Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Well-dressed children watch toys in the shop window of a department store displaying Christmas decorations on December 11, 1946. AFP - Getty Images F.W. Woolworth Company: 1947
1960s décor refers to a distinct style of interior decoration that became prominent in the 1960s and early 1970s. Green, (such as pea green and drab), yellow, pink, and orange (such as peach and saffron) hues were popular for wallpaper, carpets, curtains, sofas, chair seats, and cushions, often with patterns or bright flowers.
[1] [2] The store was also known for its lavish Christmas decorations as well as the annual Nativity scene it sponsored in Centennial Park. [3] [4] In 1960, Harveys, along with several other downtown Nashville stores, was the site of sit-in demonstrations, in which local college students protested against racially segregated lunch-counters. [5]
Changing times, changing shopping trends lead to changing traditions. By the 1960s, '70s and '80s, Longstreth said, department stores, like the downtowns that once held them, were changing.
Tom Keogh designed the annual Christmas windows for Galeries Lafayette department store in Paris during the late 1940s and early 1950s. The Fenwick (department store) in Newcastle is known locally for its Christmas window display. Since 1971 there has been a Christmas display in the shop's windows, and people come from near and far to look at them.
Get organizers for all of your Christmas decorations on sale now for as low as $10 AOL This foldable storage shelf is on sale for under $60: 'It is like a magic act'
B. Altman's Fifth Avenue store, which is now home to The Graduate Center of The City University of New York, Church Pension Group, and Oxford University Press Altman's store on Sixth Avenue in the Ladies' Mile shopping district. B. Altman and Company was a luxury department store and chain, founded in 1865 in New York City, New York, by ...
G. Fox & Co. was a large department store that originated in Hartford, Connecticut. It was the largest privately held department store in the nation when it was sold in 1965 to the May Department Stores Company. In 1993, May Department stores phased out the G. Fox & Co. brand, converting them into the Boston-based department store Filene's.