Oshawa Daily Times, 21 Jun 1930, p. 10

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mrreme ra -- TS Si ------ au FO ------------------------------ JY A -------- fh --------------EN y Frock a -------.-H. of LALITION -- Tr -- ohoer I Te SR Occasion We Are Slaves To Type, But We Rejoice In A Fascinating Bondage. Harmony Is The Keynote Of Every Ensem: ble Symphony, And The Notes Are Those BE ------------TE IA a i LA A a s For Eve Srstm-- » Presentin "Our Immediate Concern Is The Sum- * mer Dress, Its Lines, Color and Fabric. * Already There Are Signs Of Change Creep- "* "ing Into The Mode, And They Serve To we Er ra m-------- : ' a Add Piquancy To Our Newest Frocks, The Fall Mode Will Soon Cast Its Shadows Before is no reason for us te think of fall fashions, even \ though they are the chief ! m of the designer, It is warm weather, and we need and demand warm-weather materials, the colors that are mont affective against a summer backsround and the lines that the resort season laid the foundation for, If a little inter in the season we find a certain type of frock necessary, then we shall wonsider fall possibilities that It . may do service at the beginning of the new season. After all, one does have to follow svery turn of fashion wheel to be well dress- md. There ls a wide latitude, and longitude, tee, In the fashions 'of the hour, and we ean give due con. sideration to the type that best be- comes Na-~that is, the type within pe, There may be no breaking of the genera! rules laid down for appropriateness to occasion. Matevials Ave Provocative They lead us te indiseretions se far amour budget iv concerned, for * the wools are soft and colorful, #ilis, arepes and the sheer fabrics are beautifully woven and pattern od, and the cettons and linens de- mand our consideration, Perhaps there are leaders In the material aworld, and if you would have the smartest of the smart, de not for- ' t tweed, printed silk, chiffon, angtung silk, handkerchief linen, Ynoe and the newly popular fiwiss wnd organdie musline, «Georgette Is Important In the 'mode and Inces qualify, specifying flouncing as ultra smart, Even though it is summer, black is the Isader when it comes to colors, It is featured for either day or evening wear and you will surely Inglude one black frock In your wardrobe As to colors in general, they are as would be expected, the soft pastels, clear tones, white, and lovely com. Pinations in printed materials, Only shades are new on the color eard- and names! Lines Are More Important But this does not mean that you Are not to give proper attention to eoler, for much of the success of Jour frocks depends upon it, Just es ean do more to really the effect you desire than any other one thing, You must avoid' fussiness, for yeu will |ike #0 many details that you will want them all! Easy enough to list them---ruffles, flounces, peplums, beleros, capes, eapelets, sleeves of every length and description, but to choose! Some of the details are useful 88 in a oapelet model of flowered | chiffon, It marks ite waistline with & narrow belt, widens Ite skirt be. low a yoke that is pointed at the wides and omits sleeves. But re- vers widen away from the V-neek- line~~there is a wee vestes of white, inte a capelet that deepens to the waistline in back, BSueh a frock is suitable for the formal afternoon ocoasion, dining Inferm- ally on roof or at home and for the summer theatre party, Naming The Shirtwaist Frook It is an established fashion, this sport frock, and it harks back te the days of goed Queen Vietoria for its Inspiration, Sports were far more genteel" perhaps-~bieyeling, tennis and eroquet, and the very frooks we copy 'were far less eolor: | ful, smart and ohie, You may have A shirtwalat froek In erepe, silk, linen, pique, any sumber of fab. ries, and It may be short sleeved or sleeveless, And perhaps it will have shorts to mateh, & practices) idea fports enthusiasts endorses the | frock of cotton mesh, seen every. | where during the winter at Palm Reach These frocks are to be | had In the favorite pinks and blues, as well an white and the al« wayn-conl green shades, and are one-plece or tuek-in fashion, Ten- nis frocks are offered and they fea. ture the little cardigan jacket, matehing or, If the frock is white, nan attractive color contrast, © A plaue frock, worn with a pique Jacket in malge, green or blue Lovely Pastel Toned Frocks They are pffered, not alone for sports wear, but for afternoon uses, and they are hand-embroidered, fagotied or. appliqued, They are washable, as a0 many of this sea son's dresses are, and they are made with flattering lines and ex. quisite detalls of finish. Apropos of nothing at all, except slender: ness, there Is the froek with fringes. very deep, very svaceful, and infinitely becoming. Quite the newest fringe In painted, delightful on a frock of selld color, Far the afternoon at home, in the car, for aver so many practical purposes, there are the little cot ton frocks tubable, orisp and dainty Dimity, HNwiss, dimity« k of knitted cotton in pastel blue, It is in two pieces. Double date frock of black chiffon combined with pink chit gs fx oa chiffon evening teach with gored cape. The collared neckline is unusual, pique and voile are the matertat, and they adopt all of the fashion: abla detalls, even tn eapes and cape sleeves, Plooting Is a clever finish for these materials, and when they are printed, plain eel. ors are used to trim them, When a detall is not practical, It in wug- | gested with bandings or ruffles. | WHEN DAUGHTER GOES TO CAMP ® properly supervised sum- mer camp la a logical part of the young girl's training, In + At ahe learns the value of sys- tem and routine, punctuality, hpalthful exercises and a real love and appreciation of the outsef. doors, And If 'thera ls some study that has, In the past year, proven & stumbling block to progress, it may be reviewed under a eompe- tent instructor, camps Jane trom the ¥. W. C, 'A and ut Camps to those where real luxuries are provided, ! The present perfection and ves visty of eamp Apitetl reerhge fashion by way of the per outs fit, still a fu ental, the khaki sult and the vogue of shirt shorts. It Is now ible ta ine a i in the linen, although khaki! are im. shorts are amart, quires then as a part of the regu lar equipment. Hfheats and dases, soft, thick, flufty Turkish "towels And the attendant hand towels, preferably of the same weave are matched with wash cloths, Bath sets make an excellent gift for the 'girl damp-bound. Tf possible they should be in the camp color, toe, To W [J fon for The Charm Of A Sheer Fabric NE reverta to the funda-| mentals of grammar, when considering this subject, and | conjugates her verbs, Nhe | han had, she is having and 'whe is | about te have x frook of aither | chiffon; CGeargetia or organdie and If you wish, net may be In. eluded in the list, For that is the way of a material type that Is so essential to smartness and yo whael. ly feminine, not to mention appro. priate to the season. ~ They call | them Aower frocks, especially when they are printed, The major proportion of the frocks in this group are made of chiffon, for it has been perfected in the past few years to & point where It is practical, not the frail, cobwebby stuff of other years There are, literally, hundreds of onlora ar color combinations, and An equal number of designs, and they range from the soft pastels to | the bolder tones, from patterns that are pin-dotted to those that are huge, sprawly designs of ex- tremely elever conception, There are, you know, ohiffon sults, | ohifton jackets ensembles and chif- | fon frocks, and it ia interesting to ote | few use a solid color, al: '& model may combine the plain with the fAgured, And there na to he observed in the mat. 4k rinta----they grow with the than ever when the deepen, Front noon until ur of tea, the small print, teastime on, the large, bold st a light background, | . from prateray 'Far the portion of the day first pisos iy the jacket ensemble la appro . Ad so I» the long: sleeved frock, an excellent example |.) of the latter found ina navy blue | ehiffon with embroidered dota, white on the blue, The very full skirt, falling a trifle irregularly, io bordered with plain chiffon in blue, while the upper portion of the bodies In made white ohiffon n idered In navy hiue dota ves divide thelr allegiance, white above blues, 4 The ted ehiffon heck for early | 0 WORF MAY have a sleeve that extends to the » wrist, or ; iow aba or end just he. fants re ited wide tthe feat of | B be a T would almost seem that the | 1 fashion story, so far as it ve Intes to shoes, could he writs ten around the opera pump, | for it is the approved type for aft. | arnoon and formal wear, ta closest | aompetitor the simple step-in, One | New York shop, specialising In the FASHION STEPS OUT SMARTLY pumps In linen, silk, crepe, . sliver | and gold thread, moire shot with wold or sliver or just plain moire, and there are satin pumps, If you! sean the material list as applied to | pumps, you have the material list! of the shoe mode, and It In the same when It comea to eelor, If] | | Buckskin and tan leather oxford and a black linen opera pump. pump, offers more thal three noore and ten diferent kinds offering quarter alses, both short and long ag and gt least five heights of LH "should ve the popularity oF this oe. dif It you like a lower heel, then ¥ou may Wave it an inéh and five. elghta in height, or, If you orave halght, there are three-ineh heels! And eare has heen taken to cut the shoe so that It la proportionate, and there are no uply lines, That some women eoannot wear a long ong [ings and the Cuban and Spanish You will find pumps In patents leather, kidskin, suede, reptilian aking, buckskin and oalf, as well you oannot find the shade you wish, ft oan be dyed to your order, The long skirts do not conceal one's footwear, instead they attract attention te it, reaching, perhaps, to the, ankles, must be finished with wtitul | shoss=<there can he no compro. mine, Outside the pump, undoubt- edly the leader, we find the Oxford for sports and the one-strap slip per, simple of line and treatment. As the season advances there will be more of the lightweight fabrie shoes and woven sandals will again | be fashionable, : The spike heal is having ita Inn esl appear on the strest, Cone trating leathers are approved for trimmings, and many timea the Teather Is appliqued in the form of A small bow, Colors will ba warn as estuleh leather. Thare ane A beautiful froek, | second shade in pipings, or, when the trim Is reptile akin, there will he heels, tips and pipings of the leather, Riack linen ia being shown and the patterned linens and allkas have representation, And de not forget the rules that years of experimentation have pro- duced, rules that add to your com- | fort and to the trim appearance of your feat, And some of the rules, It followed, will Insure a smaller foot-~to the aye, at least, If you have a very long, narrow fool, or plump ankles, do not wear the opera pump. Instead you should wear a strapped model that breaks | the length of the feot==horisontal trimmings do the same, sven rows [ of stitahing, The plump foot looks well In a Testrap, and a round tos shortens short-vamp shes, and the opposite in true, for comfort in the first re quisite, but you oan shorten or lengthen the apparent sine with Ita trimmings, And you must realize that materials have something te do with this business of alse, just as thay deo In the making of a tronk, It is a ease of aptieal flu son, THE ENSEMBLE OF THE WEEK © There ls & vowue for dull surfaces. for white and the pastel shades, and, last of all, for linen. And we have offer. od us for our sUMMer organ: diss, batistes, cottons and the dike, the shes of linen, carried out in aports models and those sultable for walking and im- portant dress ocoaslons, Buch a shee is bound to be cool, and when It ia Oxford type It com: plements the linen or plgue tallleur perfectly, and when high-heeled it 1a quite an for: mal as any other for the gay Nttle organdie gown, Shaped perfently, it Ia charming in OPATA OF One-Strap guise. Te complete it, there la the hat of linen, unmistakeably Paris sian in lta origin, rather wide of brim, and very, vary ehie, Tmawine It in pink, sprig wrean, lemon, nen blue and the other clearsglaned pastels, or, if you wish, In mad, brown | oF navy blus, i and asambinations of asslavs tha (HB 4 WE { i IVI | #port, even If she merely watches! | Whe has need of sirest clothes, of afternoon attire and of evening ap | woman with | he has no thought of appropriate | woman who belongs to the Details That We Fi TRONG-MINDED, indeed, is S the woman who ean resist a hat or some other ascessory | when It does not belong and has no possible relation to her wardrobe, It may be a color she | adores, A type thal she really needs, carried out in lines that are her vary own, but==if that color in not harmonious, the detail is un necessary, aven fatal, It is the tra- ditional white slephant, this tims | of fashion Practically every | WOMAN engages in some form of parel, sven though It may not he the types we know as wholly fors mal, This means that she must dress for every ocoasion, and we OAR ONY My---""Hreathes there a soul so dead?' that ness, not alone te the mods in gen oral, but to type? In The Perfect Wardrobe In the spacious slossts of the haute monds," the one thal ls ever in| the mind of the "haute eoluture," | there are many, many frocks, serv. | ing the many purposes of res! so elal lite, Her budget and her time | both permit her to differentiate he- tween every possible type, and she is not merely perfection, but a ver table "glass of fashion" to the | world in general. Bhe makes a few mistakes in selnotion, but when she does, she simply disoards A single closet may be devoted to sports logs, another to the smart, tallored things that are des- ignated Yeountry and town elothes," a third to afterneen ap- pare! and yet a fourth to evening things. Nha may have frocks of the type (hat the lems fortunate WOMAR uses for more (han one | type of onoasion, but she regards sueh a frock as of the type that ner and theatres troek, but dedicat: #4 to one of the three it seams to favor, [i ov The Average Woman | fhe, too, knows that what she [ wears on the tennis court, or In | the country, or shopping In town will not do for even semi-formal nocanions unless oaarefully chosen, but she depends for. smartness upon the very double or triple date frooks that the 'weman of fashion fanorea. the line, so close that many of her suits and frooks answer more than A single purpose and do Jt well, And all this helps with the acces: i 18 regulated by the blouses, it most resembles, Not a tea, dine | Nhe keeps very close to! nd So Difficult Te Choose. Ruin May Be Wrought By A Single Discord Constant reiteration af » a that are obvious, yet easily 714m ten, has impressed us with the im portanes of the correct hat, shoes And other costume details for the frock we happen to be wearing, afd we know Lhat this means more than aelor, material and line, It means type, Oxfords and a ohif fon afternoon froek, sports shoes And a town ansemble, high<heelsd pumps and sports togs, these are arrors, sirangthening the sas of strict adherence to special type, The Most Important Types We begin with sports apparel, for it Is now specialised, that fs, togn for active aporta, It Is quite possible for the spectator to wear the same suit as she watches the FAME As she wears, later on, when shopping in Lawn, Accessories may Vary, but they do not have to, if | the buyer asks two questions be fore 'selecting an Item--~Will it do | for sports and will it de for town wear? But tennis, golf, riding and bathing demand syles Probably the mest useful offers ing of the season is the alll suit, whieh may be three pieces, but is oftendr two, Tt permits of variety, whether It be several frocks or several blouses for the skirt, and In the latter' instanes its formality It ean he extremely simple, even severs, Ita details equally simple, or it may take on a real degres of formality by the use of frills at neckline and wrists, a different hat, shoes and so forth The Meoting-Masny-Noods Type There are many women whe never really have need of an ultes- formal evening frock, and even then she can get by with one of the models that put on or take off details to achieve certain de Nrees fof formality Nueh a frock may he of plain-hued chiffon, ins Lerestingly long and full of skirt It may be sleeveless and have » matehing Jacket, or it may add a OApe, WAalst/length (n back, for lem formal aftuies, This (8 newer, tor there in no doubt capes are chia, It In with a froek of this ses that ancessories justify their mist. ence, for they may transform ft trom a formal afternoon dress inte a formal evening frook---beneath the oape such a dress may be ds collete, the desolietage flied In With a removable vestes for leas formal wear. And this applies to the back as well as the tront of the model, Jewelry, handNerehief, handbag or evening bag and wrap oartain definite aories she must have, hi sr a will do much to place the froak in la proper lacs. ------ SUMMER UMMER is vacation and "let. down" time for every one, yet the housewife must have a watohful eye over sertain S moths, dust and other agents that | destroy, Prevention ia not merely | the better part of cure, It Ia the | only part, for many agencies there 1s no cure, Moths like, not only our furs and woolens, but hangings | and upholstery and other furnish: ments of the houses, tharefore, it | behooves us to prevent the des | struction they cause, It you do net plan to place your | the foot, It you have a wide, short. | {UPR In the care of an expert furs | vamp foot, then you wear a wide, | / Ti | 1 { { | summer houses | many of the | things, for summer Ia a time of | and your dey AND THE HOUSEWIFE | rer then huve them olehmed and treated with tha preparation that | WI diweouvage moths, This holds fire with woery 'woolen garment, eanay will give the garment (ino cen tment for a amall Ohare, wior whieh they oan be safely hung away in & moth-proef bag and furgwiion until epld weather comes, Thera are aprays And other preparations that will keep a lose moth prof, Perhaps you have taken your luggage from storage and found it shabby looking, hardly as, aplek ANd WPAN wa you seemed 0 PeIMIR ber dt, There are suaps thal have heen specinlly prepared fur. dress Ing leather, and (here are poliahes that will smarten up the roughs ened places, and there ia, also, home treatment that will assem plish mueh. Pure soap, disselved in wweet milk In an excellent dress. ing, and shoe dreasing may be used for roughened vorners and apets,, Lighten your summer houses work by storing many eof the {smaller plecen of hric-a-hrae, even furniture, giving 10 the roams an RIF wpACIOUNTNOsS AL the same time urnamenta and small pletures, sven small pillows may be stored away to advantage, making sure that ww. Ant bresses do not blow them down, and that rich materials are not harmed hy summer dust, Mi. lows of Jtnen, chints and ereteuns Are muoh more summery, and the, 'will save bettar pillows hard wear, Try out oflaloth during the sum- Mar mantha, perhaps you will son. Hue fx use into the winter. It a no longer drab, utilitarian and otherwise unattractive. Rather it Is guy and a really lovely fdbrie tor laundry 'and of utility bags, table covers, chalraeat oo WASLO-DAPAT baskets, bridge-tabl covers, aprons and the like, And your kitohen meme pad may be covered with it, or your book, and tt will serve the small a = In bib and bat [al] : PID YOU KNOW THAT. The ambroidersd dress In quite! the smartest of the pate terned froek, ombine em. plain, the and to thee the coat, and the idea ts oareled out in two shades bf a color, black and white and a fSower on navy wa x Xai A rT y

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