Gaylene leaps from mid-century Colorado nursery rosters like a sun-kissed marigold dancing in a flamenco swirl. Pronounced GAY-leen (/ˈɡeɪˌlin/), this female given name is a breezy American coinage with English roots—melding the playful zing of Gail with the graceful -lene flourish—yet it hums with Latin warmth, rolling off the tongue like a gentle bolero under a rose-draped balcony. It sashayed onto hospital charts in 1949 at #94 with five newborns, and by 1957 it still sparkled at #108 with eight little girls claiming its melody; through the early ’60s it held steady among Colorado’s top 120, a testament to its joyful, sunlit charm—honestly, a name that seems on a first-name basis with sunshine. Gaylene evokes an era of mid-century optimism, painting images of hopeful parents, hearts alight with dreams, welcoming a daughter whose name feels as bright and embracing as a summer’s dawn.
| Gaylene Preston - |
| Gaylene Sciascia - |