Amelia Earhart

MulletProof

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.. With the 70th anniversary of her disappearance just around the corner and many tv documentaries and articles being devoted to her (she's this month's Beauty Icon in style.com), her fascinating story and beautiful style need a thread of their own. :heart:

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[americaslibrary]
 
from style.com

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:heart:

"As soon as we left the ground, I knew I had to fly," Amelia Earhart is reported to have said after her first flight. And fly she did. Fascination with the "Queen of the Air" endures in large part due to her mysterious disappearance over the Pacific in 1937, but the plucky aviatrix's gender-defying talents—she was the first female to fly solo across the Atlantic—made her one of the most celebrated faces of her own time. Clad in leather jackets, silk ties, and slim trousers, the Kansas-born tomboy ushered in an era of independence for women confined until then to corsets and sitting rooms. Indeed, her slight frame and boyish crop of tousled hair led to comparisons with Charles Lindbergh—her generation's other great pilot. But behind those goggles "Lady Lindy" was a true beauty, with silver-dollar eyes, a slender neck, and freckles scattered across a button nose. An exhibition celebrating Earhart's life and her iconic image opens today, May 11th, at New York's International Center of Photography.

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from wikipedia.

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Amelia Mary Earhart [24 July 1897- Missing 2 July 1937, declared deceased 5 January 1939) was a noted American aviation pioneer and women's rights advocate. Earhart was the first woman to receive the Distinguished Flying Cross, which she was awarded as the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic.She set many other records, wrote best-selling books about her flying experiences and was instrumental in the formation of The Ninety-Nines, a women's pilots' organization.
Earhart disappeared over the central Pacific Ocean during an attempt to make a circumnavigational flight in 1937. Intense public fascination with her life, career and disappearance continues to this day.
 
Amelia Earhart
"As soon as we left the ground, I knew I had to fly," Amelia Earhart is
reported to have said after her first flight. And fly she did. Fascination with the "Queen of the Air" endures in large part due to her mysterious disappearance over the Pacific in 1937, but the plucky aviatrix's gender-defying talents—she was the first female to fly solo across the Atlantic—made her one of the most celebrated faces of her own time. Clad in leather jackets, silk ties, and slim trousers, the Kansas-born tomboy ushered in an era of independence for women confined until then to corsets and sitting rooms. Indeed, her slight frame and boyish crop of tousled hair led to comparisons with Charles Lindbergh—her generation's other great pilot. But behind those goggles "Lady Lindy" was a true beauty, with silver-dollar eyes, a slender neck, and freckles scattered across a button nose. An exhibition celebrating Earhart's life and her iconic image opens today, May 11th, at New York's International Center of Photography.

She really is a fascinating woman.
More so than most celebrities.
 
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amelia_earhart_05.jpg

Amelia graduating

Amelia went to Hyde Park High and the caption in the year book said: "The girls in brown who walks alone"

ww3.mpls.k12.mn.us
 
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oops, I had just dumped it in the second post from style.com.. :blush: :ninja:
thank manzana!.

here's a short, silent video.. :heart:
 
Fashion

After a series of record-making flights, she became the first woman to make a solo transatlantic flight in 1932. That same year, Amelia developed flying clothes for the Ninety-Nines. Her first creation was a flying suit with loose trousers, a zipper top and big pockets. Vogue advertised it with a two-page photo spread. Then, she began designing her own line of clothes "for the woman who lives actively."

She dressed according to the occasion whether it was flying or an elegant affair. She was most conscious of the image she projected. Several New York garment manufacturers made an exclusive Amelia Earhart line of clothes which were marketed in 30 cities, with one exclusive store in each city, such as Macy's in New York and Marshall Field's in Chicago.

ameliaearhartmuseum.org
 
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oh my, I'd lovelovelove to see that Vogue spread!. wonder if it's somewhere on the web.. :woot:

psst, manzana, big and colorful fonts for text are not allowed according to TFS guidelines. -_- :flower:
 
omg i love her so much, in like grade 8 she was my idol :lol: I did a big project about her too. Yay!
 
:flower:




[SIZE=-2]
source: corbis & simply classics forum
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omg i love her so much, in like grade 8 she was my idol :lol: I did a big project about her too. Yay!

LOL I did a big project on her a well. Definitely a pioneering spirit, not just for women, but for all of America where it comes to breaking through boundaries and conceptions
 
There is a very nice picture "coffe table" book about Amelia. Alas, my purse would not allow such an expense. However, I found these.....60282- costumesinc com.jpg

Airheart- theapplecollection com.jpg

EARHART- lawrenceartscenter com.jpg

Final_tattoo_large- tattosinflight com.jpg

ameliaearhart2- education-world com.jpg Sources: Pic 1 - Amelia Earhart Disguise - costumesinc.com Pic 2 - Apple Computer ad - theapplecollection.com Pic 3 - lawrenceartscenter.com Pic.4 - very cool tatoo - tatoosinflight.com Pic. 5- Eleanor Roosevelt & Amelia Earhart illustration - education-world.com
 
a fascinating,brave woman...

amelia earhart inspiring hermès
428812.125amelia.jpg

(vogue fashion news,7/2009)
 

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