Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
' woIE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €. NOVEMBER 1. 1931—PART THREE. o= Ensemble Idea in Winter Wardrobe Expressed in Accessories Miniature jewelry is a revival of an old fashion. In the necklace and bracelet rounded with gold twist set end suspended on four strands of pearls. the miniatures are sur- with pearls and coral Another miniature, similarly set, ornaments the evening bag. The short white kid gloves are mew and smart for Distinctive Details Spell Chic for Diagonal Line Important in All the Newest Accessories—Shoes Show Wide Range of Leathers—Suede Favored for Daytime Wear. HOSE charming adjuncts to dress have become of such vast impor- tance that in many a large shop they now are shown in a little shop of their own. This idea of & little shop devoted to one, for here are group- to each other. scarfs, the newest sweaters. and those little vests ‘woolen that have become smartly dressed it lfi! 52 4 E ! it H § !ii I i i i i 2 i 1 . i 1 2 Se ! ,l; i il il A hat of winecolored and purple vel- Sleeveless jumper of black suede fastened with square.jet buttons, and cap and purse to match. Below it, three wooden bracelets, ecklace of silver and brown wooden beads, & bag of stitched brow le. with wooden bar and handle and a black silk umbrella with wooden handle and ferrule. The bag above at the right is of black antelope in a novel shape, fastened with a large marcasite clasp. New Hat for Every Face | There May Be One Selected for Every Hour. New Berets Are Soft and Becoming. Evening Millinery. vet, with a rolled edge, is complemented by a scarf and bag to match it. The gloves shown are of black antelope. Their cuffs are lined with white kid. !u the domestic variety, are uséd in | sports shoes 1 (‘DOV!S‘ along with all the other ac- | Y3 cessories of women's dress, bespeak the fact that there is at least one branch of business that is not afraid to expand. Whereas last year one style of | glove for the daytime and another for | the evening might have carried a woman | through the Winter, this year a glove is demanded for every type of dress, and manufacturers have fearlessly met this | demand. ' “Por morning and sports clothes we | have the heavy glace kid glove with base ball stitching, the pigskin glove, the | hand-stitched glove with gauntle$ wrist. | a hang-over from last Summer, and | many other kinds. But these are not | for the afternoon dress. Here trimness | is required in less cumbcrsome gloves | | with close-fitting wrists. Here the slim | hand of fashion is displayed. Among | the novelties are the trim, snug-fitting | gloves with fur cuffs, and some manu- facturers have gone so far as to m: one-button gloves with detachable cuffs. When evening comes fancy runs riot in gloves. We may still have our own ideas of taste in evening gloves, while reporting that a glove has been | made to accord with every evening sil- | houette, and there are a many of them. Younger women pin their faith * o ok % Smart Woman BY MARY MARSHALL. HEN hats are as varied as they are at present it just naturally follows that there's & hat for every occasion. And that there is one for every face. ‘Time was when we bought one hat— a plain. pull-on felt, of the mushroom sort. We wore it all day long, with all our frocks. It was serviceable enough for going to market or taking the chil- dren to school, and it looked enough like everybody's hat to wear to a card party or a concert. It did duty all day long. But now we have a simple little felt hat for the morning, we have hats most charmingly trimmed for card parties and teas in the afternoon. We choose & demure hat for church and a coquet- tish hat for dinner at a restaurant, a hat specially designed to wear after dark in artificial light. The milliners have done everything to please us—and we like their work. * A ONE of the really cleverest of accom- plishments is the evening hat— the hat to wear when we need one in ke | the evening. It is never, this season, a large picture hat. It is small, compact. in keeping with the general trend of millinery fashions. But it is always picturesque. It is really one of the most attractive dress details that we have had for years. One such hat is made of black Brus-| sels net, draped and folded softly around the head. with a little brim transparent- A sealskin hat trimmed with a white uill is worn with a scarf of the same ur and a muff-purse, velvet. The bag at the right is of black alligator with a gold clasp. “]z began the season, before the sea- son really began, With Eugenie hats. All more or less the same. Down over one eye, up &t the other side, usually trimmed with ostrich or coq. As the season has progressed we have found ourselves confronted with a wide variety of hats. Those of us who hesi- ung. tated at perching ome of the jaunty| Pajama outfits of openwork st Eugenie revivals slantwise above our | Woven effects in natural colored eyes find a most comforting array of | are usually cut with hats of larger proportions, with any number of styles to choose from. The typical little Eugenie hat is still here, and it is most becoming to some wom- | en. But the woman who does not like | it or who does not find it becoming can | with same | choose one of the many other types, ¢ |jumper of the string, | One of these is a sort of beret that | trousers replaced by a straight wrap- is modeled on the velvet caps of the |around skirt of green flannel. D.L.M. Renaissance. It is soft. usually made of e |1 iraarm becomingly down over e | New Lamps Sho Varied Decoration its modernistic bird in pink and white shanded tones, and the pajamas, with a- sleeveless: bolero, were the palest pink shant: | head, and is really one of the most gen- | erally becoming styles imaginable, | * ok X % | AN()THER good point about this beret —it is one of the most satisfac- tory hats possible to wear with a fur coat. It has no stiff to interfere at the back of the neck with the coat collar—to the harm of the fur and the discomfort, of the wearer. And its soft, rich lines and fabric make it especially { appropriate with & fur coat. For the woman who looks best with |a brim, there are most attractive hats |of that description. Brims all around, N!w lamps may be divided, perhaps, distinctly into two sorts—the very i simple, and the others. The very simple lam pottery or metal bases of pl ps consist of lain line and jof the purse, which juts out at either | side to accommodate” all the aids to vanity that one just must put into.a purse. As we have said, shapes of bags | are k?ion. 50 we have the pouch-shaped bag of velvet to accompany the velvet dress, if this has been your choice; the | melon-shaped bag with the drawstring, | the gold mesh bag just l;:e those ele- gant contraptions used JOars ago, and others too numerous to list. These, | however, are the style highlights. | JEVENING purses are resplendent with beads, gold and silver embroidery and the prevalent semi-precious stones. In shape they are oblong pouches, often made of satin or velvet in dress shades Rhinestones and pear] beads worked in striped effects adorn many of them. Then there is the crocheted white 287 bag with pin-point rhinestones worked into it in some mysterious man- fer to make it look like a glittering bit of snow. Diagonal stripes are smart in wool they idea | times crosswise, som muff-purse of brown and ther. striped together. it 1S interesting to observe wide range of l~athers used. Rep- not domimate the shoe mart as id last Fall. Suede is the im- riant leather at the moment in sports and aft>rnoon shoes, with kid, alligator, tor is skins, and kid, especially the sponsored by Patou and pat- have piaces in the to the ve the older woman prefers the more dig- r‘;‘.“ d elbow-length, Either is a safe choios. Fur Trims New Hats | UR is used to trim some of the new hats—to harmonize, of course, with | the coat or with the fur collar and muft | set. Sometimes the upturned brim of & small hat is edged with fur. Some- times there are bow-shaped ornaments of fur on the hat. Sometimes there are bands about the crown of the hat. Ribbon, too, is much used for trim- ming hats. It often takes the place of feathers, which are also widely used. bon is skillfully tied into bows e wing shaped, to place flat t the side of an upturned brim. | ries of little bows, with pointed ends. is fastened in any desired shape against the hat. s Stripes Are Good. used in many of the new n afiec-l tion. Sometimes up Stripes are clothes—and are most run sym- sides toward | Blouses of striking. Sometimes the metrically down from both the center. Sometimes they run down, from left to right or from right to left. | the stripes running in only one direc-| uon on both sides. Metal Be | SOME of the newest of the Prench clothes for Autumn have metal beits, mu—nwfi.nw‘- are as fiexible a9 are gleaming. Its short _evening glove, while | ly casting a becoming shadow over the|or brims only at the front. Brims of |eves, and perky little feathers adding velvet or brims of felt. | their stiff contrast of line and texture. | _ Velvet fashions another restaurant | year. It has a rather low crown, still | hat. It is really & cap, almost as com- | deep enough to allow the hat to be There is a new sort of sailor hat this | any room. The most interesting of the more elaborate lamps have hand decorated shades that match the bases. The bases in every and down, some- | and social | pact and close fitting as a skull cap. It is of any suggestion of severity by &, wisp of ostrich and a tiny, filmy wveil. Gold and silver lame, soleil, tricot, are other fabrics that are manipulated into these most becoming little hats. They. are really a boon to the woman who has lots of evening engagements that do not call for evening dress. pulled well down over the hair. The top of the crown is flat. The brim is | often soft and floppy, and is pulled | down, of course, over the right eye. This sailor is made of both felt and vel- vet. Sometimes the brim edges of these new sailors are wired, so that they may be adjusted into the most becoming line with assurance that they can be put on a second time in the same way, are made of vases of various sorts, some of them very valuable and rare. The shades are decorated in matching color and d . Sometimes lutely match. decorated in blue t] slightly lavender shades of blue—just enough difference to be piguant, inter- Book prints are Yellow Most Popular Color At Island of Mollorca BALEARIC ISLANDS. (ONE of the new play spots of Europe is the Island of Mallorca. While its climate makes it an all-year-roun resort, the group that has found the sun is beginning to desert the Riviera and Biarrits is giving the preference for late September and early October, and from both § fashion % et be In- ‘Europe, important as an advance guide on resort wear for Palm Beach. At the Formentor, yellow is of ex- treme importance, and most effective it is against the brilliant coloring of | Indeed, yellow takes the ' d that | | sometimes " with hand-painted replicas | of the prints, just reversing the usual | | procedure of making the shade match | i a possible. to. mak | always make your {own lamp shade cecorations to fit mzol ;fly room crcdwtdnn'u. You c:;d:: y & paper parchment shade and | to its mmmc suitable | high turnback collar fastened with zp sleeves finished | wit] | links | the ringe Again. ined with black % Hunt in Smart Shops Reveals Gems and Wood Ornaments 'UDDEN whims of fashion rise from no one knows where and sweep the S stones bracelets. to wooden brooches o ‘who | stars of a beautiful Empress. Lhemmtuuumlinmdmu They are here in costume elry. Why their name, no one but their sponsors can tell, for there is nothing precious about them but their coloring. Glass beads, as primitive as those worn by the American Indians, are what really 'l.:' Colored glass beads, ris and 1l very intriguing jeweled hairpins and tiny combs, to be worn in pairs. These are headlined as new in our smartest shops. Rubies, emeralds and brilliants stud fascinating wee combs, one of which is worn on either side of the head at the h::ka of the neck to hold the hair in Pplace. i *8EER it i fifi"g Y i fEel | f