![Picture](/uploads/2/5/3/3/25337524/4056409.jpg)
This picture shows women as well changing their life. The fight for women to get new and more important roles in the world would only be fulfilled if there were enough people. More and more women began to support the movement.
As ideas in education and the overall way of life began to change after the war, women began to change their lives after. Women began to challenge the economic, political, social and economic boundaries, these women were called flappers (Lapansky-234). Women became more vital outside the home. After suffrage became a law the National Woman's Party along with a lot of the groups that previously fought for suffrage, began to fight for overall equal rights between men and women. A lot of women wore shorted dresses, put on more makeup, danced to latest dance crazes, and believed they had the equal rights that they were fighting for. Women even had new haircuts called the “bob”. It was a short haircut that was considered to be very risky at the time and was making a huge statement about women challenging the social norms. Change came slowly and steadily and the flapper became the symbol of change for women. Women began to get new jobs that typically men had. Women became engineers, athletes, pilots, and took up jobs in the United States government. Dishwashers and vacuum cleaners made life easier for women and made life in the household easier for women, especially as more appliances were made. Women would say “live longer, less kids, marry later”. They say it gave them more time to pursue their interests. Women wanted a change, and they got it (Sauro).