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German autograph card by Kino, 1990.

 

American actress Ricki Lake (1968) is best known for her lead role as Tracy Turnblad in Hairspray (1988). She is also known for her talk show which was broadcast internationally between 1993 and 2004.

 

Ricki Pamela Lake was born in 1968 in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York, to a secular Jewish family. Her parents are Jill, a homemaker, and Barry Lake, a pharmacist, though Lake was largely brought up by her paternal grandmother, Sylvia Lake, until Sylvia's death in 1978. Ricki attended Hastings Elementary as a child, went on to Farragut Middle, and then attended Hastings High, for two years. At the end of her sophomore year, she transferred to the Professional Children's School, in New York, to study acting. Ricki began singing professionally at the age of nine, in cabarets and clubs. After finishing high school, she attended Ithaca College for one year. Ricki made her film debut as Tracy Turnblad, the lead character in John Waters's cult classic Hairspray (1988), with Divine as her mother. Lake also starred in other Waters films including Cry-Baby (John Waters, 1990) with Johnny Depp and Susan Tyrrell, Serial Mom (John Waters, 1994), featuring Kathleen Turner, and Cecil B. Demented (John Waters, 2000) with Melanie Griffith and Stephen Dorff. She also appeared in Last Exit to Brooklyn (Uli Edel, 1989) with Jennifer Jason Leigh, Inside Monkey Zetterland (Steve Antin, 1992), and co-starred in Mrs. Winterbourne (Richard Benjamin, 1996) with Shirley MacLaine and Brendan Fraser. On TV, she joined the cast of the Vietnam War drama series China Beach (1988) as a Red Cross volunteer, Holly "the Donut Dolly" Pelegrino, for the show's third season. She later also had a recurring role on the CBS sitcom The King of Queens (2000-2001) as Doug's sister Stephanie. She starred in the TV movie Baby Cakes (Paul Schneider, 1989) with Craig Sheffer, had a voice role on King of the Hill (2006), and guest-starred on such TV series as Drop Dead Diva (2010). In 2007, she had a cameo appearance in the remake of Hairspray (Adam Shankman, 2007) as a William Morris talent agent. She also teamed up with star Nikki Blonsky, who played Tracy Turnblad in the remake, and Marissa Jaret Winokur, who played Tracy Turnblad in the Broadway musical based on the original 1988 film, to record 'Mama I'm a Big Girl Now'. The song is played during the film's end credits. She later reunited with original Hairspray co-star Deborah Harry for the film Hotel Gramercy Park (Douglas Keeve, 2008).

 

In 1993, Ricki Lake was Lake's first daytime talk show and at 24, she was the youngest person at the time to host one. The show specialised in topics involving invited guests and incorporated questions and comments from a studio audience. For the show she went on a deit and lost 57 kilos. The show debuted in syndication in 1993, and ended first-run episodes in 2004. Although Sony Pictures Television had many stations contracted through the 2004–2005 season, Lake decided to end the show in August 2004, citing a desire to spend time with her family. Lake returned to the talk show platform when she hosted a second talk show which premiered in September 2012 and was cancelled after one season. lake also hosted the TV series Gameshow Marathon (2006), which re-created classic game shows with celebrity contestants. The Business of Being Born (Abby Epstein, 2008), Lake's documentary about home birth and midwifery, premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival. Lake also jointly with Epstein and Jacques Moritz, wrote a book on the world of natural childbirth and birthing options, Your Best Birth (2009). Lake returned to television in 2009, succeeding Sharon Osbourne as host for the third season of Charm School. Lake competed on the 13th season of Dancing with the Stars and achieved tremendous success, consistently achieving high scores. She ended third. The Ricki Lake Show premiered in September 2012. The new program had a more Oprah-like format as compared to her earlier talk show. It was cancelled after one season, but Lake won the Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Talk Show Host in 2013. Afterwards she made the documentaries Sweetening the Pill on hormonal birth control (with director Abby Epstein) and Weed the People (2018), examining the use of cannabis as medicine in the treatment of pediatric cancer. She also appeared in the mystery thriller Gemini (Aaron Katz, 2017), which received mostly favorable reviews. In February 2019, she was revealed to be The Raven in the TV series The Masked Singer, and in October 2019, she began competing in The X Factor: Celebrity. Lake met political illustrator Rob Sussman on Halloween 1993. The two married in Las Vegas in 1994. They have two sons: Milo Sebastian Sussman (1997), and Owen Tyler Sussman (2001), whose actual water birth was shown in The Business of Being Born, which Lake also produced. The couple divorced in 2005. She married jewelry designer Christian Evans in 2012. They divorced in 2015.

 

Sources: Wikipedia and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Built for the 2013 MocOlympics final, a maxifig scale circus, scene of some carnage...

soft pastyel & pastel pencils

i did not repost this portrait in the jkpppool untill now :)

www.flickr.com/groups/1384462@N22/discuss/721576316629223...

If you want to replicate this look, visit my blog post so you too can be a sexy mistress of your domain! wp.me/pEOCB-Yi

Electri-Living House

Designed by R. Duane Conner

OKC

1956

 

Here's a bit of the article (in Living For Young Homemakers magazine) that accompanies the images of this beautiful home:

 

"The architectural vocabulary of this house is inventiveness. Every element has been investigated to determine its function and how that function could be improved upon or heightened for better value in cost, comfort, convenience, and performance.... Dominating the immediate impression, the imposing roof structure has been engineered as a cantilevered shelter that hovers over the interior areas to form a protective canopy for the continuous glass strip above the nonbearing masonry walls. No wonder this house cannot be categorized by any of the familiar terms or times: it is, by concept, not only an articulate expression of mid-twentieth-century shelter but an encouraging step towards the future. Witness to the fact: some ten thousand visitors on the opening day, who were concerned neither with the intricacies of engineering, the mystery of light nor the arts of architecture, said simply -- by how expressively -- "this is a good house."

  

Homemaker (1981)

Clip Book pf Line Art, No. 782

Volk Clip Art

The most beautiful women in TV and Movie History now become Barbie Collector Dolls created by acclaimed re-paint Artist Donna Brinkley.

 

Jennifer O'Neill was the face of beauty in the 70's and 80's with her glamorous Cover-Girl ads. O'Neill (born February 20, 1948) is an American actress, model, author and speaker, known for her role in the 1971 film Summer of '42 and as the face of Cover-Girl cosmetics starting in the 1970s til the mid 1990's. Jennifer was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the grand-daughter of a Brazilian bank president, and the daughter of a famous Spanish-Irish medical and dental supply import/export businessman, Oscar D' O'Neill and his English wife, Irene ("Rene") Freda, a homemaker. O'Neill and her older brother Michael were raised in New Rochelle, New York, and Wilton, Connecticut.

 

When she was 14, the family moved to New York City. On Easter Sunday, 1962, O'Neill attempted suicide because the move would separate her from her dog Mandy and horse Monty -- "her whole world". That same year, she was discovered by the Ford modeling agency and put under contract. By age 15, she was gracing the cover of Vogue, Cosmopolitan, Seventeen and other magazines, earning $80,000 a year in 1962 working as a fashion model in New York City and also working in Paris, France, and dating older men.

 

An accomplished rider, O'Neill won upwards of 200 ribbons at horse show competitions in her teens. She saved up her modeling fees and bought a horse, Alezon, who balked before a wall at a horse show, breaking O'Neill's neck and back in three places, and giving her a long period of recovery. She attended New York City's Professional Children's School and the prestigious Dalton School in Manhattan. Later, she moved on to films and worked in a number of television movies and series.

[edit] Career

 

In 1968 O'Neill landed a small role in For Love of Ivy. In 1970 she played one of the lead female roles in Rio Lobo starring opposite John Wayne.

 

She is most remembered for her role in the 1971 film Summer of '42, where she played Dorothy Walker, the young widow of a pilot shot down and killed in World War II. Her agent allegedly had to fight to even get a reading for the part, since the role had been cast for an "older woman" to a coming of age 15 year old boy, and the director was only considering actresses over the age of thirty, Barbra Streisand being at the top of the list.

 

O'Neill continued acting for the next two decades. She appeared in The Carey Treatment (1972), Lady Ice (1973), The Reincarnation of Peter Proud (1975), Caravans (1978), A Force of One (1979), Scanners (1981), and The Cover Girl Murders (1993 made-for-television film). She went to Europe in 1976 and worked with Italian director Luchino Visconti, appearing in his last film L'innocente (1976), where she played the part of the mistress, Teresa Raffo.

 

In 1982, O'Neill starred in the short-lived NBC prime time soap opera Bare Essence. Her credits include singing in the Chrysler Corporation commercial Change in Charger that represented the end of the Dodge Charger in 1975. In 1984, she played the lead female role on the CBS television series Cover Up; the lead male actor, Jon-Erik Hexum, was accidentally killed on the studio set after placing a blank-loaded prop gun to his temple and pulling the trigger—the wadding from the blank cartridge drove a bone fragment from Hexum's skull into his brain.

 

O'Neill is also listed in the Smithsonian Institute's National Museum of American History's Center for Advertising History for her long standing contract with Cover Girl cosmetics as its model and spokesperson in ads and television commercials.

 

O'Neill has been married nine times to eight husbands (she married, divorced, and remarried husband number six); at one point, she was married to four different men in four years. At age 44, she married husband number seven sooner than any other actress, sooner than Zsa Zsa Gabor (who was 63), Liza Minnelli (59) and Lana Turner (49), making her the youngest "most married" Hollywood celebrity. The August 23, 1993, issue of People magazine reports that a friend of O'Neill's says that the actress obtained the (Texas) annulment of marriage number seven (Neil L. Bonin - after less than five months) ... because she felt stifled.

 

O'Neill has three children from as many fathers, a daughter (Aimee) by her first husband whom she married at age 17, and a son (Reis Michael) from her fifth marriage and another son (Cooper Alan) from her sixth marriage.

 

At age 34, O'Neill suffered a gunshot wound. Police officers in the Westchester County town of Bedford, New York, who interviewed the actress, said that on October 23, 1982, she shot herself accidentally in the abdomen with a .38 caliber revolver at her Bedford mansion while she was trying to determine if it was loaded.

 

She describes many of her life experiences, including her marriages and career, to her move to her Tennessee farm in the late 1990s in her 1999 autobiography Surviving Myself. O'Neill says that she wrote this autobiography (her first book) … at the prompting of her children.

 

In 2004, O'Neill wrote and published From Fallen To Forgiven, a book of biographical notes and philosophical thoughts about life and existence. The actress, who had an abortion after the divorce from her first husband while dating a Wall Street socialite, became a pro-life activist and a born-again Christian in 1986 at age 38, counseling abstinence to teens. Concerning her abortion, she writes:

 

I was told a lie from the pit of hell: that my baby was just a blob of tissue. The aftermath of abortion can be equally deadly for both mother and unborn child. A woman who has an abortion is sentenced to bear that for the rest of her life.

 

O'Neill continues to be active as a writer, inspirational speaker, fundraiser for the benefit of crisis pregnancy centers across the United States. She has also served as the spokesperson for the Silent No More Awareness Campaign, a non-denominational, non-political, non-profit organization dedicated to post-abortion healing and recovery.

 

O'Neill works for several other charitable causes as well, such as Retinitis Pigmentosa International and the Arthritis Foundation. As a breast cancer survivor she has also been a former spokesperson for the American Cancer Society. She has also hosted a one hour television special for World Vision shot in Africa concerning the HIV epidemic. In addition, she remains actively involved with her childhood love of animals and horses, sponsoring the Jennifer O'Neill Tennis Tournament to benefit the ASPCA, and fund-raiser for Guiding Eyes for the blind.

 

O'Neill purchased a horse farm in Tennessee called Hillenglade Farm where she runs a non-profit organization as a ministry and retreat for girls and young women.

Hey,man... can I get a leg up? Missing a leg, she's an amazing homemaker..... Just don't let her hear YOUR name :)

 

If she writes it in her web, you'll be dead....or at least that's how I heard the story...my mom says not to smile, cause if she counts your teeth....who knows...but isn't she beautiful?

 

06 Oct 1969 --- 1970s Woman Housewife Homemaker Wearing Apron Loading Laundry Into Washing Machine --- Image by

Former Blockbuster Video store on Burwood Highway located in the homemaker section outside the main shopping centre. This store lasted longer than most, closing in April 2014 after a closing down sale for its stock. The store's fittings were quickly removed after closure.

 

Blockbuster Video commenced in Australia in 1991 and was eventually taken over by local chain Video Ezy. Both chains have seen a significant decline in recent years, particularly due to the effect of the internet.

...portrait of a Gujar woman: working on her home in a remote village in rural Rajasthan, India

 

(© Handheld Films 2013)

www.handheldfilms.co.uk

 

Everywoman's Family Circle

November,1959

FLINT

Frank

Lionel

1907 -1984

 

ELLIOTT

Grace

Marguerite

1907-2002

 

♥ In memoriam. Lionel - A lithographer & only child of Cecil & Ina (Moore) - and Grace his wife-homemaker & 4th daughter of Harry & Mabel (Hewlett) Elliott. They had 5 sons George, Richard, Donald, David, Douglas & 32 grandchildren. They were conscientous & caring. May God continue to bless them through eternity. Amen

  

St. John's Norway Cemetery

Toronto, Ontario

The Magazine for Career Girls and Homemakers of Tomorrow

Aprons are a classic and never go out of style ... even this vintage apron paired with a modern spaghetti strapped dress looks just as in style as when it was worn in the 1950s.

Italian postcard in the 'World Collection' series, no. P.c. 310. Photo: G. Neri.

 

American actor Richard Gere (1949) has been hailed as The Sexiest Man alive and a humanitarian, but he is foremost a good actor. He shone in such box office hits as American Gigolo (1980), An Officer and a Gentleman (1982) and Pretty Woman (1990). For portraying Billy Flynn in the Academy Award-winning musical Chicago (2002), he won a Golden Globe Award and a Screen Actors Guild Award as part of the cast.

 

Richard Tiffany Gere was born in 1949, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. He was the second of five children of Doris Ann (Tiffany), a homemaker, and Homer George Gere, an insurance salesman, both Mayflower descendants. Gere had a strict Methodist upbringing. Richard started early as a musician, playing a number of instruments in high school and writing music for high school productions. He graduated from North Syracuse Central High School in 1967, and won a gymnastics scholarship to the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, where he majored in philosophy. He left college after two years to pursue acting. Gere first worked professionally at the Seattle Repertory Theatre and Provincetown Playhouse on Cape Cod in 1969, where he starred in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead. He landed the lead role as Danny Zuko in the London production of the musical Grease in 1973. While in London, Gere gained the privilege of becoming one of the few Americans ever to work with Britain's Young Vic Theater, with which he appeared in The Taming of the Shrew. He later reprised his role as Danny Zuko in Grease on Broadway. In 1974, Gere made his feature film debut with a tiny part in Report to the Commissioner (Milton Katselas, 1974). He returned to the stage the following year as part of the cast of an off-Broadway production of Sam Shepard's Killer's Head. Some of Gere's earliest photos, known as 'head shots' were taken by boyhood friend and struggling photographer Herb Ritts. The people handling Gere were so impressed with the photos that they began hiring Ritts for other assignments. Ritts became a top photographer. Onscreen, Gere had a few roles, and gained recognition in Looking for Mr. Goodbar (Richard Brooks, 1977) opposite Diane Keaton. He played his first leading role in the dream-like drama Days of Heaven (Terrence Malick, 1978). Joshua Dysart at IMDb: "A poetic biblical parable played out in the Texas Panhandle at the turn of the century, it gives total preference to the emotion of imagery over the emotion of the actors. It's an exorcise in feeling and seeing that's so successful it elevated Terrence Malick into the ranks of visual storytellers like Tarkovski and Kurosawa." In Italy, Gere won the David di Donatello Award (the Italian Oscar) for Best Foreign Actor. Gere spent 1978 meeting Tibetans when he travelled to Nepal, where he spoke to many monks and lamas. Returning to the US, Gere won considerable theatrical acclaim for his performance as a gay concentration-camp prisoner in the Broadway production of Martin Sherman's Bent. For his role he received the 1980 Theatre World Award. Back in Hollywood, he played the title role in American Gigolo (Paul Schrader, 1980), which established him as a leading man and a sex symbol. His star status was reaffirmed by An Officer and a Gentleman (Taylor Hackford, 1982) with Debra Winger. The film grossed almost $130 million and won two Academy Awards out of six nominations. Gere himself received his first Golden Globe Award nomination. In The Cotton Club (Francios Coppola, 1984) he appeared with Diane Lane. In the early 1980s, Richard went to Honduras, Nicaragua and El Salvador amidst ongoing wars and political violence. With a doctor, he visited refugee camps. In the late 1980s, his career seemed to have a dip. His celebrity status was jeopardized with roles in the several poorly received biblical drama King David (Bruce Beresford, 1985) and the underrated political drama Power ( Sidney Lumet, 1986).

 

In 1990 Richard Gere returned to the front row with two excellent films. In Internal Affairs (Mike Figgis, 1990), he was a sensation as the bad guy. Andy Garcia played an Internal Affairs agent who becomes obsessed with bringing down a cop (Gere) who manages to maintain a spotless reputation despite being involved in a web of corruption. Gere then teamed up with Julia Roberts to star in the the smash romantic comedy Pretty Woman (Garry Marshall, 1990). His cool reserve as a ruthless businessman was the perfect complement to Julia's bubbling enthusiasm. The film captured the nation's heart, and it earned Gere his second Golden Globe Award nomination. Fans clamored for years for a sequel, or at least another pairing of Julia and Richard. They got that with Runaway Bride (Garry Marshall, 1999), which was a runaway success. Gere received $12 million, and the box office was $152 million. Offscreen, Richard and Cindy Crawford got married in 1991. They were divorced in 1995. Gere had a leading role in the Japanese film Hachi-gatsu no rapusodî (Akira Kurosawa, 1991), a film warning viewers of the dangers of nuclear power. Gere is also active in AIDS fundraising and agreed to play a small role in the HBO film And the Band Played On (Roger Spottiswoode, 1993) despite the prevalent belief in the film industry a film about AIDS would be detrimental to his career. It was not. He co-starred with Jodie Foster in the box office hit Sommersby (Jon Amiel, 1993). A Buddhist for over a decade, he was banned from the Oscars once after making anti-China comments on the air at the 1993 ceremony. Gere played one of his best roles in Primal Fear (Gregory Hoblit, 1996), as a fame-hungry lawyer who defends an altar boy (Edward Norton) accused of murdering a priest. People magazine had picked him as one of the 50 Most Beautiful People in the world in 1991, and in 1999 picked him as their Sexiest Man Alive. The following year, the actor enjoyed some of his best reviews to date as a gynecologist at once devoted to and bewildered by all of the women in his life in the aptly titled Dr. T & the Women (Robert Altman, 2000). Critics noted that Gere seemed to have finally come into his own as an actor, having matured amiably with years and experience. After his divorce from Cindy Crawford, Gere had started dating actress Carey Lowell. In 2000, they had a son, Homer James Jigme Gere. Jigme means 'fearless' in Tibetan. Gere and Lowell married in 2002. His later films include the thriller Unfaithful (Adrian Lyne, 2002) in which he reunited with Diane Lane, the Oscar winning musical Chicago (Rob Marshall, 2002) with Renée Zellweger and Catherine Zeta-Jones, and the ballroom dancing drama Shall We Dance? (Peter Chelsom, 2004), which grossed $170 million worldwide. In the comedy-drama The Hoax (Lasse Hallström, 2006), he played Clifford Irving who sold his bogus biography of Howard Hughes to a premiere publishing house in the early 1970s. Gere was one of the characters who embody a different aspect of Bob Dylan's life and work in I'm Not There (Todd Haynes, 2007). Other interesting films are the crime drama Brooklyn's Finest (Antoine Fuqua, 2009) with Don Cheadle, the British comedy-drama The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (John Madden, 2015) with Judi Dench and Maggie Smith, and Three Christs (Jon Avnet, 2017) with Peter Dinklage. He was notably singled out for portraying businessman Robert Miller opposite Susan Sarandon in Arbitrage (Nicholas Jarecki, 2012), earning his fourth Golden Globe Award nomination. Gere is also an accomplished pianist, music writer, and above all a humanitarian. He's a founding member of Tibet House, a nonprofit organization dedicated to the preservation of Tibetan culture. He has been an active supporter of Survival International, which supports tribal people, including the natives of the Amazon, the Maasai of East Africa, the Wichi of Argentina. After 11 years of marriage, Gere and Lowell separated. Since April 2018, Richard Gere is married to Spanish activist Alejandra Silva.

 

Source: Sandra Brennan (AllMovie), K.D. Haisch (IMDb), AllMovie, Wikipedia and IMDb.

Former Blockbuster Video store on Burwood Highway located in the homemaker section outside the main shopping centre. This store lasted longer than most, closing in April 2014 after a closing down sale for its stock. The store's fittings were quickly removed after closure.

 

Blockbuster Video commenced in Australia in 1991 and was eventually taken over by local chain Video Ezy. Both chains have seen a significant decline in recent years, particularly due to the effect of the internet.

Cover of Co-ed magazine, February 1963

 

"The High School Magazine for Homemakers and Career Girls"

Status: Current

 

BrickLink: Chrome Silver

Peeron: Chrome Silver

 

This color was technically introduced back in 1971 as a Homemaker faucet, and common in System sets starting in 1994, this coating process wasn't given its own official color ID until sometime around 2010.

Artists paint a wall mural at 14th and S Streets NW, in Washington, DC.

With a new year comes a new life!

 

I've decided that this year I am going to learn how to cook (more than just Mexican food) by cooking healthy and yummy meals every night with fresh ingredients.

 

The following inspiration has been brought to you by Martha Stewart and her wonderful website that helps with menu ideas and even has grocery lists to help you with menu planning. I feel like uber housewife... even if hubby and I work the same job, same hours, same shift.... and I cook all the time. <3

 

I think I had a little too much fun with the liquefy tool but I still SOMEWHAT resemble me. :X

 

Texture brought to you by pareeerica.

Carpet squares were used to create the carpet design pattern.

 

Source: Living for Young Homemakers

Ramzan Iftar Delicacies prepared at home by my better half / homemaker Ruhi Peerzada

Retro housewife Erin scolds one of her smartmouthed children.

Ramzan Iftar Delicacies prepared at home by my better half / homemaker Ruhi Peerzada

"Homemaker's Digest," 1948

...lest he pop you on the nose with a rolled up newspaper.

 

From the "Etiquette for Everybody" volume of the 1952 edition of "The Homemaker's Encyclopedia"

We hit the park this afternoon. Z likes to formally introduce us to the kids she meets in the park. "This is my mother, Michele and my father, Ray. Mom and dad, this is.....ughhh what's your name again?" She is not very good with names and neither am I.

 

Funnily, without us talking, emailing, or seeing eachother's images before hand, my friend, Grrltravels and I shot pretty much the same thing for our photos today. Check her photo out.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/grrltravels/5317142179/

From rustic pumpkins to shutters made from barn wood, pallets are the star of this fall mantel display. Get the tutorial at The Frugal Homemaker.

 

Source by hvdelights

  

sharekid.com/from-rustic-pumpkins-to-shutters-made-from-b...

 

#ShareKid

From the Sunday newspaper magazine called This Week, Nov. 14, 1948. Until 1950, yellow colored margarine was illegal in many dairy states, and there was a federal tax on it where it could be sold, as indicated at the bottom of this ad. The tax was repealed in 1950 and states started lifting their bans, with Minnesota and Wisconsin the last holdouts until the 1960s. Police in Wisconsin were supposedly even known for nabbing people at the Illinois border attempting to smuggle in yellow margarine.

are featured in this modern, work-saving kitchen planned for a homemaker's pleasure. "Armstrong's Linoleum and LinoWall," Armstrong Cork Company, Lancaster, PA, 1940.

Title / Titre :

[Kahentinetha Horn] Kahn-Tineta Horn Homemakers .72 /

 

Portrait de Kahn-Tineta [Kahentinetha] Horn pris en 1972

 

Creator(s) / Créateur(s) : Arnaud Maggs

 

Date(s) : August 1972 / août 1972

 

Reference No. / Numéro de référence : ITEM 4716534, 4726999

central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.redirect?app=fonandcol&id=4716...

central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.redirect?app=fonandcol&id=4726...

 

Location / Lieu : Unknown / Inconnu

 

Credit / Mention de source :

Arnaud Maggs. Arnaud Maggs fonds. Library and Archives Canada, e011313905

© Estate of Arnaud Maggs / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery /

 

Arnaud Maggs. Fonds Arnaud Maggs. Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, e011313905

© Succession d'Arnaud Maggs / avec l'autorisation de la galerie

Stephen Bulger

Rawwr! (Do kangaroos roar?)

 

Yummy peanut butter cookies!

Most people think that the outskirts DK are sick, except when they go to the cottage. I think it's fantastic, and when on weekdays it's empty and people are taken home to work, I sneak around and sink a little over the hedge. Today it turned into lilacs, which I make juice from :-) It's not bad to be a homemaker :-)

Status: Retired

 

BrickLink: n/a

Peeron: n/a

 

Used between 1974 and 1980 in Homemaker sets. Its replacement, 25 Earth Orange (old brown), was introduced in 1978.

 

Presumably this hair color was used before Lego started naming/numbering their colors. It's about as dark as Dark Brown, but less purple.

 

Thanks to WoutR for noticing that these were a new (to us) color :)

Holding up a public service ad for Radio Free Europe that appeared in the June 1955 issue of Woman's Day magazine, courtesy of the Advertising Council.

Title / Titre :

[Kahentinetha Horn] Kahn-Tineta Horn Homemakers .72 /

 

Portrait de Kahn-Tineta [Kahentinetha] Horn pris en 1972

 

Creator(s) / Créateur(s) : Arnaud Maggs

 

Date(s) : August 1972 / août 1972

 

Reference No. / Numéro de référence : ITEM 4715935, 4725937

 

central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.redirect?app=fonandcol&id=4715...

central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.redirect?app=fonandcol&id=4725...

 

Location / Lieu : Unknown / Inconnu

 

Credit / Mention de source :

Arnaud Maggs. Arnaud Maggs fonds. Library and Archives Canada, e011313908

© Estate of Arnaud Maggs / courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery /

 

Arnaud Maggs. Fonds Arnaud Maggs. Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, e011313908

© Succession d'Arnaud Maggs / avec l'autorisation de la galerie Stephen Bulger

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