Vintage 1973 Johnson’s Baby Shampoo: It’s Fabulous Today Too!

Johnson's Baby Shampoo Ad - Winter 1973We are caught up in an usually frigid cold snap here in Seattle, which always sends me scrambling to adjust my wintertime beauty routine. Freezing weather is always harsh for both skin and hair. I wrote about my wintertime skin care routine a couple weeks ago, and my skin is surviving quite nicely being slathered under Nivea Creme and/or Aquaphor. I might add that I only wash my face at night, only splashing/rinsing my face with warm water in the morning. You want to retain as much of those natural skin oils as possible!

When I went to wash my hair this morning, I was trying to decided between the myriad of shampoos that I use for different purposes. With the weather being so cold I wanted a gentle shampoo, one that would retain as much moisture as possible while actually cleansing the hair. Since I hand-wash my cashmere sweaters in baby shampoo with great success I thought, AHA, I have a big bottle of Johnson’s Baby Shampoo on hand and I’m going to try that! I have to say that I am incredibly impressed with how my hair turned out. I shampooed, rinsed, and repeated. I used no conditioner, styling gels, or any other hair product.  I blew it dry and – WOW – my hair was clean, shiny, soft, and moist.

Vintage 1973 Johnson's Baby Shampoo adI was actually a bit flabbergasted, since the last time I used Johnson’s Baby Shampoo was in high school in 1973. Johnson’s had a huge advertising campaign advertising their gentle shampoo, baby oil, and baby powder to teenage girls in the ’70s. I can remember trying baby shampoo then, but I had long thick oily hair and it just didn’t clean the way I wanted it to. I was a big Prell and Alberto Vo5 shampoo user – they were the big guns that actually cleaned hair REALLY well.

Fast-forward to today: I still have thick hair that is somewhat oily, but I now color my hair. Coloring renders your hair a little more delicate, so it’s good to be gentle with it. I feel like I’ve rediscovered a vintage beauty bonanza in baby shampoo! Like these ads from 1973 say, “With Johnson’s, your hair can always look its best – shining clean and baby-soft. You know Johnson’s is gentle. It can’t harm your eyes – it can’t hurt your hair!” I must say that I agree. 🙂

~Marilyn

The Magical Vintage Technicolor KENZO Coat

Vintage Kenzo Coat - FinnfemmeI am an avid vintage clothing lover, and spend many hours haunting thrift stores in pursuit of those certain elusive sartorial treasures. I sell vintage clothing – the pieces I can bear to part with, that is.  I collect vintage clothing – the pieces that I cannot wear but love to just have around to look at.   And I wear vintage clothing – which can be especially hard to find because I am tall and statuesque (why did women in bygone eras all seem to be petite and stick thin?)

When I do happen to come across a vintage piece that I can actually wear, I am beyond thrilled.  I am not one to dress in head-to-toe vintage, preferring to mix the modern with one vintage statement piece and maybe a vintage accessory or two.  I like bold colors too.  A lot of vintage tends towards the beige and gray, which I find a bit too drab for me.

Imagine my surprise, several years ago, when one sale day at a local thrift store I found a truly magnificent colorful wool coat on the racks.  I checked the tag to see if it was the 99 cent color sale tag of the day, and sure enough it was.  Upon further inspection I saw that it was a vintage 70s KENZO-PARIS, Made in France label – SWOON!  SCORE!

The coat is, quite simply, amazing.  It is mid-calf length, with side slits to the hip, V-neck collar, and straight-lined.  In brilliant red wool, with green, fuchsia, and gold stripes in a large herringbone pattern; it has a vaguely ethnic, tribal feel to it.  Lined in heavy red satin, it feels like pure luxury.  Kenzo designed some incredible stuff in the ‘70s, one of my favorite fashion decades.

Vintage 70s Kenzo Coat - FinnfemmeI was almost a bit scared to wear the coat for the first time.  You see, I live in Seattle where people tend to dress in gray and black coats during winter.  No one really stands out, seemingly blending in with the interminable gray days.  But eventually I did get bold enough to wear it, figuring it was the Christmas season and I could get away with a little more festivity.  And the resultant attention was almost more than I could handle.

“Nice coat!” shouted my neighbor; cars driving by honked and waved; perfect strangers came up to me and paid me compliments. A guy at the grocery store told me I looked like Joni Mitchell in my coat (it does have a folksy vibe).  Lots of smiles, nods, winks, and thumbs-up from various passersby. The coat truly seems to have a magical effect, not only for me, but for whoever comes in contact with it.

Naturally, since it is a very warm coat, I wear it only in winter.  And even then I wear it sparingly, mostly reserved for the holiday season or special occasion. For it is a serendipitous coat, a special coat.  Not really meant for the mundane workaday world.  And to be honest, I can’t take that much attention all the time, preferring a bit more subtlety.  But when winter roars in and the gray clouds loom, and I do don the magnificent Kenzo coat, well, let the games begin!

~Marilyn Huttunen

Thanksgiving Is The Best Holiday!

Vintage ThanksgivingThanksgiving is my favorite holiday. Yes, VERY favorite! I am constantly amazed each year that somehow Thanksgiving has remained the humble, non-commercialized holiday that it was originally intended to be. Sure, there is always the issue of Black Friday sales and now, Thanksgiving Day sales. But for the most part, it is all about gathering with friends and family, preparing food, feasting, and giving covivial thanks. What is not to love about that? No shopping, no gift lists, no holiday office party – nothing is really expected of you except maybe to cook and eat. And I can definitely handle that!

Vintage ThanksgivingI love all the traditional Thanksgiving fare – comfort food at its finest. Woe to those who try to mess with the standard Turkey/Stuffing/Potatoes/Green Bean Casserole/Pumpkin Pie menu! Once in awhile someone tries to throw something different in – like salmon or lasagne. Um, no. I am lucky in the fact that no one in my family is vegan or vegetarian, so there has been nothing completely ghastly like Tofurkey. I mean, REALLY now – sacrilege! 😀

I will be enjoying having my son home from college, and getting together with my family. We all get along quite well and love to cook (and eat), so we are having a potluck Thanksgiving at my brother and sister-in-law’s home. I shall be making roasted Brussels sprouts (I was assigned a side dish), and then joyously feasting. Because that’s what it’s all about.

Peaceful ThanksgivingTo a peaceful feast! ~Marilyn

 

 

Cold Weather Skin Care: Bring Out The Gentle Big Guns!

My skin care “incident” last week with using full-strength argan oil (see my previous blog post) is almost over – I am pretty much recovered. This reaction, coupled with a drop in outside temperatures to below freezing, prompted me to make a change to my skin care routine. Gentle and Protect are the key words when dealing with, AHEM, middle-aged skin in wintertime.  You want to provide a barrier for your skin to protect it from any outside elements, as well as holding in the moisture of your skin. So this is what I use:

Cold Weather Skin Care - Nivea, AquaphorI used Aquaphor Healing Ointment on my face and neck after my skin reacted with redness and inflammation to using argan oil. Aquaphor is fantastic for healing and skin protection because it is so gentle and soothing. It really does soothe and protect, as it says it will, and works quite fast to restore smooth and healthy skin. It is clear, fragrance-free, and contains no weird “natural” tree nut oils, which can cause contact dermatitis. Good stuff! I only use it on my face when I need to deal with a skin issue, or use it as protection in outside cold weather, since it is on the greasy side.

I now use the original Nivea Creme both morning and night. It is the most amazing stuff – quite dense and thick – but feels fantastic and smells heavenly. It consists of water, mineral oil, petroleum, glycerin, and microcrystalline wax. Not very sexy or exotic, but man does this creme work! Kind of like the blue collar worker of skin moisturizers – just gets in there and does its stuff. The English, who are noted for their lovely complexions, are big users of Nivea. The Queen, and more recently, Kate Middleton, are known users of Nivea Creme. They certainly have beautiful skin, and are good advertisements for the product.

For cleansing, I found a terrific product at Trader Joe’s – it is their All-In-One-Facial-Cleanser. It is very gentle and thorough, and even cleans off my eye makeup without tears! It leaves the skin moist and not “stripped” feeling – perfect for wintertime cleansing as you want to retain as much moisture as you can. I don’t use any astringents or toners after cleansing – they are way too rough on your skin. Remember, gentle is key!

About once a week or so I use a gentle exfoliant on my face in the form of Baking Soda. Yes, good old-fashioned Arm & Hammer Pure Baking Soda. I have actually used this technique for decades – it really helped when I had more oily, acne-prone skin – but it also works fantastically on older skin too. After cleansing your face and leaving it wet, pour about a teaspoon or so of baking soda in the palm of your hand, add enough water to moisten it and apply it to your face. Again, gentle is key! Gently rub the baking soda mixture over your face once or twice and rinse, rinse, rinse. It really gets all those bits of dried skin that are hanging around, and makes your skin smooth. Pat dry, and immediately apply your moisturizer.

Marilyn Huttunen - FinnfemmeHere I am today, after a week of using this skin care routine to recover from my allergic contact dermatitis. It feels good to have healthy skin again! I plan on doing this routine all winter long because there is nothing better than having glowing skin. 🙂

~Marilyn

 

 

Allergic Contact Dermatitis: Sometimes Natural Skin Care Isn’t Better

Allergic Contact Dermatitis/Argan OilI am my own best guinea pig when it comes to experimenting with so-called “natural” organic beauty care. I mean it just seems right that when some beauty oil  is derived from nature in an organic form, it’s going to be good for you to slather it on – true? At least that is what my common sense told me. Or maybe that was what the organic natural marketing hype was telling me. Anyway, sometimes I need to just find things out for myself – and what does and doesn’t work on my skin.

Right now I am nursing my skin back to normalcy after developing allergic contact dermatitis from argan oil. Yes, 100% organic virgin argan oil. What could possibly go wrong with that? Apparently, with my skin, a lot. I have no known allergies, so I slathered my face and neck with full-strength 100% argan oil and went on my merry way on Sunday. I started noticing redness later on in the day, and by evening I was a full-blown inflamed red mess. Yikes! Ouch!

I put two and two together and decided that it had to be the argan oil. I did a Google search and found many other people who have had the same skin reaction. It turns out that this is a contact allergy to argan oil, and possibly to other tree nuts (almond oil, macadamia nut oil, shea nut butter, and ginko biloba). Since I used it full-strength, it caused a more severe reaction, but I am kind of glad I did because it alerted me to what possibly caused other skin reactions I’ve had. Since cosmetic companies are on the “natural” beauty bandwagon, they are freely putting these potentially irritating tree nut oils in many of their products. Shea nut butter and almond oil seem to be in everything, and argan oil is the latest on the beauty buzz bandwagon. Really bad news for those who are sensitive to it.

Now I am wondering if that what was causing the mysterious rashes on my face, neck, and décolletage that seem to come and go? A glance at the ingredients list on a lot of the products I use show that almond oil,Allergic contact dermatitis - Argan oil shea nut butter, ginko biloba, and macadamia nut are in a lot of them. Of course, not full-strength amounts – but possibly enough to cause a slight rash or redness.

I am going to be a lot more aware of what I put on my skin. I never in a million years thought I would be putting a petroleum-based product like Aquaphor on my skin, but that’s what I am currently doing.  There is not a single plant-based “organic” ingredient in it, but it is quietly doing its job to protect and heal my skin from the ravages of argan oil. Sometimes natural isn’t always better!

~Marilyn

 

Funky and Clunky Vintage 1971 Shoes

While flipping through my vintage 1971 Seventeen magazines, I was struck by the shoe ads. Were the shoes and boots we wore in that particular year really THAT ugly? Page after page of  horrendously designed shoes. Was it a style aberration for that particular year? I was a high school sophomore then, and I definitely don’t remember wearing any of these styles. Anyway, here’s a blast from the shoe and boot fashion annals of 1971…

Funky/Dexter shoe ad vintage 1971“It Takes a Funky Chicken to Lay a Funky Egg – Funky by Dexter”

Yeah, these are pretty funky all right. At least they are aptly named. Flat multi-colored suede lace-up shoes and tall lace-up boots. The shoes made you walk like a duck. I actually like the funky boots though, but I’ve always had a weakness for boots. I would wear them now; I wasn’t so funky in 1971.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Capezio shoe ad vintage 1971“The Showstoppers – Capezio”

Who knew Capezio made shoes, other than dance shoes? Well I didn’t . These sandals and boots are pretty far-out, man! I would kill for those lace-up, buckled, gladiator “Shepherd” boots. I really missed out on these, they are FABULOUS!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Connie Shoe ad vintage 1971“She Loves Puppies and Preppies and Connies”

Shoes for the new romantic who has her heart on her sleeve, her head in the clouds, but her feet are firmly on the road to fashion in her wardrobe of Connies. These are more on the line of what I would have worn – especially the heeled lace-up and the purple suede Gibson strap. They were more fashionable than funky. And in 1971 I was more into fashion than funk.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“BaBakers-Leeds shoe ad vintage 1971kers and Leeds Qualicraft Shoes”

The great suede tie-up, with super soles, hearty heels and round bump toes. And the requisite patchwork suede purse. Suede was huge in the early 7os. I remember shopping at Leeds a lot. I think I got most of my shoes there…just not any of these.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Funky/Dexter 2 Shoe ad vintage 1971“It Takes a Funky Chicken to Lay a Funky Egg – Funky by Dexter”

Here’s another ad from Funky Shoes, featuring more flat-footed crepe-soled suede lace-up shoes. You could get a funky saddle style, a funky quasi-athletic style, or a funky ankle boot style.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fanfare Boots ad vintage 1971“Boots by Fanfares”

Low boots, high boots. Buckled or tied boots. You and your boots by Fanfares. What a team!  The tall boots she is wearing are completely awesome. Actually I love all of these boots. Because I love boots. The lace-up/buckle duo ankle boot is especially rad – I would definitely wear those now.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fashion Craft shoe boot ad vintage 1971 “Fit To Be Tied – Fashion Craft”

More shoes…but the pièce de résistance here is those boots. Kind of a funky hippie look, with a lace-up tapestry style called “Rug”. Only in 1971.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hush Puppies Hot Heels shoe ad vintage 1971“The 12 Hour Shoe – Hot Heels by Hush Puppies”

I saved the best, actually the worst, for last. Look at these formidable clunkers! The 12 Hour Shoe? They look like they could survive the apocalypse. They are called “Hot Heels”, to be worn with Hot Pants or Hot Skirts. They were meant to look great and feel even better – wear them from a.m. to p.m. – they’re the 12 hour shoes. In reality they probably killed your feet and caused blisters lugging these babies around all day. On a good note, they probably were a good self-defense weapon. But some styles are definitely meant to stay in the past. 🙂

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

~Marilyn