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I. WOMAN DECORATIVE IN HER GARDEN:WOMAN DECORATIVE ON THE LAWN

<< WOMAN DECORATIVE IN HER SUN-ROOM
WOMAN AS DECORATION WHEN SKATING >>
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know always uses her last Summer's muslins and wash silks, shoes, slippers and
hats in her sun-room during the Winter. In her wardrobe there are invariably a lot of
sheer muslins, voiles and wash silks in white, mauve, greys, pinks, or delicate
stripes, the outline following the fashion, voluminous, straight or clinging, the
bodice tight with trimmings inset or full, beruffled, or kerchiefed. Her hats are
always entirely black or entirely white, in type the variety we know as picturesque,
made very light in weight and with no thought of withstanding the elements. The
woman who knows how, can get the effect of a picture hat with very little outlay of
money. It is a matter of line when on the head, that look of lightness and general
airiness which gives one the feeling that the wearer has just blown in from the
lawn! The artist's hand can place a few simple loops of ribbon on a hat, and have
success, while a stupid arrangement of costly feathers or flowers may result in
failure. The effect of movement got by certain line manipulation, suggesting
arrested motion, is of inestimable value, especially when your hat is one with any
considerable width of brim. The hat with movement is like a free-hand sketch, a hat
without movement like a decalcomania.
If the owner of the sun-room is resting or invalided then away with out-of-door
costume. For her a tea-gown and satin slippers are in order, as they would be under
similar conditions on her furnished porch.
If the mistress of the sun-room is young and athletic, one who never goes in for
frou-frous, but wears linen skirts and blouses when pouring tea for her friends, let
her be true to her type in the sun-room, but always emphasising immaculate
daintiness, rather than the ready-for-sport note. A sheer blouse and French heels on
white pumps will transpose the plain linen skirt into the key of picturesque
relaxation, the hall-mark of sun-rooms. More than any other room in the house, the
sun-room is for drifting. One cannot imagine writing a cheque there, or going over
one's monthly accounts.
We assume that the colour scheme in the sun-room was dictated by the owner and
is therefore sympathetic to her. If this be true, we can go farther and assume that the
delicate tones of her porch gowns and tea gowns will harmonise. If her sun-room is
done in yellows and orange and greens, nothing will look better than cream-white
as a costume. If the walls, woodwork and furniture have been kept very light in
tone, relying on the rugs and cushions and dark foliage of plants to give character,
then a costume of sheer material in any one of the decided colours in the chintz
cushions, will be a welcome contribution to the decoration of the sun-room.
Additional effect can be given a costume by the clever choice of colour and line in
a work-bag.
CHAPTER XI
I. WOMAN DECORATIVE IN HER GARDEN
N your garden, if you would count as decoration, keep to white or one
colour; the flowers furnish a variegated background against which your
costume of colour, grey or white stands out. The great point is that your
outline be one with pictorial value, from the artist's point of view. If merely
strolling through your garden to admire it, keeping to the well-made paths, a fragile
gown of sheer material and dainty shoes, with perishable hat or fragile sunshade, is
in order. But if yours is the task to gather flowers, then wear stout linen or pretty,
bright ginghams, good to the eye and easily laundered, while resisting the briars
and branches.
Smocks, those loose over-all garments of soft-toned linens, reaching from neck half
-way to the knees and unbelted, are ideal for garden work, and to the young and
slender, add a distinct charm, for one catches the movement of the lithe form
beneath.
You can be decorative in your garden in a large enveloping apron of gingham, if
you are wise in choosing a colour which becomes you. One lover of flowers, who
has an instinct for fitness and colour, may be seen on a Summer morning, trimming
her porch-boxes in snowy white,--shoes and all,--over which she wears a big,
encircling apron, extending from neck to skirt hem; deep pockets cross the entire
front, convenient for clippers, scissors and twine. This apron is low-necked with
shoulder straps and no sleeves. The woman in question is tall and fair, and on her
soft curling hair she wears sun hats of peanut straw, the edges sewn over and over
with wool to match her gingham apron, which is a solid pink, pale green or
lavender.
Dark women look uncommonly well in khaki colour, and so do some blonds. Here
is a shade decorative against vegetation and serviceable above all.
Garden costumes for actual work vary according to individual taste and the amount
and character of the gardening indulged in.
Lady de Bathe (Mrs. Langtry) owns one of the most charming gardens in England,
though not as famous as some. It is attached to Regal Lodge, her place at
Newmarket. The Blue Walk is something to remember, with its walls of blue
lavender flanking the blue paving stones, between the cracks of which lovely
bluebells and larkspur spring up in irrelevant, poetic license.
Lady de Bathe digs and climbs and clips and gathers, therefore she wears easily
laundered garments; a white linen or cotton skirt and blouse, a Chinese coat to the
knees, of pink cotton crêpe and an Isle-of-Jersey sun-bonnet, a poke with curtain, to
protect the neck and strings to tie it on. So while she claims never to have
consciously considered being a decorative note in her own garden, her trained
instinct for costuming herself appropriately and becomingly brings about the
desirable decorative effect.
PLATE XIV
Madame Adeline Genée, the greatest living
exponent of the art of toe dancing. She wears
an early Victorian costume (1840) made for a
ballet she danced in London several seasons
ago. The writer did not see the costume and
neglected, until too late, to ask Madame
Genée for a description of its colouring, but
judging by what we know of 1840 colours
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and textures as described by Miss McClellan
(Historic Dress in America) and other
historians of the period as well as from
portraits, we feel safe in stating that it may
well have been a bonnet of pink uncut velvet,
trimmed with silk fringe and a band of
braided velvet of the same colour; or perhaps
a white shirred satin; or dove-coloured satin
with pale pink and green figured ribbon. For
the dress, it may have been of dove-grey
satin, or pink flowered silk with a black
taffeta cape and one of black lace to change
off with.
Victorian Period about 1840
Mme. Adeline Genée in Costume
II. WOMAN DECORATIVE ON THE LAWN
When on your lawn with the unbroken sweep of green under foot and the
background of shrubs and trees, be a flower or a bunch of flowers in the colour of
your costume. White,--hat, shoes and all, cannot be excelled, but colour has charm
of another sort, and turning the pages of memory, one realises that not a shade or
artistic combination but has scored, if the outline is chic. Since both outline and
colour scheme vary with fashion we use the word chic or smart to imply that
quality in a costume which is the result of restraint in the handling of line, colour
and all details, whatever the period.
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A chic outline is very telling on the lawn; gown or hat must be appropriate to the
occasion, becoming to the wearer, its lines following the fashion, yet adapted to
type, and the colour, one sympathetic to the wearer. The trimming must accentuate
the distinctive type of the gown or hat instead of blotting out the lines by an
overabundance of garniture. The trimming must follow the constructive lines of
gown, or have meaning. A buckle must buckle something, buttons must be used
where there is at least some semblance of an opening. Let us repeat: To be chic, the
trimming of a hat or gown must have a raison d'être. When in doubt omit
trimming. As in interior decoration, too much detail often defeats the original idea
of a costume. An observing woman knows that few of her kind understand the
value of restraint. When turned out by an artist, most women recognise when they
look their best, but how to achieve it alone, is beyond them. This sort of knowledge
comes from carefully and constantly comparing the gown which is a success with
those which are failures.
Elimination characterises the smart costume or hat, and the smart designer is he or
she who can make one flower, one feather, one bow of ribbon, band of fur, bit of
real lace or hand embroidery, say a distinct something.
It is the decorative value gained by the judicious placing of one object so that line
and colour count to the full. As we have said in Interior Decoration, one pink rose
in a slender Venetian glass vase against a green silk curtain may have far more
decorative value than dozens of costly roses used without knowledge of line and
background. So it is with ornaments on wearing apparel.
III. WOMAN DECORATIVE ON THE BEACH
With a background of grey sand, steel-blue water and more or less blue sky, woman
is given a tempting opportunity to figure as colour when by the sea. That it is gay
colour or white which makes decorative effects on the beach, even the least
knowing realise. Plein air artists have stamped on our mental visions impressions
of smart society disporting itself on the sands of Dieppe, Trouville, Brighton, and
where not. Whatever the period, hence outline, white and the gay colours impress
one. Most conspicuous is white on woman (and man); then each colour in the
rainbow with its half-tones, figures as sweaters, veils, hats and parasols; the striped
marquise and gay wares of the venders of nosegays, balloons and lollypops. The
artist picks out the telling notes when painting, learn from him and figure as one of
these.
On the beach avoid being a dull note; dead greys and browns have no charm there.
What is true of costuming for the beach applies equally to costumes to be worn on
the deck of a steamer or yacht.