The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 24, 1903, Page 10

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T 3idde 10 | THE SUNDAY C folds of the tra i Fur is charmingly used to trim gow i ; in the back. 1t begins in ‘the front, but em away t > e : is continued around the back in a narrow only two inches wide, but fur Th Vell-Dressed n e Well-Dressed Womar edge. It T be of Sonshn Ok Wiss ARE .} 3 ¢ o s < A that is used in the summer must that ¢ - . - - nice quality to bear clese inspection. It k About With a Clear | = vl aly sy ie placed on the back of the gown, to bor- 2 T : . | der the shoulder line, to border the 4 Her Dress Is as Pretty | postilion, which can be fashioned in a flounce and to make a delicate center f - s wide d on sash a ehiffon ruching, and fur is v e Back as It Is in the . ends and in tail trimmings. day. Dame Fashion will not be appeased nt — The Little House | by any suc i - sol i v any such small offering at her shrine Coat and the Parasol Which and right vigorously she demands that Such Dressy Backs. o g s Matches It for Plazza Walks | 9076 STk anA Smidre | attention: be put ., f You Iive’shyodde At tuds.of Tux > snd the Hat That Marches upon the backs of the new gowns and Lnere e be e e e - —Walks and Talks With | more thought be applied to them camphor chest. There is for, them a ng Dressmaker | One of the favorite trimmings in the to do this summer, and a very little sable, 1 fashionable world is the trimming which @ Very little squirrel, a very little lynx, s " consists of many little ruchings. For this & VEry little mink, of a very litie 1aro A - - style of trimming take your materlal. gnq add materially to its beauts - anon. for ber which should be a thin stuff, and shirr Old fur coats, gone past redemption, can ack view it through the middle. Make a thick, be made to live again .in a bet ate. . o close shirring and pujl the shirr s Cut them in narrow strips and m P ! ’ ke tight. Now, with the fingers. pull 1 fol 8C A tuvntng. SRS 2 and at e s . s= is as pre pat and shape the shirring until it makes e ,‘,‘W»‘,K;‘““"‘,"'Kl"'fi:f et lac » A . ma a nice, heavy, handsome ruching. That o0 Sy With = is one way. Take for this s t t ° g was S s Another style of ruching, and, perhaps, Your last vear's cloth gown. lay It upon . . £ mw whick a more successful one, is made by doub- the cutting table. Betler e e i s By il & 2 & ling the material and shirring it throhgh g g b 6 Tlt: way dp (he back, and cq s s g = ways the middle. Still another is the genuine pack “cutting out a pattern. If you are s S sro's - g ruche, which is a little box plait, . deft with th and will use a arrow, be - while thick and heavy. very fine bladed pair, you can cut out a s kel But, whea you come to reflect that sash lovely pattern. s ¢ e 24 iy s ruching no more than-three inches A fashionable modiste cut out a lavg - i : ; daisy chain. which was o arrapge x s a2 e wide, when completed, and that you need i pogan at the side breadth and exte < & < o seven or elght rows to go around the across the back of the skirt. Under - : s skirt seven or eight times, then discretion she set a band of panne velvet about 2 t k - whiis gets the better part of valor and you are inches in width, perha t a contented to take any kind that is easy ¢ertainly to cover the t e head of the o the s o to make and can be put together quickly. 27 underlay: the dalsh e Ko by > g g Trimming an Easter Skirt. may imagine, was that i with lace, S : To trim a skirt acceptably, say, an Irench gown. Really jt w: e e The Little Houde Coat. = i ster gown, made of brown foulard, ;;_”n”;::n N o PR A IR PR to " s with little red figures in it, take black rhere is another way to do the f s le , silk muslin or black taffeta, just which trick. And this is a much easier r aft s A s cuits you best. Take vou in hand a scissors ar skirts s g embr I Make your little three-inch hings out Dblades T holes, larger. than k of ta of thia meleriat and ‘Stiach thein to the . Deles ~Worki sfound them. Swing & Mack - - A tonh stitch, if the gown be a tan mid ) skirt. Put them on so that they come ... 1¢ b Mlnck: nee-a Mo Oe: ( p et of these ‘coats is together in front, low, near the foat of i} taff mmed w the skirt. Let them gradually rise toward Bu the nd, then from ; ! B e A k satin t " with A Fre gowns are trim the front alsc arse ck of a dress and the woman who to get up sémething more claho- ate can make the sash out of a bias fold of panne velvet and can tie il in a wide, flat knot, without bows, at the back of the waist For many reasons the “made” sash is better than the ribhon sash. It wears bet ter, for it does not curl up, and it is cheaper, for a great dcal ¢can be done with a yard of va The made™ ah also looks just a little more dressy, for it shows that a great deal of hand work h: been n it, and that is what wom- a dressy sash. The Sash Buckles. 1r u familiar “with belt buckles 0 be familiar with sash buck- they are . identical. The s s a belt buckle put on at the back, l’“i s its self-appointed task of the sh together. The long Langing ends arc fastened in the buckle and they float aw the very tip of the gown And sometimes one sees them a very dittle 1 Woman goin to the very ex- tent ‘of ‘ner rope when she wears sash ends lor r than her train. With it she texes the patience and the skill of man- her escor utmost. How the man to dodg h ends three,inches longer than the ? These arg questions which he, poor devoted creature, is trying to answer. Xnd for reply he hears nothing but the echo of his own thought. How, fndeed? For the street dress that must be sud- den| fitted out for a view from the back there are =till prettier possibilities than the floating ash, or better be it said, that there are more appropriate trim- mings. One of these is found jn the pos- tilfon Delt, that belt which is revived again this year, not because the modistes want it, but because it is so becoming to the average waist 0 i = & P row in front, where it is caught with a 4 = o 0" o AL g iyl e g g i buckle. In the back it becomes very wide i gt S A et and is finished In a high point, which The Shoulder Sash. skirt that is trimmed in the black. The comes up well toward the small of the There is another way to trim the back, gtroke” is made of lace, wide, and of back a'x?d rx\?ms well down nelij the an easy way and a way that any one any heavy variety. Bruges lace is some- belt. The point is wired that it may might follow. And this is by means of times used. so aiso {5 fillet with a heavy know al.-ldk"'”n its place. the shculder sash. This simple article, work set in it. Yalk s good and so are Now, and here comes the strange part 3 o v tele, e heavy Russian laces. ot the new postilion, there are coat tAIIS: ' yevas oo b o ok e s e o, Take & or two of this lace, say Bt the talls do not imateh the Belt " THE"1x shras thenca wida’ Bt Io thatased upor, L inches Jwioe: BBl e it belt, gaudy thing, may be in blue Louis- the back of the bodice, rig pon shaped edge. Apply it to the skirt, just : : of the bodice, right between the above the ruching, and let it meet in the ine silk, 100King, oh, so much as though shoulders, where it is caught with a middle of the back. Do not have the lace BN it misht have been snipped from the coat round flat buckle, show from the front, but begin it at the St 15 THNE PEW E VENING SRSk OF SILic NG LAIGE - of ‘the giddy Louts, while the talls:are The ends are now: tied in a little harg H0¢ seams letting the ends just come ey ey Ay 16”'::"!111 - lh‘l':ck Knot, of the kind that you Pick out by ' hen ihere mie other ways to trim the and rough and bound with silk. But they ‘tooth and nail, and they are then let back of a skirt. They take very " . e 5 Diace it Apiigl i wilit. pelt. Tet the lace ends hang down the MAtch the bodice, which is made of. biack hang. The knot Is fastencd very near to e Kig 0f h And ek mqii‘::,‘mfwfifgf"f" Uit %l St e Tie it at the back . & four-in-hand back of the skirt by the side of the silk scrge and is :""'nfl with gilk also: the back of the belt, 5o that the effect s - beads, all made Into one great, sprawlyy NELS OF WHITE LACE. e e paang Yo annt $he St it . { » two long, narrow tails of scrge as s , e bgw: and they apply such a bow as thi . knot, w a wid pressed Th ult will be a very hand; 8¢ as of a sash which floats free from' the P§%; MC TNCE SRR TRCL B OON O pe, .;{:&e:r:g‘[:m!’c;yei'elllecth-hole work a run- black hat all nodding with white plumes. tened to the back of the postilion belt line or a little above. lhvr,\ hang down very long to But away with the sash, which is so middle of the skirt and some- easy to make, and out of close against the back of the belt. Now =such, one of the kind that will dress up put @ strip of lace insertion around the tre back of a dress skirt to perfection. waist and fasten it at the back of the Bug this is a very simple way to trim The ends are long and drag their way | You who have worked b By this' sign shall y& know that the itin around the skirt, always going toward | nel petticoats in the days wn"f,.':‘;‘m"“* #irl is-a bride of Easter, for the “set” is g the the back. Finally they are lost in the | was judged by the flannel p“uw“n:;n so‘ch-{mgng :‘hd- one cannot pass it with. 9 cut npoticing it

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