comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1922-01-21 · page 7 of 36

Judge — January 21, 1922 — page 7: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — January 21, 1922 — page 7: Judge, 1922-01-21

What you’re looking at

# Judge Magazine Cartoon Analysis This is a fashion satire cartoon by René Vincent showing two women discussing veils as romantic attractions. The woman on the left wears an ornate, heavily patterned veil covering her face, while the woman on the right wears a lighter dress with decorative embroidery. The joke uses a fishing metaphor: veils are compared to nets that "catch" men like fish. The punchline suggests that veils—fashionable accessories meant to enhance beauty—actually work as traps, implying men are foolish creatures easily ensnared by feminine allure and mystery. This reflects early 20th-century anxieties about women's fashion, femininity as deception, and gender dynamics. The cartoon presents women's fashion choices cynically, as calculated tools of attraction rather than genuine style preferences.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

Drawn especially for Judge by RENE “Do you think veils attract the men?” “Well, many a poor fish has been caught in a net!” comicbooks.com