The pin up art of George Petty is a very iconic. Its classic pin-up girls are very recognizable, and is considered one of the leading pinup artists of the time gold.
As Vargas and Elvgren, Petty had a very long race. A master of the airbrush technique, which began to create images of pin-up calendar 1926, and his career lasted until 1970.
He created the most iconic image pin up girl of all time, The Petty Girl. Appeared first time in 1933 and continued until 1956. Petty had done during his years as an illustrator for Esquire magazine, and she became the first teacher Centerfolds.

In my opinion, the vintage pin up by George Petty Girls can not cope well today, and I can only think that is because of the strange smile stylized stuck in each of their faces, and their fetish for ballet slippers.
I find it disturbing that at first, but they are starting to grow on me, and I think because they are so technically perfect. I like his insistence on a white background and the fact that some elements are not rendered with as much detail as shoes and other child elements, both in its parts.
Anyway, the girl was like a pin-up girls popular World War II, artists were commissioned paint on the nose art bomber. The most famous girl was painted in the Memphis Belle.
After moving to Esquire, the teacher continued to produce programs pin-up, and had a long Top pin-up girl art for Ridgid Tool Company. The pin up girls who participate in these giant pieces of tools are some of his works of the most famous and unusual!
Stacy Lande is a Los Angeles based artist, and her pin up art is most often placed in the lowbrow catagory. Her book, THE RED BOX, from Last Gasp press, features introductions from Robert Williams and Frank Kozik. Stacy has had a lifelong obsession with pin up girls, and her erotic paintings explore the more allegorical side of pinups. Her subjects are femme fatales and devil girls, and her fascination with the succubus has prompted her work to be described as "predatory pinups". Stacy's paintings have been featured in magazine articles, notably Juxtapoz, Detour, and Hot Rod Deluxe; films, notably Gone in 60 Seconds starring Angelina Jolie and Nicholas cage; and art books, such as Weirdo Deluxe, from Chronicle Books, and Vicious, Delcious, and Ambitious, from Schiffer Books.