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Lipstick in the heel

St. Louis

Practically Family
Messages
613
Location
St. Louis, MO
Seems highly impractical to me; can you imagine excusing yourself to your date while in a restaurant, bending over to twist that lipstick out of your heel (no way to do that gracefully) and then, after application, getting it back in there?

But the shoes are kind of cute.
 

KILO NOVEMBER

One Too Many
Messages
1,026
Location
Hurricane Coast Florida
What I find interesting is that in 1949, Leipzig was part of the Russian occupation zone. Things were very grim in Germany at the time, especially in the Russian zone (the Soviet Union not being a "forgive and forget" sort of outfit). Yet here was a glamor fashion photo!
 

Fastuni

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,277
Location
Germany
Post-war Germany was not all rosy, but 1949 wasn't 1945-47.
Reconstruction was already underway East and West and there was much enthusiasm (after all one also wanted to leave behind the war years quickly).
Political and economic conditions in the Soviet zone (since 1949 GDR) were of course much different, but it wasn't only barbed wire and propaganda ralleyes either.
Eastern Germany was to become the economic power-house and had the highest standard of living among the Eastern bloc.

Berlin and the Leipziger Messe (trade fair) were showcases in Eastern Germany, where the authorities highlighted the advances and diversity of their economic output.
Much of the stuff was hardly (or impossibly) available for the average consumer.

Nevertheless particularly regarding textiles and shoes, Eastern Germany was very strong and productive.
Also due to lower costs a large part of West German (and other countries) clothing was in fact produced in East German factories, before they began outsourcing to developing countries.
 
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TimeWarpWife

One of the Regulars
Messages
279
Location
In My House
I wouldn't have enough coordination to get the lipstick out of the heel without falling over probably. When I was 15 my dad told me that my being extremely clumsy was just a phase I was going through...I'm now 53 and I'm still waiting for this phase to end. :eusa_doh:
 

Amy Jeanne

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,852
Location
Colorado
I say NAY to this one lol

If it unscrewed from the bottom -- eew! Those heels go on the ground where there is all kinds of unpleasant matter!
If it was accessed from inside -- eeew! Your sweaty foot was in there! I hate feet lol
 

sheeplady

I'll Lock Up
Bartender
Messages
4,479
Location
Shenandoah Valley, Virginia, USA
Post-war Germany was not all rosy, but 1949 wasn't 1945-47.
Reconstruction was already underway East and West and there was much enthusiasm (after all one also wanted to leave behind the war years quickly).
Political and economic conditions in the Soviet zone (since 1949 GDR) were of course much different, but it wasn't only barbed wire and propaganda ralleyes either.
Eastern Germany was to become the economic power-house and had the highest standard of living among the Eastern bloc.

Berlin and the Leipziger Messe (trade fair) were showcases in Eastern Germany, where the authorities highlighted the advances and diversity of their economic output.
Much of the stuff was hardly (or impossibly) available for the average consumer.

Nevertheless particularly regarding textiles and shoes, Eastern Germany was very strong and productive.
Also due to lower costs a large part of West German (and other countries) clothing was in fact produced in East German factories, before they began outsourcing to developing countries.

In my high school education (which I don't pretend to be at all factual in much of what was taught) we were taught that there were significant differences between East and West. To quote my teacher the year we covered WWII in world history, "In East Germany they were living in the rubble. In West Germany they were picking up the bricks, cleaning them off, and rebuilding. But that wasn't happening in East Germany. They just left the bricks there and lived around them."

It doesn't surprise me that what we were taught about East Germany was actually non-factual given the way Russia was actually portrayed in much of my education (highly non-favorably). I was taught this after Russia became a "democracy" and during the brief time the United States seemed friendlier towards Russia.
 

Fastuni

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,277
Location
Germany
"In East Germany they were living in the rubble. In West Germany they were picking up the bricks, cleaning them off, and rebuilding. But that wasn't happening in East Germany. They just left the bricks there and lived around them."

Idiocy. In West Germany they modernized the cities more extensively and at a much faster pace - thus destroying lots of old buildings that could have been restored. In East Germany they retained (until today) relatively more of the old building substance (though it now is again in decay in more rural and sparsely populated regions). Of course they had their countless concrete high-rise buildings, too. While it is true that war-damages and rubble heaps were more widely encountered in the East for many years after the war, the same was to be found in the West. On the outskirts of the prosperous West German city of Munich the giant rubble heap was converted after 30 years to the park for the Olympic games 1972...
 
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sheeplady

I'll Lock Up
Bartender
Messages
4,479
Location
Shenandoah Valley, Virginia, USA
Idiocy. In West Germany they modernized the cities more extensively and at a much faster pace - thus destroying lots of old buildings that could have been restored. In East Germany they retained (until today) relatively more of the old building substance (though it now is again in decay in more rural and sparsely populated regions). Of course they had their countless concrete high-rise buildings, too. While it is true that war-damages and rubble heaps were more widely encountered in the East for many years after the war, the same was to be found in the West. On the outskirts of the prosperous West German city of Munich the giant rubble heap was converted after 30 years to the park for the Olympic games 1972...

Like I said, not surprised. I have since found many things (including many things in our textbook) that were similarly erroneous, and often for political motivations. (Even worse was also what was *left* out of my education.)

I remember that quote, as well as several others that represented things that just seemed illogical at that time.
 
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Fastuni

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,277
Location
Germany
Would they advertise their gimmick to the world on the largest trade fair?
This might be the case if it was a rejected idea and they thought it was only good enough for actual lipstick (which BTW seems to be inserted sideways into the heel). :p
 
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