

This cute little dress straddles the line between respectable wife and beautiful woman. Not that a woman couldn't be both at the time, as Betty clearly demonstrates. Just that the costume has typically home-y details, like the pin-tucking and the black trim, but it also looks just sophisticated enough to impress the ladies. She's "housewife dressed up" which is different from "husband dressed up" and "in the city dressed up." This outfit says "I'm respectable and well-appointed, but not in a vulgar way." Her Main Line roots are showing here. Remember she wore white to the country club and white to visit her father when he had his stroke.



Okay, this goes a little beyond "housewife pretty." It's still respectable, but it's also meant to make her look as good as possible. Even though it looks to be a simple cotton dress, the fit, the print, and the detailing (LOVE those shades), make her look amazing. Easily one of her top 5 outfits of the show, which is notable, because most of her more memorable outfits are expensive "in the city" getups. The fact that this is so simple yet looks so spectacular on her tells you how much looking good for Henry while looking respectable in the eyes of her neighbors was a goal for her - and one she accomplished with typical Betty competence. She knows the rules and she knows how she looks and she's working her assets to the hilt within those boundaries.

Okay, it's probably going a little far to say she's "feeling herself up" (although Betty's capable of a little spin-cycle masturbation as we've seen in the past). It's not so much that she's fantasizing in a sexual manner (although she is partially doing that); it's that she's enjoying the idea of being the type of woman that Henry sees her as; the delicate type who needs to be protected from the sun and needs a fainting couch. Don shuts her out constantly and Henry dotes on her. This ruffled and slightly old-fashioned floral sundress illustrates how she wants to be seen, even when no one is looking at her. She likes the idea of being a delicate woman that deserves to be fussed over.
Season 3 Episode 8 - "Souvenir"



This is exactly the outfit she wore when she went home to Philadelphia after her father's stroke (different scarf, though). Again, this is her "respectable" look. Good enough for Daddy and good enough for the Junior League. And again, it not only says "respectable," it says "affluent." We could get all Freudian here and point out that she's trying to impress Henry with the same dress she used to impress her father, but honestly, it doesn't need to be that deep. She looks good in this dress and she's projecting exactly the respectable, moneyed image she wants to.

Sometimes, you can just hear the thought process in the costume design. "Let's make Betty look like a movie star here." And she does, calling to mind not just the stable of Hitchcock blondes she resembles, but also any of a number of Doris Day types starring in a continental romance film of the period.



From Doris Day to Anita Ekberg in one trip to an Italian beauty parlor. She, of course, looks amazing and we can only imagine how much fun Janie Bryant had putting this look together. One needs only to look at, oh ... every other thing every other woman ever wore on the show, just to see how radical a departure this was from the working class to upper class styles worn by all the woman in America at the time. This is pure cutting edge Italian style, from the outrageous bouffant to the heavy eye makeup to the long beads and dangling earrings, and like a lot of classic Italian styles, it reads as pure sex all the way. Compare her look here to the respectable Ossining drag she's forced into back home. These styles will make their way to American shores within the next couple of years, but Betty probably never got the chance to dress this way again. By the time heavy eye makeup and beehives filtered down to suburban America, she would have considered herself too old to partake.


She looks stunning here ("Look how pretty Mommy is," Don says to the kids when she emerges from the bathroom) and this would have read as expensive and very of the moment stylish. But compare how demure she looks in comparison to her lusty continental drag of the previous episode. The tightly pulled back hair and ice tones of the dress illustrate her mindset here. She's cold and withdrawn but still beautiful in that way that turns every head in the room. Very much a "look but don't touch" look.
Season 3 Episode 11 - "The Gypsy and the Hobo"

She's wearing the pants here. We've said this before, but you can only get away with that kind of costuming trick in this particular time period, when women could wear pants but only rarely. She's a column of uncharacteristically dark color here; an unforgiving wall of anger. Not at all coincidentally, she matches exactly the walls of Don's office. Janie Bryant has tied all the wives to the colors of their homes, but it's of special significance that this time Betty isn't tied to her kitchen or dining room; she's tied to the one room of her house she wasn't allowed into.
Season 3 Episode 12 - "The Grown-Ups"

Another ice-cold look from Betty. It's interesting that after falling for Henry and after realizing the sparkling and sophisticated dolce vita of her Rome trip was a shallow fantasy, she starts wearing more mature-looking outfits. Henry's in politics and he's a bit older than Don, which means he's significantly older than Betty. She's already started dressing like his wife.
Season 3 Episode 13 - "Shut the Door. Have a Seat."

And just like that, Betty's dressing like she's ten years older than her age. It's a nice-looking suit and it almost certainly cost her enough, but the entire effect here is to look as mature, respectable, and serious as possible. The hair and makeup are considerably scaled back. Pretty, but not too pretty. This is serious business and she's determined to move forward, but still apprehensive. Women didn't just get out of unsatisfying marriages back then and she's aware of how potentially dangerous this all is.

She's halfway between two worlds. She's got the kicky little plaid pants that tie her to the home and make her seem modern and confident, but she's wearing a very respectable blouse and cardigan that tend to read as mature.

Again, respectable and mature. She's moving on and she's not the trophy wife or the child anymore.

Mature. Respectable. We hate to be so repetitive, but she's not giving us much else to talk about. It's at least in a bright, optimistic color which might be a reflection of a tiny part of her, but the goal here was to ensure that no one would ever mistake for her anything but the wife of the older man sitting next to her. She may be doing something schocking and scandalous by the standards of the day, but by God, she's going to look respectable doing it.
And that's it! We did it, kittens. A look at every major costume worn by every major female character from the first three seasons of the show. Tonight is the premiere of Season 4 and you can expect to see our recap and review of the episode at some point after midnight, EST. Later in the week, we'll do a Mad Style post looking at the styles from the episode and throughout the season (hopefully about once a week), we're going to continue looking back, with posts on the styles of all the major male characters, as well as whatever ladies we never got to, like all those hookers and strippers and bad girls who made memorable appearances.
And if all THAT Mad Men material isn't enough for you, be sure to bookmark Basket of Kisses for all your Mad Men needs.
[Screencaps: projectrungay.blogspot.com - Photo Credit: amctv.com/originals/madmen]
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Labels: Mad Men, Mad Style, Television