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Published December 1, 1936Mademoiselle's December 1936 cover fittingly shows an aprés-ski scene to illustrate the magazine's features on Christmas gifts, snow fashions, and fiction. Jean Coquillot's sketch shows a woman mountainside wearing a lively printed blue scarf tied over her hair and a wide smile on her face.Photo licensed from the Condé Nast Collection, home of The New Yorker, Vogue, Vanity Fair and other popular brands. Find this and other artwork at the Condé Nast Collection. This premium giclee print, an upgrade from the standard giclee print, is produced on thick (310 gsm), textured watercolor paper made from alpha cellulous wood pulp that is acid free. It shares the same vivid colors, accuracy, and exceptional resolution that make giclee prints the standard for museums and galleries around the world. Giclee (French for 'to spray') is a printing process where millions of ink droplets are sprayed onto a high-quality paper. The smooth transitions of color gradients make giclee prints appear much more realistic than other prints.
Published December 1, 1936Mademoiselle's December 1936 cover fittingly shows an aprés-ski scene to illustrate the magazine's features on Christmas gifts, snow fashions, and fiction. Jean Coquillot's sketch shows a woman mountainside wearing a lively printed blue scarf tied over her hair and a wide smile on her face.Photo licensed from the Condé Nast Collection, home of The New Yorker, Vogue, Vanity Fair and other popular brands. Find this and other artwork at the Condé Nast Collection. This premium giclee print, an upgrade from the standard giclee print, is produced on thick (310 gsm), textured watercolor paper made from alpha cellulous wood pulp that is acid free. It shares the same vivid colors, accuracy, and exceptional resolution that make giclee prints the standard for museums and galleries around the world. Giclee (French for 'to spray') is a printing process where millions of ink droplets are sprayed onto a high-quality paper. The smooth transitions of color gradients make giclee prints appear much more realistic than other prints.
Published December 1, 1936Mademoiselle's December 1936 cover fittingly shows an aprés-ski scene to illustrate the magazine's features on Christmas gifts, snow fashions, and fiction. Jean Coquillot's sketch shows a woman mountainside wearing a lively printed blue scarf tied over her hair and a wide smile on her face.Photo licensed from the Condé Nast Collection, home of The New Yorker, Vogue, Vanity Fair and other popular brands. Find this and other artwork at the Condé Nast Collection. This premium giclee print, an upgrade from the standard giclee print, is produced on thick (310 gsm), textured watercolor paper made from alpha cellulous wood pulp that is acid free. It shares the same vivid colors, accuracy, and exceptional resolution that make giclee prints the standard for museums and galleries around the world. Giclee (French for 'to spray') is a printing process where millions of ink droplets are sprayed onto a high-quality paper. The smooth transitions of color gradients make giclee prints appear much more realistic than other prints.