

A jar of Pond’s dry skin cream can be seen on the vanity of the protagonist (Shelley Winters).
Thanks to Alessandra for submitting this post.


A jar of Pond’s dry skin cream can be seen on the vanity of the protagonist (Shelley Winters).
Thanks to Alessandra for submitting this post.



Young Jackie (Mallory Wanecque) finds some make-up items belonging to her mother. Among them, there’s a bottle of Guerlain Mad Eyes liquid eyeliner.

There are several hair styling products by Paul Mitchell at the hair salon where the protagonist gets his hair dyed.

In the screencap above we can see bottles of Awapuhi Moisture Mist hydrating spray.


There are bottles of Shampoo Three, which removes chlorine and impurities.


There’s a bottle of Wipe Out, too. This is a product that prevents and removes colour stains.


Last but not least, a can of L’Oreal Professionel Alpiane hairspray.

In a season filled with chaos and violence, Karen Wheeler (Cara Buono) is the only character who gives us a short moment of relax — nice music (ABBA’s Fernando is playing on the small stereo she keeps on the bathroom counter), a glass of white wine and a bubble bath.

On the same counter there’s a can of Aqua Net super-hold hairspray.

Half-hidden among other bottles, there’s a Guerlain flacon montre with a gold stopper. This is a historically accurate choice, because this specific bottle was introduced on the market in 1972. The front sticker is not visible, so it’s impossible to tell what fragrance it contains.



The product she generously pours into her bath tub is Avon Bubble Bath in Soft Pink.

There are two interesting bottles on Isabella’s vanity.

Both fragrances are by Prince Matchabelli. There’s no way to know exactly what the small crown bottle contained, because the same bottle housed several fragrances by the same brand.

The taller crown-topped bottle housed the Duchess of York eau de toilette, so maybe the other bottle contained the eau de parfum version. This white floral fragrance was launched in 1934.

In another scene other two fragrances join the Duchess of York tall bottle.

The one on the left is a fragrance by Charbert. It could be Breathless (launched in 1933), Grand Prix (launched in 1938) or Fabulous (launched in 1944), because all of them were housed in the same bottle.

The last bottle is Lucien Lelong Sirocco, a musky powdery fragrance launched in 1934.
Thanks to Daniel Roldán for submitting this post and for the ids.