The Flapper - Life,1922 (Large)
422 wooden pieces / 438x343x5mm (approx. 17.25x13.5x0.25")
Enjoy a little nostalgia with The Flapper wooden jigsaw. This beautiful puzzle features a Vintage Life Magazine cover from 1922, brought to life with 422 irregular and whimsical shaped pieces. Crafted from high-quality 5mm Linden plywood, it's a perfect blend of illustrative art and entertainment. Get lost in the charm of the past as you piece together this unique puzzle.
We chose this beautiful image because it was created in 1922, around the same year that Gerald Hayter declared 'Victory' as the brand name for his wooden puzzles.
It's a signature puzzle for us and features many cool whimsies of objects that were common or invented around that time.
This delightful puzzle features a unique art-deco cut pattern and contains ~30 whimsy pieces, many of them multipart!
This puzzle comes in our beautiful new premium quality packaging - a very sturdy box with a magnetic closure. It will look fabulous on your bookshelf or coffee table!
What Is a Flapper?
No one knows how the word flapper entered American slang, but its usage first appeared just following World War I.
The classic image of a flapper is that of a stylish young party girl. Flappers smoked in public, drank alcohol, danced at jazz clubs and practiced sexual freedom that shocked the Victorian morality of their parents.
Flappers were famous—or infamous, depending on your viewpoint—for their rakish attire.
They donned fashionable flapper dresses of shorter, calf-revealing lengths and lower necklines, though not typically form-fitting: Straight and slim was the preferred silhouette.
Flappers wore high heel shoes and threw away their corsets in favor of bras and lingerie. They gleefully applied rouge, lipstick, mascara and other cosmetics, and favored shorter hairstyles like the bob.
Designers like Coco Chanel, Elsa Schiaparelli and Jean Patou ruled flapper fashion. Jean Patou’s invention of knit swimwear and women’s sportswear like tennis clothes inspired a freer, more relaxed silhouette, while the knitwear of Chanel and Schiaparelli brought no-nonsense lines to women’s clothing. Madeleine Vionnet’s bias-cut designs (made by cutting fabric against the grain) emphasized the shape of a woman’s body in a more natural way.
For more information about the Flapper movement, click here (opens separate window)
About the artist
Frank Xavier Leyendecker was an American. He worked with his brother, J.C., in their studio, first in Chicago then later in New York City and New Rochelle, New York.
He studied for a time at the Académie Julian in France. He was known for his stained glass work as well as his illustrations for magazines and advertisements.
Material: 5mm Linden Plywood
Artist: F.X Leyendecker, 1922
Cut Design: Aidan Knowles
Article code: 23503
Barcode: 5056461101775