Miss Kajjan. On chair as helpfully indicated.
Also elegant shoes!
I love Miss Kajjan’s dress here from that little cutwork/embroidered blouse to the casual pinning of the saree with those long pins that seem to have been around at the time.
The waved hair is so common in the 20s/30s in Indian cinema.
And you have to love it when an actress is described as having “roaring love affairs”.
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Not many period dramas in India get their period details right. I am not sure a leg of mutton sleeve blouse was the way to go in 1942 but its the evoked emotion rather than authenticity that matters in film. And this is a fair bit of effort for Bollywood.
This film did not eventually feature Ms Dixit but she looks quite radiant in this photoshoot.
Via the MD tumblr.
Lady Abbas Ali Baig by Lafayette (Lafayette Ltd), half-plate film negative, 14 May 1929. Love all the elements here – the cacophonous sari and a rather magnificent cape-shawl.
Homai Vyarawalla is a favourite so I am featuring her again.
She looks totally professional and totally at ease in cute, simple blouses teamed with a saree and lugging around her ever present camera.
The Illustrated Weekly cover of 9/12/1945 is from a time when white blouses were teamed with every kind of saree.
The sari influenced western attire in the early part of the 20th century to some extent – though there was no separation of the bodice and skirt as in India. Elsa Schiaparelli for e.g. was known for her “sari dresses”.
I am assuming this is a gown with a shawl. It has all the elements of a saree in it – the folds of the skirt, the draped cloth over the bosom, the pallu (the loose end of the saree) and the head covering (though the last of this is optional in a saree). I think Ms Baker also has a bindi in keeping with the attire. All in all – as always – she looks quite fabulous.
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