The Playboy Playmates of 1967 captured the magazine in the polished sophistication of the late 60s, when Playboy's centerfold style balanced classic studio glamour with the freer cultural mood that was reshaping fashion, beauty, and sexuality. The year opened with Surrey Marshe in January, followed by Kim Farber, Fran Gerard, Gwen Wong, Anne Randall, and Joey Gibson. Together, the first half of the lineup reflected the elegant Playboy image of the period: soft lighting, poised beauty, Bunny-era polish, international accents, and the refined sensuality that made the monthly Playmate feature one of the magazine's defining traditions.
The second half of 1967 brought together DeDe Lind, Angela Dorian, Reagan Wilson, Kaya Christian, and Lynn Winchell, giving the year a vivid mix of American charm, actress-model ambition, pop-culture appeal, and late-60s star quality. DeDe Lind became one of the most memorable Playmates of the decade, while Angela Dorian, born Victoria Vetri, added a strong Hollywood connection through her later screen career. Across the year, the 1967 Playmates reflected Playboy's place in a media world shaped by magazines, television, Playboy Clubs, changing fashion, and the growing confidence of the sexual revolution.
One of the defining figures of the 1967 class was Angela Dorian, Playboy's September Playmate, who would later be named Playboy's 1968 Playmate of the Year. Her appearance gave the lineup its strongest legacy connection and helped carry Playboy's late-60s glamour toward the more liberated visual language of the 70s. Together, the Playboy Playmates of 1967 represented a stylish transitional class: elegant, playful, culturally aware, and full of the polished but increasingly expressive glamour that defined Playboy at the height of the 60s.