cocktail dress 1940 Retro Stage V-Neck Pearl A-line Velvet Vintage Dress Wine Red
SKU: 31335037938
cocktail dress 1940

cocktail dress 1940 Retro Stage V-Neck Pearl A-line Velvet Vintage Dress Wine Red

Sale price$22.84 Regular price$25.38
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Size: 4

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Description

cocktail dress 1940 Retro Stage V-Neck Pearl A-line Velvet Vintage Dress Wine RedThis Retro Stage green 1940s deep v neck pearl velvet dress brings a clear 1940s feeling to the outfit, with enough charm for photos, dinners, and dressed up plans. Composition: 100% Polyester Stretch: Slight Stretch Closure Type: Back Concealed Zipper Length: Knee Length Package Content: 1 x Women's Dress Care Instructions: 1. Machine wash cold 2. Dry in the shade There are 5 sizes (S M L XL XXL) available. Please allow 1 2cm differences due to

This Retro Stage green 1940s deep v-neck pearl velvet dress brings a clear 1940s feeling to the outfit, with enough charm for photos, dinners, and dressed-up plans.


Composition: 100% Polyester
Stretch: Slight Stretch
Closure Type: Back Concealed Zipper
Length: Knee Length
Package Content: 1 x Women's Dress
Care Instructions:
1. Machine wash cold
2. Dry in the shade

There are 5 sizes (S/M/L/XL/XXL) available. Please allow 1-2cm differences due to manual measurement. Thanks for understanding! (All measurements in cm and please note 1cm=0.39inch)

Note:

The Hollow to Floor measurement of our standard dresses already includes 2 inches(ca.5 cm) extra to fit high heels.

Usually, you need to add some margin from the garment measurement to the body measurement.

This is a general size suggestion, please choose the size according to the size chart of each product.


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SKU: 31335037938

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Jon Parshall
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
Groundbreaking Work!
Format: Hardcover
The first thing to note here is the author is trilingual. He's Polish by birth, writing very credibly in his second language (English), and using his Nihongo to translate Japanese source materials into English for the first time. Wow! As a historian myself, I only wish I had those kind of language skills. The second thing I'll say is that I learned a lot from the book. I've never seen many of the details the author had dug up. He's doing the same sort of thing that Tony Tully and I did in Shattered Sword--using the Japanese air group records, and Senshi Sosho, as well as more modern sources from Japanese historians like Mori Shiro--to paint a much richer picture of the Japanese side of the battle. And in some ways he's doing it better, because his language skills are so formidable that he was able to look at more Japanese source material than we were. Bravo Zulu. An example: for years American historians have portrayed the placement of Shoho in front of the Japanese invasion force as either 1) a bait force to lure the Americans away from Japan's main carrier force, or 2) at the very least an indication of extreme Japanese hubris, by sticking a lone light carrier's neck out waaaay too far. It turns out that there were a number of Japanese staff officers that were appalled at the dangers Shoho was being exposed to, and lobbied for her inclusion in the main carrier force instead (which would have made a lot more sense, frankly, and was a detail I hadn't known before.) But those officers were overridden in the name of keeping at least some air cover near the invasion force. What this demonstrates is that even here, at the very beginning of the war, the Japanese were already over their skis in terms of the fragility of their air power. All in all, Piegzik's book is a very welcome contribution to the English literature on the Pacific War. He has also written what is (from all accounts) a fine series on the Indian Ocean raid that I need to pick up as well. I am really looking forward to his continued publications in the field.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2026
C
Verified Purchase
Chorzepa
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
An excellent book
Format: Hardcover
An excellent book, based on Japanese documents—offering, for the first time, such a detailed account of the first aircraft carrier battle, presented from the Japanese perspective. It covers every Japanese aircraft involved, as well as the fates of their naval aircrews. A must-read for anyone interested in World War II in the Pacific.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2026
J
Verified Purchase
james
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent book.
Format: Audiobook
History of WWII. Great research.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2026
L
Verified Purchase
LynneC
Boise, US
★★★★★ 4
Good Book, not Parshall though
Format: Kindle
The author uses more Japanese terms than any similar book that I've read but uses western naming conventions for Japanese people. I don't quite know what to think. Good diagrams.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2025
R
Verified Purchase
Robert K. B
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Japanese mindset Coral Sea
Format: Kindle
This book gave me fresh insights to the Battle of the Coral Sea. I feel like I have an idea as to what was going through the Japanese minds. Well written. He make it easy to follow each step of the battle.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2026

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