"We Are The New Vintage"
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That's silly! Modern pinup gals just generally happen to also be people who like having tattoos a lot of the time. Ya definitely don't need them to be a pinup model, and in fact one could argue that you'd be a more versatile model without them, because you can pull off really authentic vintage looks!
All you have to do is look around here, you can be thick, slim, tattoo'd, not tattoo'd, tall, or short and be an amazing Pinup. It flows from the inside, and your style.
Tell your friend he is stupid and hit him in the head for me
Well I would love to chime in on this. I do have one tiny tattoo and a few non obvious piercings and I consider myself to be very much a pinup girl. I never got the stringent rules that are beginning to come around when it comes to this. To me there are MANY types of pinup. I go for the classic, original, authentic 1920s-40s look. Some might think that boring but thats what suits me best. Not that I don't admire the tattooed hotties on here. I am not kitschy or outrageous and I don't actually wrench on cars or do any of that. I do help my husband from time to time with details on our cars but I don't weld or wrench. Remember that the girls that started all this the Betty Grables, the Rita Hayworths and the Louise Brookses never had tattoos. Neither did the beautifully rendered Elvgren or Vargas girls ! Me, I am al about classics, a purist so to speak. There is nothing wrong with either style or something n between. Best part of this is that there are really no rules, it is all attitude and soul ! Who are you on the inside?
here, here! amen to that. knowing yourself and who you are is what's important, not whether you have ink. i never think of it as who's the "most" whatever or the "best" something else. Pinup isn't a contest (except when it is), it's a form of expression, and all forms are valid!
Miss Audrey Brooks said:Well I would love to chime in on this. I do have one tiny tattoo and a few non obvious piercings and I consider myself to be very much a pinup girl. I never got the stringent rules that are beginning to come around when it comes to this. To me there are MANY types of pinup. I go for the classic, original, authentic 1920s-40s look. Some might think that boring but thats what suits me best. Not that I don't admire the tattooed hotties on here. I am not kitschy or outrageous and I don't actually wrench on cars or do any of that. I do help my husband from time to time with details on our cars but I don't weld or wrench. Remember that the girls that started all this the Betty Grables, the Rita Hayworths and the Louise Brookses never had tattoos. Neither did the beautifully rendered Elvgren or Vargas girls ! Me, I am al about classics, a purist so to speak. There is nothing wrong with either style or something n between. Best part of this is that there are really no rules, it is all attitude and soul ! Who are you on the inside?
Exactly Louise !
It is all about finding yourself and what you feel good with. As I mentioned before I do get kind of odd looks for not being all tatted up and not turning a wrench but Hot Rods and tattoos are not what defines Pinup. Pinup was around long before it was socially acceptable for a girl to be tattooed and before Hotrods became a mainstream thing. The pinups that graced the sides of B-17s over Germany were not the tattooed gearhead girls that seem to be associated with pinup these days. Vargas and Elvgren girls were and still remain graceful, dainty, ladylike and absolutely feminine, they dont scowl, they dont fight they simply are there allowing you a brief glimpse into their world of charming aloofness.
Hotrods didnt become a subculture until after WWII when our fighting men came back from England and Germany and realized that Detroit did offer vehicles of the sporting nature like a Morgan or an MG so they would convert Model A Fords to handle and brake like the European sports cars. Pinup was around 20-30 years before that.
So that said I am a purist, I am inspired by the style of the original pinup girls ! I guess one can say my tendencies tend to be purist on many levels even with cars. If it is from the 1930s-40s I want it bone stock and meticulously restored ! Anyone have a Packard for sale?
Louise LeMans said:here, here! amen to that. knowing yourself and who you are is what's important, not whether you have ink. i never think of it as who's the "most" whatever or the "best" something else. Pinup isn't a contest (except when it is), it's a form of expression, and all forms are valid!
Miss Audrey Brooks said:Well I would love to chime in on this. I do have one tiny tattoo and a few non obvious piercings and I consider myself to be very much a pinup girl. I never got the stringent rules that are beginning to come around when it comes to this. To me there are MANY types of pinup. I go for the classic, original, authentic 1920s-40s look. Some might think that boring but thats what suits me best. Not that I don't admire the tattooed hotties on here. I am not kitschy or outrageous and I don't actually wrench on cars or do any of that. I do help my husband from time to time with details on our cars but I don't weld or wrench. Remember that the girls that started all this the Betty Grables, the Rita Hayworths and the Louise Brookses never had tattoos. Neither did the beautifully rendered Elvgren or Vargas girls ! Me, I am al about classics, a purist so to speak. There is nothing wrong with either style or something n between. Best part of this is that there are really no rules, it is all attitude and soul ! Who are you on the inside?
I agree with all that — I admire those girls, and have lots of friends who'd qualify — but you're more likely to find me digging though a box of vintage purses and gloves than under a car! To each their own, I say. Even though that's not my thing, I respect it!!
Ooooo, a Packard!! I am holding out hope for my grandpa's '53 Corvette, that he's been showing off at car shows for years as a proud GM retiree. :-P
Miss Audrey Brooks said:Exactly Louise !
It is all about finding yourself and what you feel good with. As I mentioned before I do get kind of odd looks for not being all tatted up and not turning a wrench but Hot Rods and tattoos are not what defines Pinup. Pinup was around long before it was socially acceptable for a girl to be tattooed and before Hotrods became a mainstream thing. The pinups that graced the sides of B-17s over Germany were not the tattooed gearhead girls that seem to be associated with pinup these days. Vargas and Elvgren girls were and still remain graceful, dainty, ladylike and absolutely feminine, they dont scowl, they dont fight they simply are there allowing you a brief glimpse into their world of charming aloofness.
Hotrods didnt become a subculture until after WWII when our fighting men came back from England and Germany and realized that Detroit did offer vehicles of the sporting nature like a Morgan or an MG so they would convert Model A Fords to handle and brake like the European sports cars. Pinup was around 20-30 years before that.
So that said I am a purist, I am inspired by the style of the original pinup girls ! I guess one can say my tendencies tend to be purist on many levels even with cars. If it is from the 1930s-40s I want it bone stock and meticulously restored ! Anyone have a Packard for sale?
Louise LeMans said:here, here! amen to that. knowing yourself and who you are is what's important, not whether you have ink. i never think of it as who's the "most" whatever or the "best" something else. Pinup isn't a contest (except when it is), it's a form of expression, and all forms are valid!
Miss Audrey Brooks said:Well I would love to chime in on this. I do have one tiny tattoo and a few non obvious piercings and I consider myself to be very much a pinup girl. I never got the stringent rules that are beginning to come around when it comes to this. To me there are MANY types of pinup. I go for the classic, original, authentic 1920s-40s look. Some might think that boring but thats what suits me best. Not that I don't admire the tattooed hotties on here. I am not kitschy or outrageous and I don't actually wrench on cars or do any of that. I do help my husband from time to time with details on our cars but I don't weld or wrench. Remember that the girls that started all this the Betty Grables, the Rita Hayworths and the Louise Brookses never had tattoos. Neither did the beautifully rendered Elvgren or Vargas girls ! Me, I am al about classics, a purist so to speak. There is nothing wrong with either style or something n between. Best part of this is that there are really no rules, it is all attitude and soul ! Who are you on the inside?
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