2005) was a Danish actress and model who became one of the most seductive and talked-about European sex symbols of the late 1950s and early ’60s.

Discovered by French director Roger Vadim, whom she later married, Stroyberg rose to international fame with her bold and sensual performance in Vadim’s Les Liaisons Dangereuses (Dangerous Liaisons, 1959). With her striking blonde hair, full lips, and magnetic screen presence, she embodied the liberated, provocative femininity of the era.

Though her acting career was relatively brief, she appeared in several European films and became a notable figure in the glamorous, scandal-filled world of 1960s continental cinema. These alluring vintage photos capture the bold sensuality, striking beauty, and magnetic presence of Annette Stroyberg, one of the most provocative and unforgettable sex symbols of late 1950s and early 1960s European cinema.






Brooklyn Stand-Up Mugshots

Before the stand-up series began, the New York City Police Department (NYPD) relied on the “Rogues Gallery” (established in 1857), which consisted of thousands of small, portrait-style photos of known criminals organized by height and specialty. By the turn of the 20th century, police departments integrated these photos into Bertillon cards, a French identification system combining physical measurements with front-and-profile mugshots.

In 1918, looking for a more practical way for detectives to recognize active criminals on the street, the NYPD launched the “Brooklyn Stand-Up series.” Subjects were photographed standing up against a plain background or height chart, capturing their complete physical presence rather than just a facial portrait.

When known collaborators, pickpocket rings, or gang members were arrested together, the NYPD photographed them in a group stand-up. This allowed detectives to document the physical associations and relative sizes of co-conspirators. The process was explicitly directed at recidivist criminals (repeat offenders) or individuals accused of severe, major crimes.

Margie Goldberg, Sarah Klein, Anna Miller. April 9, 1933. Grand larceny (shoplifting).

Alleyne Brothers. April 22, 1934. Felony assault knife.

Claire Odds. September 9, 1945. Felonious assault.

Bessie Globllo. January 19, 1947. Grand larceny.

Sarah Elizabeth Palmer. July 13, 1947. Homicide and 1897 Penal Law (gun).

Richard Roland Holst: Master of Dutch Art Nouveau and Symbolism

Richard Roland Holst (1868–1938) was a prominent Dutch painter, graphic artist, and designer who played a significant role in the development of modern Dutch art and design.

A key figure in the Dutch Arts and Crafts movement and influenced by Art Nouveau and Symbolism, Holst was renowned for his monumental murals, exquisite posters, book illustrations, and stained-glass designs. His work is characterized by strong, rhythmic lines, symbolic imagery, and a deep sense of idealism. He was also an influential teacher and served as director of the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam.

These refined and powerful works reveal Richard Roland Holst’s exceptional talent for blending symbolic depth, elegant linework, and monumental beauty, securing his place as one of the most important and influential Dutch artists of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Tentoonstelling der Nagelaten Werken van Vincent van Gogh, 1892

Portrait of Harpje, Aged 15, 1895

Kop van de geblinddoekte Justitia; ontwerp voor figuur van de marmerdecoratie in de Hoge Raad te Den Haag, circa 1900s

Traditie, Scheppingskracht en Erkenning, circa 1900s

Aan die ons steunden en vertrouwden in dagen van strijd, 1904

40 Glamorous Portraits of a Young and Beautiful Eleanor Parker in the 1940s

In the 1940s, Eleanor Parker built the foundational decade of her career as one of Warner Bros.’ most versatile and radiant contract players. Before earning her famous moniker, “The Woman of a Thousand Faces,” and her three 1950s Best Actress Oscar nominations, the 1940s saw her evolve from a studio starlet into a formidable dramatic and comedic leading lady.

Signed by Warner Bros. on her 18th birthday, Parker’s career started with typical studio apprenticeship work. Her actual film debut was supposed to be a bit part in the Raoul Walsh classic They Died with Their Boots On (1941), but her scenes were left on the cutting room floor. The studio kept her busy in B-movies and shorts (Busses Roar, The Mysterious Doctor). Her first taste of a major production came with Michael Curtiz’s pro-Soviet wartime drama Mission to Moscow (1943), where she played the daughter of the U.S. ambassador.

By 1944, her distinct combination of classic, elegant beauty and deep emotional intelligence moved her out of the B-unit permanently. She gave a haunting performance opposite Paul Henreid in Between Two Worlds (1944), the fantasy drama about a group of passengers on a ship traveling between life and death. A massive breakthrough for Parker in Pride of the Marines (1945). She played the devoted, resilient girlfriend of a blinded WWII veteran (played by John Garfield). Her performance required a delicate balance of heavy drama and warmth, solidifying her reputation as an actress of real substance rather than just a glamorous face.

The late 1940s proved that Parker refused to be typecast, seamlessly shifting between melodrama, classic literature, and comedy. She took a massive risk by stepping into the role of the cruel, manipulative Mildred Rogers, a part Bette Davis had famously made her own a decade prior, in Of Human Bondage (1946). While it didn’t match Davis’s iconic heights, it proved Parker’s fearlessness in playing unlikable, complex characters.

Shifting gears into sparkling romantic comedy The Voice of the Turtle (1947, she starred opposite Ronald Reagan. Taking over a role made famous on Broadway by Margaret Sullavan, Parker was highly praised for her charming, slightly eccentric, and naive portrayal of an aspiring actress. In the gothic mystery The Woman in White (1948), she took on a challenging dual role as the frail, terrified Laura Fairlie and the mysterious, ghostly “woman in white.” She easily held her own against notorious scene-stealers like Sydney Greenstreet and Agnes Moorehead.

While the 1940s established her as a stellar studio asset, it was her very first role filmed at the tail-end of the decade that transformed her into a Hollywood powerhouse: Caged (1950). Her staggering performance as an innocent girl transformed into a hardened criminal in a brutal women’s prison earned her her first Academy Award nomination and won her the Best Actress Volpi Cup at the Venice Film Festival.






June 26, 2026

22 Stunning Portraits of Suzy Vernon in the 1920s and 1930s

Suzy Vernon (born Amelie Paris, June 26, 1901 – January 24, 1997) was a popular French film actress, primarily active as a leading lady in French and German cinema during the silent era of the 1920s and the early sound period of the 1930s.

After working in the theater after World War I, Vernon made her screen debut in 1922. She quickly rose to prominence by collaborating with some of the most prominent directors in Europe. In 1925, legendary Belgian director Jacques Feyder cast her in Visages d'enfants (Faces of Children). Her performance as a young stepmother in this stark mountain drama linked her to the early roots of Poetic Realism, an incredibly influential aesthetic movement. She secured a role in Abel Gance’s monumental, visually groundbreaking historical masterpiece, Napoléon (1927).

Vernon became an international favorite, moving seamlessly between French cinema and German UFA studio productions. She starred in popular silent titles like Der Letzte Walzer (The Last Waltz, 1927) alongside Willy Fritsch, and the detective drama Das grüne Monokel (The Green Monocle, 1929).

When synchronized sound arrived, Vernon handled the transition better than many silent stars because she was multi-talented and internationally marketable. Before dubbing became standard practice, Hollywood studios would shoot alternative-language versions of the same movie on the same sets. Vernon went to the United States to star in these French-language productions, notably playing the lead in First National’s Le masque d'Hollywood (1930)—the French counterpart to Show Girl in Hollywood.

Back in Europe during the 1930s, she continued to land prominent roles in romantic comedies and dramas. She famously starred in Pour être aimé (1933), an early romantic comedy directed by the legendary Jacques Tourneur, and shared the screen with cinema titan Harry Baur in Un homme en or (1934).

By the late 1930s, Vernon slowed down her film output, appearing in smaller roles before retiring completely from the screen in the early 1940s.









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