Picture Play Magazine (Sep 1920 - Feb 1921)

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ni ! ;iii-;;KiiiHtunimiiUiuinmn;tinr'-:iii 'irinir ^ i,: ;t; r:^.ih ;m iiiiiiiiiiiiMi^iuir Coat on a Star selections according to what she wears. Williams " . ■ ■.. ', ■ . . . ■ „i.' ..',!;■ : ~ Incidentally, the problem of what sort of hat to wear with a fur coat is an interesting one, and is solved by Miss Roberts most pleasingly. She loves color — and with a fur coat she has free range. Therefore this hat was selected. Its brim is of autumn leaves in their natural shades, made of velvet, and the crown is of brown velvet which just matches the kolinsky on her coat. It is rarely advisable to wear a large hat with a fur coat, as the thickness of a fur collar, combined with a wide-brimmed hat, achieves a bunchy effect which is anything but effective. It is best to obtain width, if a wide hat is more becoming to you than a small one, by the use of feathers, as does Hope Hampton in the hat pictured here. Her features are very fine, consequently it is better for her to get the effect of width in a hat by something less heavy than the velvet or satin brim of a hat. The placing of the feather on this hat gives her the desirable result of contrasting its color with her eyes, and, also, because of the manner in which the end of the feather is turned, the desired breadth is obtained. Ermine is admirably suited to a blonde of Justine Johnstone's type. Photo by Geisler and Andrews Photo by Apeda Hope Hampton is fine-featured enough to wear the harsher furs. Miss Hampton has very blue eyes and dull-gold hair, with a suggestion of red. Because of this, and also because her face is small, she can wear the harsher furs, such as skunk, wolf, black marten, and racoon. It is a great mistake for the woman with rather large features to wear such furs as these ; they emphasize this characteristic, and so are not really becoming. But coloring and features like Miss Hampton's are made to seem more delicate by contrast with the coarseness of these furs. Quite a different type of blonde is Justine Johnstone, whose hair is very golden, and whose eyes are not so deep a blue as Miss Hampton's. She is one of those who can wear unrelieved black — there is a softness about her beauty which the velvety black of seal makes more pronounced. Pure white ermine is also very becoming to her, though in most instances blondes do well to avoid this fur unless the black-tipped tails are used, since they need the emphasis of the bits of black to relieve the monotony of the white. Ermine is a very popular fur among the actresses of the screen; Anita Stewart and the Talmadges all have pure white ermine coats, which are equally becoming to Norma's dark eyes and hair, to Anita's reddish-brown ones, and to the gay Constance's brown eyes and light hair. Norma Continued on page 98