Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1921)

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MAN TURNS TO THOUGHTS OF CLOTHES! TO the right: a blouse. It is a blouse, really; but worn with a smart skirt, it makes a charming afternoon costume. Black and red make the color scheme; there is a good neck-line, and the blouse ties, as blouses have been doing of late, at the side. From Gidding. HERE is a hat, from G i d ding's. I spied it in their Fifth avenue window and had it sketched for you. It is a chapeau for the jenne fille. BETTY COMPSON wears this little hand-made turban, of gray wool, for windy days. This, too, is a hat for the debutante. I like it very much. SPAIN has inspired many of our gowns and hats this season. This one is decidedly Spanish, with its real lace, combining the effects of the mantilla and the comb. TO THE left : Many women count theirwinter lost if they have not some such fur wrap as this, imported by Gidding. It is of ermine, the queen of furs; it is lined with black satin, and sashed with the same. It may also be of any of the other and less expensive furs, with the same smart effect. (? ' THE cinema celebrities are quite as able as anyone to tell you what is being worn. Here is little Lila Lee, in the sort of dinner gown I should like to see every young girl wear. It is of orchid, a good shade; and georgette, a good material. It is a simple embroidery design. MARY MILES M INTER went to Paris. And of course she shopped. She brought back with her one of the most adorable frocks I have ever seen: a Jean Lanvin model, of apple green taffeta, with a girdle of flowers with black velvet centers. FOR the street; for the office; for travelling — I recommend this suit, worn by Betty Compson. It is of serge, and very simply made; but it has an air all its own. You can be, you know, quite as well dressed in a costume such as this, as in those more elaborate. 33