I found these iron-on transfers at an estate sale last week and bought them purely because they feature magazines that I love. It's getting harder and harder to find good uncut copies of The Designer and The Delineator anymore. In fact, I also bought a few loose fashion illustrations from this same sale--cut from the pages of The Delineator of 1915.
The dress below is kind of deceptive, as when you actually make the skirt, it is quite a bit wider than that. I made a dress from a 1919 pattern, so I found this out. Ankle-hobbling dresses were all the rage in about 1913, but women soon learned it was really hard to get around in them. In fact, the woman I bought the lace from that I used to embellish said 1919 dress was in her '90's at the time, in the 1980's, and described a dress she had bought in 1913 which was the height of fashion. She couldn't lift her foot high enough to get on the streetcar! She was mightily embarrassed to have to hike her skirt to do it.
Here I am in the 1919 dress and vintage hat and a good case of sunburn.
You can see one of my prized 1929 McCall's patterns in the background and a Singer bird card.