PICTORIAL SUPPLEMENT.
Winter
HONGKONG TELEGRAPH, NOVEMBER 8th, 1930.
Tweeds and Jerseys
New Suggestions
for
Your Winter Wardrobe.
PAGE THREE
I. a sports outfit done in a combination of several fab. rics, green being the pre-
dominant colour.
Julia
H
OW is your winter wardrobe coming along
these days?
If it is not all planned, I should like to in- troduce to you the idea of becoming addicted to tweeds and jerseys, with a royal touch of fur here and thore, and a bit of soft, colourful ribbon.
This winter's tweeds are quite as soft and supple as the jerseys, and the result is a ravishing range of un- usual colours that are identical in the two materials. Skirts are definitely longer. The numerous ways
modernistic design which is worked out in such soft colours as to be ravishingly charming...
Its material is important. being wool lace jersey, and its pattern is worthy of note also. It is of blue and beige, with the collar and all edges bound in bluc. it buttons, up the front with silver buttons and has a wide navy blue velvet sash belt, fastened in front. with a modernistic silver buckle. This is a fitted frock, practically princess until a deep hipline is reached. Its collar has wide revers, notched deeply.
IT is possible this season for you to satisfy
one-sided effects are achieved is worth noticing Y that desire for a tweed coat that has no fur
Some are diagoná!, some have their whole bodice and skirt different on the two sides.
Suits rarely take huge fur collars, but you will understand this change when you get into one of the newer suits. for the blouses always have some kind of original neck treatment, scarves or fancy collars or yokes, and only a small choker or military collar of fur seems appropriate..
EXCEPTIONALLY nice for a runabout outfit is the costume at the upper left, which uses tweed for the skirt, knitted striped wool for the blouse and for the coat, jersey faced with the knitted wool.
It is green. The tweed skirt-one of the new two- gored type, flaring at both sides-has two pockets.
Over the waistband of this green skirt fits the striped blouse, of two greens and white, with a waist- band of knit webbing of the darkest green, matching the skirt. This blouse uses its stripes in an original manner, horizontally for the body part of the blouse, diagonally for a yoke both front and back, and diagonally the opposite direction for the scarf collar that knots in front, with long ends.
II. FOR Your meat suit, te moment, the show at
FOR your most sedate moments, there is the
the right.
It has a skirt that fits like the paper on the wall
J
collar, the trickiest and loveliest models make collars of their own or contrasting tweed.
One such coat that I recommend to you as one of the smartest styles I have looked at, is of a purply blué mixture tweed, with a little of the softest cream yellow and quite a bit of black. It is a kind of salt and pepper material in hand-made homespun.
The coat is quite long, flaring so that it will stay shut without any trouble when you sit down.. It has a collar, a novel collar with one side longer than the other, made out of plain blue tweed, of the same light purply tone that the background of the mixture has. V ONE of the most striking costumes for autumn is a novel combination of rich red and black. The tweed of the suit is an unusually dainty and effective design made fitted and flaring. The coat is long and has black caracul banding it from the collar to the hem. The banding makes a crushed collar.
There is a tuck-in blouse of black jersey, long- slesved, made raglan, and both, the collar and cuffs of it are made of black and white grosgrain ribbon, very effective and different.
The use of a black felt hat, with black gloves, purse and pumps. cmphasize the unusualness of this. costume.
until it gets low enough to fare, for walking comfort. VI. IF you are a golfer, you will enjoy the novelty
Above this there is a beige tweed overblouse, like a gilet, split in front where it fits down over the skirt, and belted with a wine-red leather belt. This blouse. has a white pique collar.
The coat of this euit is low hip length, has cape aleeves and a choker collar and flaring cuffs of beaver. Topping it, a wine velvet beret sits far back on your head, showing your curls. ·
III. THE importance of the coat dress has been emphasized before and you may have one already. But there should be room in your wardrobe for the latest frock of this type, a lacy wool in bold,
of one of the new jumper suits of plaid tweed ratines, with a jersey or a flat, crepe blouse and a jacket of the tweed to fit over it.
The model at the lower right is a colourful blue and yellow plaid, in big squares, made to open the front and then belt shut with a navy blue patent leather belt. It has diagonal pockets in the flaring - skirt and is cut with a V neck and bound armholes to display both the collar and sleeves of your blouse.
The jacket is slightly fitted, as is the jumper dress, indicative of the new femininity in sports wear. A navy blue felt beret, bound in yellow worsted, is suitable headgear for this outfit.
1. Intriguing indeed is this belted one-piece frock in
wine-red and belge wool tweed, worn with wine-red.
coat and wine-velvet hat.
III. wool, face in a, mod- ernistic blue and beige pat tern, with a dark blue sash of
velvet and 'a felt hat.
17. Smart but practical is this fall coat of blus tweed mixture, with a plain blue twood collar.
V. a novel red
and black
knit tweed
fall outfit.
.the coat be-
園
ing edged
in a wide
band of
black cara
cul.
VI. jumper dress in blue and yellow plaid ratine, with a long-sleeved shirt blouse in yellow wool jersey and fitted jacket jaz a golf uniform