We Can Think of Better Uses for that Hairbrush!
Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2024 6:26 am
Two cartoons now from 1955 that feature hairbrushes, which used to be sold door-to-door amazing as that sounds today.
The first of these is by Martin Filchock, whom we've seen before several times, I think most recently with a sexual innuendo cartoon on this very thread earlier this year. He also did a fly-swatter spanking over on the main site. The woman in this one is wearing either lingerie or a two-piece bathing suit that showcases her rear end, and she should have been spanked by her husband with the hairbrush the salesman left on the floor in his haste to depart:

From Nifty (September 1955).
In the second, the sales person is female, and decides to use her female assets to keep the customer from closing his door. This gag is based around the old "foot in the door" technique, which could have been easily refuted by taking the hairbrush and applying it to that portion of her anatomy holding the door open:

From Nifty (September 1955). The artist's signature is illegible. "Buller" brushes is of course a play on Fuller Brushes, the brand that was sold door-to-door.
The first of these is by Martin Filchock, whom we've seen before several times, I think most recently with a sexual innuendo cartoon on this very thread earlier this year. He also did a fly-swatter spanking over on the main site. The woman in this one is wearing either lingerie or a two-piece bathing suit that showcases her rear end, and she should have been spanked by her husband with the hairbrush the salesman left on the floor in his haste to depart:

From Nifty (September 1955).
In the second, the sales person is female, and decides to use her female assets to keep the customer from closing his door. This gag is based around the old "foot in the door" technique, which could have been easily refuted by taking the hairbrush and applying it to that portion of her anatomy holding the door open:

From Nifty (September 1955). The artist's signature is illegible. "Buller" brushes is of course a play on Fuller Brushes, the brand that was sold door-to-door.