Da-Dandy is a photomontage piece that was done in 1919. This piece includes women dressed up in different kinds of fashionable clothing that overlap each other in the piece. By looking at the photomontage, one can see that these are all different women, although their style of black and darker colors makes them all look similar. These women are looked at as the 1970’s version of a female dandy. A dandy is a man who cares a lot about the clothing he wears and his appearance. The women in this piece are looked at as female dandies because of their pearls, nice jewelry, fancy hats, velvet dresses, and heels. In this piece, one can see that each woman in the photomontage has one bigger eye which resembles and eye with a monocle. This is tied to Dadaism, because Höch stated that she remembered the monocle was the sign for the Dada, or male dandy. Höch seems to have always tied in Dadaism in her pieces, and directly incorporated women into them. The color scheme of the piece is centralized in the middle with the women being mostly all black and white, while the background of the women is collaged with different accented pieces of yellow, red, and blue. The women are each doing something different in the piece, but the top woman seems to be almost kissing the women below her neck (Lavin).