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Monday, October 10, 2022

Color


They sold millions of that sort of pendant in 1968-68.

 

9 comments:

  1. Jerry, the etymology of your choice of word is very revealing:

    Pendant (n.) early 14c., pendaunt, "loose, hanging part of anything," whether ornamental or useful, from Anglo-French pendaunt (c. 1300), Old French pendant (13c.), noun uses of the present-participle adjective from pendre "to hang," from Latin pendere "to hang," from PIE *(s)pend-, extended form of root *(s)pen- "to draw, stretch, spin." Meaning "dangling part of an earring" is attested from 1550s. Nautical sense of "long tapering flag" is recorded from late 15c. "In this sense presumably a corruption of pennon" [OED]. In 14c.-16c. also "the testicles." As an adjective, the same as pendent, which is now the usual spelling.

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    1. Do you think the photographer was alluding to a parallel between the jewelry and the package?

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    2. Could be... Some of the photographers of the period really knew how to provoke and flip the bird at the authorities, which usually went way over their heads.

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    3. Funny I thought he was just advocating nuclear disarmament. A HUGE deal in the 60s.

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    4. Yes, that design indeed started out as a nuclear disarmament symbol, but by the time this photo was made, it had broadened into an anti-war (specifically Vietnam) sentiment in the USA.

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  2. This is John David. He was once on the cover of Bob Anthony's "Young Champ". I have 13 photos of him (including this one). The pendant is present in 3 of them.

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  3. Another winner. Beautiful light muscular development. It would be good to see him in daylight.

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    1. Well, Brian E. just sent me a dozen "new" pictures of this model. They are all indoor, but some are better than this one and will appear here later.

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