The Oshawa Times, 7 Oct 1961, p. 30

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PAGE EIGHT BY MARGARET NESS ATS reflect your personality more than any other item in your wardrobe, I believe. Whatever the current fashion, if you're conser- vative by nature you choose a conservative version, in a conservative color. If you're an extrovert, you choose a chapeau . . . a creation, in other words, with the highest or shallowest crown depending on the fashion -- in the top fashion color. Last winter it was white, this year it could be ginger or magenta. Hats, too, can be fond memories -- even more so than dresses or coats. I'll always re- member the first hat El Jamon of Toronto (she executes the hats for the Stratford Shakespearean Festival) did for me years ago. It was a small brimmed black sailor, tied over the crown and under my chin with pink- dotted tulle. Another of my memorable hats was a big brilliant red sou'wester which photographer Sam Yamada so liked he insisted on photographing me in it. ONTARIO TODAY Turbans are wonderful, too. Most women seem to like them and so in recent years they have usually been prime favorites in most millinery collections. A turban is defined as a brimless hat of soft, drapable material, giving a wrapped effect. It may be head-hugging or towering, as fashion dictates, in wool jersey, beaver felt, fur or for after-five glamour, as in a high tilted turban of silver and gold embroid- ered lame, trimmed with deep veil edged in ostrich, by John Frederics. This season the turban is usually draped high and in the new, gently slanted-to-the-right side of tke hair-line. One of my own favorites-- when turbans were flat topped, was in a tangy- orange material (the same as my coat-and- skirt ensemble) with black wool jersey facing to match my overblouse. The cloche has been popular since the 'early SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1961 and PERSONALITY John Frederics. Tassels by Coro, hat by Mr. John. : 1920's. It is a head--hugger and can have a high or low crown, usually with a small brim. For the last couple of seasons, the -cloche has featured a high crown. This year's exciting ex- ample is photographed here in white mink, a peaked cloche by Irene of New York. It is also to be seen in the magenta velour soft brim- med hat with the leaf stitching and black grosgrain binding by Emme. The cloche also appeared in feathers in the Fall show by the Millinery Institute of America -- a tall cloche of swirled black hackle feathers and fringed patent leather by Robin; in color- combinations, as a brimmed cloche of turquoise felt with moss green grosgrain band and bow by Leslie James of California; in the season's new tilted angle, as in a high crowned cloche of russet soleil with tilted cuffed brim and side pleat accented with self bow by iattie Carnegie. Mimosa swagger,

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