kino-glaz:

Mae West, my hero.
“When I’m good, I’m very good.  But when I’m bad…I’m better”

kino-glaz:

Mae West, my hero.

“When I’m good, I’m very good.  But when I’m bad…I’m better”

(via kino-glaz-deactivated20111125)

I love Judy and I covet those shoes, but my lord, what a terrible movie!
mothgirlwings:

Judy Garland on a break during filming of Ziegfeld Girl (1941)

I love Judy and I covet those shoes, but my lord, what a terrible movie!

mothgirlwings:

Judy Garland on a break during filming of Ziegfeld Girl (1941)

(via ladylikelady)

I read Edith Head’s autobiography when I was about ten, and I was enraptured. I was an odd child.
earwigbiscuits:

Costume sketch by Edith Head for Rosemary Clooney in Red Garters (Paramount, 1954)

I read Edith Head’s autobiography when I was about ten, and I was enraptured. I was an odd child.

earwigbiscuits:

Costume sketch by Edith Head for Rosemary Clooney in Red Garters (Paramount, 1954)

(via mothgirlwings)

Fascinating!
coffeeandjazz:

The alternative ending to Double Indemnity (Billy Wilder, 1944). In this version, Walter Neff, (Fred MacMurray) is sent to the gas-chamber.

Fascinating!

coffeeandjazz:

The alternative ending to Double Indemnity (Billy Wilder, 1944). In this version, Walter Neff, (Fred MacMurray) is sent to the gas-chamber.

(via coffeeandjazz-deactivated201205)

Mae Clarke and Boris Korloff, Frankenstein

Mae Clarke and Boris Korloff, Frankenstein

Fay Wray in the amazing, technicolor, Doctor X (1932).

Fay Wray in the amazing, technicolor, Doctor X (1932).

golden-age-movies:

Nancy Carroll in Child of Manhattan (1933)

golden-age-movies:

Nancy Carroll in Child of Manhattan (1933)

Marlene Dietrich

Marlene Dietrich

Fay Wray in “Murder in Greenwich Village”

Fay Wray in “Murder in Greenwich Village”

fuckyescarolelombard:

Carole Lombard HOW YOU SO PERFECT.

fuckyescarolelombard:

Carole Lombard HOW YOU SO PERFECT.

I agree with thewidowflannigan - this is really remarkable!

thewidowflannigan:

this is really an awesome find, major kudos to the OP. it’s stunning to see so many fine edwardian gents and ladies and children all crushed together in the bustling of day to day life, with their tight faces and their stiff collars. ah, to have lived in this swirling sea of hats and mustaches…

dataangel:

Edwardian Era (1900s) (by ThePsybaRat)

Ladislas Starevich’s The Camerman’s Revenge: Animated Russian insects with marital problems from 1912! Really!

(Source: cavigliascabinetofcuriosities.blogspot.com)

Barbara Stanwyck and Joan Blondell in Night Nurse (1931).

Barbara Stanwyck and Joan Blondell in Night Nurse (1931).