Collection: Debs
Women’s cigarettes from the first half of the 20th century often emphasized femininity. Perhaps the logic was that if a woman wasn’t interested in femininity, then presumably she would be fine with a cigarette targeting men. For example, early Marlboros featured “red beauty tips to match your lips and fingertips” and “ivory tips to protect the lips.” Similarly, Benson & Hedges released Debs Rose Tips, which included a red tip to avoid lipstick smudging and to avoid “unsightly” lipstick stains on cigarette butts which, supposedly, disturb “masculine sensibilities.” Quotes from the ads, such as “Men like women to smoke Debs” reveal the centrality of sex appeal and sexual attraction in cigarette advertising, even as early as the 1940s. The ads claim that “men like women to smoke Debs for nearly all men have an innate dislike of a cigarette with a lipstick-smeared end and lips with half-erased color.” If this statement sounds ridiculous to women, the ads poo-poo these doubts by explaining that “A woman would have to be a man to know how intensely he dislikes a smeared cigarette and messy lips—for he never will tell her.”
Though the ads do claim Debs are mild, they also claim that the cigarettes contain a “mannish tobacco blend that does not steal from taste to achieve mildness.” In fact, the ads clam that this “mannish blend” goes “straight to the spot of smoking pleasure.” The cigarette claims to have it all – allowing a woman to present an outward appearance of femininity and gentleness, while secretly enjoying the pleasures of a man.
Women’s cigarettes from the first half of the 20th century often emphasized femininity. Perhaps the logic was that if a woman wasn’t interested in femininity, then presumably she would be fine with a cigarette targeting men. For example, early Marlboros featured “red beauty tips to match your lips and fingertips” and “ivory tips to protect the lips.” Similarly, Benson & Hedges released Debs Rose Tips, which included a red tip to avoid lipstick smudging and to avoid “unsightly” lipstick stains on cigarette butts which, supposedly, disturb “masculine sensibilities.” Quotes from the ads, such as “Men like women to smoke Debs” reveal the centrality of sex appeal and sexual attraction in cigarette advertising, even as early as the 1940s. The ads claim that “men like women to smoke Debs for nearly all men have an innate dislike of a cigarette with a lipstick-smeared end and lips with half-erased color.” If this statement sounds ridiculous to women, the ads poo-poo these doubts by explaining that “A woman would have to be a man to know how intensely he dislikes a smeared cigarette and messy lips—for he never will tell her.”
Though the ads do claim Debs are mild, they also claim that the cigarettes contain a “mannish tobacco blend that does not steal from taste to achieve mildness.” In fact, the ads clam that this “mannish blend” goes “straight to the spot of smoking pleasure.” The cigarette claims to have it all – allowing a woman to present an outward appearance of femininity and gentleness, while secretly enjoying the pleasures of a man.