Monday

My Lady's Putt is so Cute - Antique Infographic Evokes Publishing's Past

While The Babe may not have approved, I'm quite sure "My Lady's Putt"... the humorous illustration at left... provoked ample amusement in 1930 when it was published in Punch magazine's yearly Almanack.  After all, the British weekly was the era's go-to source for sophisticated satirical humor, and competitive golf for women was still... relatively speaking... in its infancy.

The illustration is comprised of a series of whimsical golf drawings by Frank Reynolds - a British artist who often focused on golf - and each sketch features an individual woman and her own... um... unique putting style.

One woman holds a cigarette in one hand while casually putting with the other, another more determined lady reads her putts on the ground, spidermanwoman style.  Golf fashions of the day are illustrated along with the idiosyncratic putting strokes.

One can easily imagine the laughter, as upper class men passed the popular magazine around in the cloistered drawing rooms of London's venerable gentlemen's clubs.  Though many of those men no doubt recognized their own putting style somewhere in the illustration, that wouldn't have been discussed in the security of those segregated bastions.




My Lady's Putt... a modern version of it... would be unlikely to be published anywhere today. Women's golf has become so widely played - on such a high professional level - that the drawing wouldn't have much of a point. In addition, with the demise of print media, humorous illustration is now something of a dying art.  Like narrative journalism and sports cartooning, it doesn't translate well to the backlit screens where new media resides, and the short deadlines and declining budgets that digital publishers work within make the detailed illustrations of the past an impossibility.  That, I'm afraid will be a great loss for future generations as a uniquely evocative kind of visual story telling disappears.

5 comments:

  1. there is a reason tony places like newport RI were significant in early american GOLF and the uber-rich really were a leisure class, not like todays work-a-holic billionaires PLUS lawn bowling was a similarly popular outdoor activity - seems if the participant also could smoke and drink during the competition the game would catch on

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  2. I've got to admit, I miss the old days.

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  3. and of course the BEST part about the olde country club mentality is "waletbet promo bonus 100" would never be allowed in.......yes boys and girls, EXCLUSIVE access wasn't such a bad theory before it became politically INcorrect it DID have its purpose

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  4. Violation of 14-1b alert: The lady in the upper right is "Diegeling," a form of anchoring named after the famed golfer of the 1920s and 1930s Leo Diegel. Smoking while putting will be legal as long as no majors are won.

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