Old US

American fashion in the 1960s to 1970s

40 Vintage Portrait Photos of American Office Workers in the Early 1970s

In the 1970s, the formal dress code started to shift within office wear and created a big change to how we dress for work. Men started to wear fewer suits for a more casual look deemed “business casual”. Women, however, created a bigger change for their dress code as they were trading in their dresses/skirts for pants. Dress codes were still implemented within the office but were starting to reflect the everyday fashion trends that people were gravitating towards.

These vintage photos from Thomas Hawk were taken by a San Francisco Bay based commercial photographer that show portraits of American office workers in the early 1970s.

35 Fabulous Photos of Barbara Bach in the 1970s

Born 1946 in Queens, New York City, American actress and model Barbara Bach was one of the most sought-after faces of the 1960s, working with the Eileen Ford Agency in New York, appearing on catalogs and the front covers of several international fashion magazines such as SeventeenVogue USA, ELLE France, Gioia Italy, and Figurino Brazil.

Her acting career started in Italy, where Bach played Nausicaa in L’Odissea in 1968, an eight-hour long TV adaptation of Homer’s epic poem The Odyssey, directed by Franco Rossi and produced by Dino de Laurentiis.

Bach is best known for her role as the Bond girl Anya Amasova in The Spy Who Loved Me (1977). She has 28 films to her credit, and was featured in a pictorial in Playboy in January 1981. She also had a cameo in a September 1987 special issue on the Bond girls.

Bach married British musician Ringo Starr, formerly of The Beatles, in 1981. The two met in 1980, on the set of the film Caveman (1981). According to the International Vegetarian Union, they practise vegetarianism.

Take a look at these vintage photos to see portrait of young Barbara Bach in the 1970s.

’70s Fashion Icons: 25 Incredible Women Who Defined the Fashion and Style of the 1970s
From Brigitte Bardot’s beehive to Mary Quant’s geometric prints, every 1960s fashion icon contributed their own signature style to the decade. It was the era of the girl group, the gamine supermodel and the original IT-girls and the Sixties still provides designers today with an endless source of inspiration. Edie Sedgwick, Jackie O, Jane Birkin – these women were some of the greatest fashion influencers of all time, let alone the decade.

1. Edie Sedgwick

The wealthy socialite, toast of the New York art scene and a certain Andy Warhol’s muse, Edie Sedgwick was the original IT girl. The essential ingredients of her good-girl-gone-bad aesthetic were lashings of eyeliner, chandelier earrings, mini mod dresses with sheer black tights and a crop of platinum hair – one day to be celebrated by Sienna Miller in the film Factory Girl.

2. Twiggy

No 1960s fashion round-up would be complete without Twiggy. One of the greatest beauty muses ever, Twiggy rose to supermodel fame thanks to her paint ’em on thick eyelashes and the boyish pixie crop that celebrity hairdresser Leonard chopped for her in 1966. Almost overnight she became the face of the decade – instantly recognizable, she’s been immortalized on everything from Andy Warhol screen prints to Marks and Spencer shopping bags.

3. Anita Pallenberg

The biggest style influence on the Rolling Stones, archetypal rock chick Anita Pallenberg also just happened to have flings with half the band members. Her quintessential rock chick look of thigh-high boots, fringing and skin-tight prints still serves as a source of inspiration for the band and all our wardrobes.

4. Mary Quant

Not only was Mary Quant a style icon in her own right, she brought the era’s greatest trends to the wardrobes of the masses from her shop on the King’s Road. The mini-skirt, hot pants, colored tights and plastic macs – we owe them all to design pioneer Quant.

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5. Jackie Onassis

Before Michelle Obama and Samantha Cameron, there was Jackie Onassis. The original fashionable First Lady managed to maintain her impeccable style throughout her time in the White House, even as she lived through tragedy. Jackie’s prim skirt suits, pillbox hats and super-sized dark glasses made her the style inspiration for women across America.


6. Audrey Hepburn

How do we love Audrey Heburn’s 1960s style? Let us count the ways… First it was that 1961 Breakfast at Tiffany’s LBD, teamed with movie star shades and top-handle bag which won over our hearts. Then came the off-duty style game – a champion of chic capri pants and ballet pumps.

7. Ursula Andress

One of the most iconic movie moments of all time (certainly the most memorable swimsuit moments ever) was Ursula Andress’ role in the 1961 Bond movie, Dr No. Stepping out of the Caribbean sea and into the fantasies of the world over, that knife belt was the perfect finishing touch.

8. Jean Shrimpton

In 1970, Jean Shrimpton brought the fashion world to a halt. Unlike the more voluptuous models of the 1960’s that came packaged with stiff aristocratic poses, this leggy British brunette broke the modeling mould entirely with her super slender frame. Jean paved the way for fellow free-spirited waifs such as Twiggy and Penelope Tree and eventually Kate Moss and co.

9. Dusty Springfield

Big eyes, big hair and an even bigger voice, Dusty Springfield rocked a blonde wig and a column dress like no other. Altogether now, “the only one who could ever reach me…”

10. Mia Farrow

The elfin crop was made famous by Mia Farrow in the late 1970s and still continues to inspire the hair world today. The Rosemary’s Baby star and former wife of Frank Sinatra was an icon of the era, always adding a playful touch to her looks and paving the way for the likes of Alexa Chung with her Peter Pan collar dresses and off-beat shoe pairings.


11. The Supremes

Long before Destiny’s Child made fashion and music collide, there was The Supremes. From all-sequin gowns to matching skirt suits (not to mention those incredible beehives) their impeccable matching style led the way for girl-groups and musicians the world over.

12. Raquel Welch

Pin-up Raquel Welch may be best-known for her fur bikini in the 1966 film One Million Years B.C., but off screen she worked an even more glamorous look, with pantsuits, Pucci prints, and sex kitten hair.

12. Tippi Hedren

Hitchcock heroine Tippi Hedren made one of the most famous roles in film history look effortlessly stylish and poised thanks to her neat blonde ‘do and ladylike skirt suits. Legendary costumier Edith Head was the woman behind her now-famous Birds looks, ensuring she was timelessly elegant and understatedly glamorous, even when running screaming from a flock of birds.

13. Jane Birkin

Trends come and go but we never tire of Jane Birkin’s style. The free-spirited Blow Up actress’s penchant for care-free classics and laissez-faire spirit earned her instant world recognition in the 70s while her gap-teeth and quirky French-meets-British dress sense charmed Serge Gainsbourg.

14. Patti Boyd

Patti Boyd’s enchanting modish style, flippy hair, and endless legs ensured she was the inspiration behind some of the greatest hits of the 70s. The former wife of both Eric Clapton and George Harrison was the quintessential sixties beauty and a favorite of Mary Quant. Quite the unsung style hero of the decade…

15. Cher

With her blunt bangs, kohl-rimmed eyes and love of outlandish prints and the widest of flared trousers, Cher was a certified 70s icon. The then other half of Sonny and Cher led the way with the bold and the daring, and launched the hippie look with cool Californian style.

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16. Yoko Ono

Yoko Ono has never done color. From her private wedding, to one of the most defining moments of the 70s – the John Lennon and Yoko Ono bed-in – the petite artist has championed a head-to-toe white aesthetic, making wide-brimmed hats and knee-high boots her signature accessories during this defining decade.

17. Marianne Faithful

With Mick Jagger arm candy and swinging mini dresses, Marianne Faithful’s style was one of the most desired of the 70s. Her love of over-sized sunglasses, the shortest of minis and full, choppy bangs all rounded off with a heavy rock ‘n’ roll attitude are just some of reasons she helped inspire the Rolling Stones’ biggest hits including “You Can’t Always Get What You Want,” “Wild Horses,” and “I Got the Blues.”


18. The Ronettes

There were a million girl groups in the 1970s but The Ronettes were by far the coolest and sexiest of the bunch. At the heart of their look was the standard-issue mascara-and-miniskirt uniform but taken to new extremes. Skirts were tight and eyeliner was flicked so high it disappeared into their bangs.

19. Jane Fonda

While off-screen Jane Fonda’s style was all-American-girl, on-screen she took the lead in the space-age cult-classic Barbarella and in doing so created one of the most iconic images of Sixties cinema.

20. Brigitte Bardot

The world-famous French bombshell’s style was unabashedly sexy. She made messy, piled-high up-dos the hair of choice, and every girl wanted a piece of her signature confidence.

21. Catherine Deneueve

Another chic French dresser, Catherine Deneuve shot to fame in the 1970s, marrying fashion photographer David Bailey and becoming the muse to Yves Saint Laurent. It was her role in Belle de Jour – where she played a prostitute by day and a frustrated housewife by night – that turned her into a bonafide icon, if only for the incredible clothes.

22. Nancy Sinatra

If ever a song – and singer – could symbolize the style of the era, it was Nancy Sinatra’s hit single “These Boots Were Made For Walking.” With her tousled blonde hair, shortest of mini dresses and ability to pull off a pair of knee-high boots with aplom – the song, and Nancy’s look was an emblem for the decade.

23. Paulene Stone

Former magazine cover girl Paulene Stone may not be as well-known as other models from the era but Paulene’s style was certainly what everyone wanted. The statuesque beauty embodied Swinging London more than any other, and her work with David Bailey is what the photographer has attributed to kicking off his career in 1970.

24. Marsha Hunt

Singer and novelist Marsha Hunt shot to fame when she played Dionne in the smash musical Hair and posed nude for the promotional images. Famed for her huge afro hairstyle, which provided one of the most iconic images of the 1970s the former Marc Bolan and Rolling Stones muse is also renowned for her rock-chick-meets boho mix of daring leather hotpants and floaty, maxi dresses.

25. Veruschka

Shot by Avedon, Irving Penn and Helmut Newton, Veruschka is the splashy German model who landed her first major magazine cover in 1970. All legs, eyes and lips, she exuded sex and lead a new direction in 70s fashion by pioneering a new skinny chic ideal.

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