Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Bored Panda
Bored Panda
Mindaugas Balčiauskas

50 Vintage Women’s Ads That Prove Society Used To Play By Very Different Rules

To look at how society has changed over time, we don’t just have to rely on history books. Sometimes, the proof is sitting right under our noses.

To spot it, you could rummage through a drawer and find an old iPod. Or take a trip to your grandma’s house, open her closet, and see what her generation used to wear. Or you can look at something people used to see every single day: the ads of the past.

And when it comes to vintage ads aimed at women, they’re especially telling. On top of selling products, they also reveal the values of the time, along with the labels that were placed on women. The design might be gorgeous, but the messaging doesn’t always age well. Check them out below.

#1 Dodge Challenger R/T Ad (1970)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#2 Frederick’s Of Hollywood Stocking Stuffers Ad (1960s)

© Photo: Miss_Conception_ish

Advertisements exist to sell us products. That simple truth has remained constant for over a century, even as the methods and messages have transformed beyond recognition. What has changed dramatically is our understanding of who gets targeted and how those targets are portrayed.

#3 Chic Jeans Ad (1983)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#4 Listerine Ad (1916)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

Women were recognized as a distinct consumer market long before modern advertising emerged. By the late 1800s, department stores and the culture around shopping already spoke directly to women and treated them as key customers.

What evolved over the decades wasn’t the recognition that women bought things, but rather the increasingly sophisticated psychological tactics used to influence those purchases.

#5 Royal Crown Cola Ad (1961)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#6 Fresca Ad Featuring Jan Smithers (Bailey Quarters From Tvs Wkrp In Cincinnati)

© Photo: reddit.com

#7 The Undie-L'eggs Panty Ad With Joyce De Witt Of The Threes Company TV Series (1982)

© Photo: Miss_Conception_ish

Soap companies became masters of speaking to housewives through guilt and aspiration. A 1930s Lysol campaign actually marketed the disinfectant as a feminine hygiene product, with ads suggesting that women who failed to use it risked losing their husbands.

The copy was clinical and authoritative, borrowing medical language to create anxiety where none existed before. The campaigns sold entire value systems about what made a woman worthy alongside the cleaning products themselves.

#8 Alfred Angelo Wedding Dress Ad (1970)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#9 L.A. Gear Ad (1988)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#10 1939 Wrigley's Doublemint Twins Ad

© Photo: _Alabama_Man

Kitchen appliances became central to advertising in the postwar boom. Refrigerators and washing machines appeared in ads as solutions to domestic drudgery, promising to transform the daily grind of housework.

A smiling woman in heels and pearls would pose next to her new vacuum cleaner, dressed as if ready for an evening out. The ads suggested that modern technology would make housework so effortless that women could look immaculate while doing it.

These machines were sold as labor-saving devices, yet the women in the ads always seemed to be performing for an invisible audience.

#11 Amc Pacer Ad From France

© Photo: reddit.com

#12 Datacomp Ad

© Photo: Remarkable-Catch-855

#13 1939 Chevrolet Ad

© Photo: DawnM74

Listerine turned ordinary bad breath into a social disaster during the 1920s with their halitosis campaign. The ads featured stories about women like Edna, who remained a bridesmaid but never a bride because of her bad breath.

The campaign worked by suggesting that friends would never tell you about the problem, leaving you to face rejection without knowing why. Within seven years, revenues jumped from $115,000 to over $8 million as the company convinced people they had a medical problem that needed fixing.

#14 Ben Barrack (1959)

© Photo: YumaAsamiNYM86

#15 Fiat Ad 1899

© Photo: reddit.com

#16 1945 Ad From Heinz Baby Foods

© Photo: DawnM74

Beauty advertising has long worked by making women feel insecure. Mid-century beauty and fashion ads helped shape narrow ideas of femininity and “acceptable” appearance, repeatedly tying self-worth and social approval to how women looked.

Women got the message that their natural appearance needed fixing and constant attention. The ads promised younger-looking skin, flawless complexions, and the kind of beauty that would make them worthy of admiration.

#17 1947 Helen Neushaefer Lipstick Ad

© Photo: DawnM74

#18 L.A. Gear Ad (1986)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#19 Cannon Towel Ad From 1937

© Photo: DawnM74

The regulatory picture started changing in the 1970s as women’s groups protested against demeaning portrayals. Norway banned gender stereotyping in advertising in 1978, becoming one of the first countries to legally recognize that commercial messages could cause social harm.

The United Kingdom established similar guidelines decades later through the Advertising Standards Authority. These regulations work from the idea that ads shape culture rather than just reflecting it, influencing what people think is normal.

#20 Jnco Jeans Ad (1998)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#21 Heats On (1965)

© Photo: PeterGibbons8888

#22 Keyko Margarine Ad - 1955

© Photo: DawnM74

Modern platforms have made things more complicated. Influencers use them to sell products while claiming to share their real lives, making it harder to tell advertisements from personal content.

Thankfully, different countries require influencers to disclose when posts are sponsored. That’s a good step toward transparency in advertising.

#23 G-D Justrite Corset A Faultless Figure (1912)

© Photo: PeterGibbons8888

#24 Dodge Charger Ad (1968)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#25 Hang Ten Ad (1983)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

Of course, we haven’t reached a perfect state with advertising. Many campaigns still manage to raise more than a few eyebrows with their tactics and messaging.

What’s changed is that we’re more educated about how persuasion works and can recognize when selling products to women means first making them feel inadequate.

We have more systems in place now to call out harmful advertising, and more people are willing to ask whether certain desires should be manufactured in the first place.

#26 Virginia Slims Ad (1971)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#27 Swatch Watches Ad (1985)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#28 General Tire Ad - 1943

© Photo: DawnM74

#29 Pepsi-Cola Ad (1954)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#30 Coca-Cola Advertisement From 1939

© Photo: reddit.com

#31 From Liberty Magazine Dated September 16, 1933

© Photo: DawnM74

#32 Scotch Tape Ad - 1945

© Photo: DawnM74

#33 1925 Real Silk Hosiery Ad

© Photo: DawnM74

#34 Teen Spirit (1992)

© Photo: lovemypennydog

#35 Smooth Silhouettes From L'eggs (1995)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#36 Bold Hold Ad (1988)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#37 Esleep Ad (1988)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#38 O-Cedar Polish Mop - November 1913

© Photo: DawnM74

#39 Joy - 1953

© Photo: DawnM74

#40 Fiat Ad, 1960s

© Photo: reddit.com

#41 Remington Typewriter Ad - 1909/1910

© Photo: DawnM74

#42 1980's Dillards Ad With Stephanie Seymour

© Photo: texsonsc65

#43 Bien Jolie Modern Foundations Ad (1930s)

© Photo: Miss_Conception_ish

#44 From The Saturday Evening Post, July 29, 1933

© Photo: DawnM74

#45 Clairol Final Net Ad (1981)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#46 Shu-Mak-Up Ad (1963)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#47 Another From Mg

© Photo: SissySlutCandie

#48 Nescafe Instant Coffee Ad (1952)

© Photo: Tony_Tanna78

#49 1967, Clairol Naturally Blonde

© Photo: texsonsc65

#50 Lancia Ad, 1978

© Photo: reddit.com

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.