Good Old Days Magazine

Baby-Blue From Dress

In the 1960s in my hometown of Aurora, 111., it was not uncommon for high school girls to have dresses custom-made for special occasions like prom and homecoming. In some cases, the cost could be less than an off-the-rack dress that needed alterations. Many extremely talented women worked at home creating and altering clothing. To call them mere seamstresses

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Good Old Days Magazine

Good Old Days Magazine3 min read
A Story of Community
Based on John Burress’s book of the same name, The Missouri Traveler (1958) is a movie about a runaway teenage orphan boy named Biarn, who finds himself attached to the small town of Delphi, Mo., after some of its residents take an interest in him. T
Good Old Days Magazine4 min read
Isabelle’s Pillowcases
My wedding at the Methodist church on Fulton Street in Wauseon, Ohio, in 1958, was a big event. We were a well-known family in town because my father was a car dealer. Dad valued education, working long hours to send his three daughters to college. A
Good Old Days Magazine2 min read
Life on My Street
When we moved onto Sparks Street in our Burbank, Calif., neighborhood in the mid-1940s, our side of the street was paved. The other side was dirt. There were mostly girls on our block. My best friend, Joan, lived down the street on the same side as m

Related Books & Audiobooks