Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1935)

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• Beauty at your finger-tips depends largely upon a practical manicure kit for emergency aid, even if you prefer professional assistance. For dressingtable, travel bag and desk drawer comes Betty Furness' complete, compact good-groomer for ailing nails McNULTY n silver standard in Hollywood. Claire Trevor with 3(ng silver nails clipped onto her own. Made in Paris ol a Hollywood sculptor's plaster cast of Claire's hands • Cream or lotion must play an important part on the hands we love. Maxine Doyle's, pictorially repeating the old story of hand beauty via care v: HEX Laurence Hope's words, 'Tale hands I loved," were set to potent music and sighed by violins the world over, that word "pale" seemed to become the i rion by which feminine hands were adjudged beautiful. lit we all know that the strictly pale hand is almost as rare white horse, for the simple reasons that few women have ip, white skin and that the hand of today is expected to do |sll as to be, so that the doing hand invariably develops a Bin strength of character, in spite of skin tone, belying the lie flower-stem, listless type. 'Jilored nail lacquer is to hands what cosmetics are to the | For hands of the pale variety, you will find a rose or ■ red lacquer attractive; for the golden blonde hand, try i| or a darker tone with a little yellow. Brunette hands look -with the darker reds or a warm light tone, but pale rose or i do not contain enough color for the right contrast. For wing, most hands look well with an exotic touch to the nails f gold, silver or intense jewel tones to match or contrast. >day, almost any fairly well shaped, well cared for hand I pass for beautiful if it is used easily and gracefully. Learn! o relax hands, to make the wrist lead in movements and to II h lightly are simple trainings toward grace. The manner in ! h you use your hands and your touch will linger longer in i/her's memory than thought of tone or shape. "ON DUCTED BY CAROLYN VAN WYCK 79