Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1929)

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I30 Photoplay Magazine — Advertising Section iSow the secret of lovelier eyes is yours . . . do this Now let Liquid Winx glorify your eyes. This clever lash dressing, so safe, so easy to apply and remove, will make them seemingly larger, more expressive and utterly alluring — by framing them in a soft shadowy fringe of luxuriantly curling lashes. Apply it to the lashes with absolute peace-of-mind. There's not the slightest hint of artificiality. It neither streaks nor runs, for it is waterproof. Sold at all toilet goods counters. Only 75c complete in black or brown. If a coke lash dressing Sold wherever Li ia preferred, there's quid Winx is sold. none quite so effective C=.a*^\. 75cconipiele. Boss as Cal&e Winx (two ^^^^~:>^ Company, 241 W. shades, brown, black). I^^mM 17thSt.,NewYoTk. wrx Send 12c for generous Liquid Winx aampie* The women you most admire, and perhaps envy, prize their beauty and guard it. Their lustrous eyes and clear skin are the result of daily care. Above all else, these women keep their blood f reeof the poisons of constipation. Thousands of such women find Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets a matchless corrective. Made of pure vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil. Know them by their olive color. They are a safe substitute for dangerous calomel. Not habit-forming. 15c, 30c, 60c. ^ eau!2^i LIVE TABLETS Be a Movie Operator ProjectorGiven We tcachyouathome. Bib demand byMovie. VaiidcvUlc Theutrt;3. Write You can soon qualify for the wonderful opportunities in this big pay [)r'if(-.slon. AABflrDA FREE BOOK explains ^ opportunitlesaaMotioa Picture Camera Man. Portrait, Commercial or ^ocrapbcr or in your own buMinepa. Home 'tr in iiur j-reat New York . Vrite Ifor Fr.-o Bii..k ta Job f.'hurt. N. Y. INSTITUTE OF PHOTOGRAPHY, 10 W. 33rd St., N. Y., Depi. 37 Print Your Own Cards, Stationery, Cirtjulard, Paper, etc. Save money. Printfor others, hiR profit. Complete outfits J8.85. Job press Sn. Vi.'^. Rotary Sl-li*. All easy, rules sent. Write for catalog presses type etc. THE KELSEY CO., P-43, MerJden.Conn. Your Clothes Come From Hollywood [ CONTINUED FROM PACE 71 I Swanson for her first big part. Peggy was so limited in a financial way that she cut out designs in bits of carpet and appliqued them to frocks to give them an air of richness. When she gowned Swanson, she shortened and remade her own frocks for the budding star. "Look to Paris for our modes? In heaven's name — why?" she exclaimed. "Have we no originality of our own? During the time that I was with Triangle I did not look at a fashion book from abroad. Our demands are different. We have created a definite style of our own. We do not need Paris." As proof of this she was the first person to take a Hollywood fashion show to Paris. Peggy believes in gay colors, in hand painted frocks, embroidery and laces and most of all the bouffant gowns that are symbolic of Hollywood. This brings us to Adrian, the boy who put the "bou" in bouffant. Si.x years ago he created the first frock of this kind to be worn on the screen. He made it for Leatrice Joy. "Ridiculous!" cried the producers, as producers are wont to do. "No woman would wear a gown like that. You couldn't get more than three or four of those skirts in one room." But Adrian and Miss Joy beheved in them. "Well," said the producer, "just this one time. She may wear this gown, but never let it happen again." That was six years ago. Last year fifty per cent of the evening dresses sold throughout the world were robes dc style and Adrian's gown is in as good style now as it was then. This trick of making frocks that are always in style is one that the designers learn. Sophie Wachner created the costumes worn by Aileen Pringle in "Three Weeks." A certain, gorgeous flame-colored negligee is still in Aileen's wardrobe. She bought it for personal use and wears it. Miss Pringle, who has gained no mean reputation for her clothes, is not easy to costume. She is short and wiU, when not properly gowned, look squatty. She must wear her Picture of a lady who didn't think she could wear clothes with style. Travis Banton was the designer who persuaded Florence Vidor that she was smarter than most of 'em. "This costume, called "A Midsummer Night's Dream," has a wrap of black velvet, appliqued with silver stars, worn over a gown of black chiffon lireiT advertisement In PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE is suaranteed.