Yvette Mimieux, leaping a tall tree in a single bound
Two naughty, naughty Wisconsin women from the 1890s, looking dangerously seductive in their revealing Victorian outfits.
Nina Barratt, who apparently used to get through dreary London winters by frolicking among the greenery and going for dips in the Thames. Doesn’t sound very bloody likely, does it?
Parade magazine (1968)
“Love reading Cupid’s hieroglyphic message.” Anyway, she’s lovely, even if I don’t know what the hieroglyphic message is or what this whole thing is a reference to.
“Filtering through a latticework of foliage, the sun beats an intricate mobile tapestry…” Oh, you’re not even reading this, are you? You’re just looking at the pictures of ‘Laura Cummings’ from Fiesta magazine (1970), aren’t you?
Ann Belling from the Cavalier magazine feature “Organic Ann: Ecology’s Darling” (1971).
“Later, while munching a carrot from her own back yard, Ann told us that she really believes that the organic, natural-food life style will sweep the country. Within a few years, everyone will be growing their own vegetables and fruit and harvesting and grinding their own corn and grain. ‘People will be a lot better off, and they’ll certainly be a lot happier,’ she said. We say, if back to nature and natural food will make a lot of girls look more like you, Ann—right on, sister, right on!”
Yeah, right on, sister! Munch that carrot. Grind that corn.
Kitty Peek, from a late 60s or early 70s Fiesta magazine. Why don’t I ever get to meet girls named “Kitty Peek”?