Colors and Gender Bias: The History Behind 'Pink it and Shrink it'

Written by roxanamurariu | Published 2021/08/20
Tech Story Tags: parenting | discrimination | gender-stereotypes | gender-bias | gender-equality | sexism | marketing | design-and-color

TLDR Until the late 19th century, young boys and girls were traditionally dressed in white dresses until five or six years. Around the 1920s, magazines started to advertise pink for boys and blue for girls aggressively. The reason is that pink is a strong gender identifier, and blue is the default color for male babies. In the 1950s, the First Lady of the United States in the U.S. was fond of pink clothing that happened around the 70s – perhaps not pink, perhaps because pink, became more suitable for boys, and girls.via the TL;DR App

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Written by roxanamurariu | Web developer writing essays about mindset, productivity, tech and others. Personal blog: https://roxanamurariu.com/
Published by HackerNoon on 2021/08/20