Soon after World War One women got their right to vote, this sparked a new age of change for women. Women were now able to be in more respectable working roles, and not be a stereotypical housewife. The average working girl was young and full of radical ideas; they were much different than the older generation and wanted to soak up all the opportunities presented to them. Because of this new found freedom woman experimented with how they lived their everyday lives. An image was credited from the writings of F. Scott Fitzgerald and the drawings of John Held Jr., featuring skinny, stylized women in funny situations. This brought about women wearing clothing that consisted of dresses and skirts that hugged their skin, using lipstick, hats and galoshes, and wearing their hair in short, Bobbed haircuts. Magazines like Vogue and Harper's Bazaar published fashion tips on how to live and look like these women. These young trend setters were titled Flappers; this was because their galoshes would make flapping sounds as they walked. There were three classifications of Flappers: semi-flapper, the flapper, the super-flapper. Most women, by the end of the next ten years, would be classified as a semi-flapper as the flapper style and behaviors were gradually shifting into a more mainstream life.