Cigarette Holder French, c. 1925 The Victoria & Albert Museum |
By the late 1920s to early 1930s, to see a woman smoking in public was considered socially acceptable. The twenty years following the First World War (1914-1918) saw a social revolution wherein the accepted roles of women were changing. During the Great War, women had been drafted into the workforce to cover for the many men who were away at the front. Once the war was over, women did not return to the more passive roles in which they had been cast previously and enjoyed increased political and social freedoms—smoking included. But, a proper lady would not smoke in the same way that a man did. It wasn’t ladylike to hold the stub of a cigarette between her fingers—especially since doing so would spoil her gloves. The cigarette holder soon became an important accessory for a progressive woman.
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