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PEEP INTO MODERN ENGLISH FLAT.— The study in Miss Dodie Smith’s (“ C. L. Anthony’s ”) flat, which is individual, yet at the same time conventional, in the modern convention. Each room is built up on a definite plan, with its own colour scheme. The study has glossy painted walls in a very deep ivory shade, and the floor'is covered with Chinese matting: The furniture is finished with green cellulose, the colour of young leaves in spring, and a silk with green stripes on an oatmeal-coloured ground is used for the curtains and upholstered furniture. Facing each other on the walls are green shelves filled with books, china, and cactus plants. Instead of drawers, the desk is fitted with trays for papers which pull out.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19330307.2.10.2

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 21354, 7 March 1933, Page 2

Word Count
123

PEEP INTO MODERN ENGLISH FLAT.—The study in Miss Dodie Smith’s (“ C. L. Anthony’s ”) flat, which is individual, yet at the same time conventional, in the modern convention. Each room is built up on a definite plan, with its own colour scheme. The study has glossy painted walls in a very deep ivory shade, and the floor'is covered with Chinese matting: The furniture is finished with green cellulose, the colour of young leaves in spring, and a silk with green stripes on an oatmeal-coloured ground is used for the curtains and upholstered furniture. Facing each other on the walls are green shelves filled with books, china, and cactus plants. Instead of drawers, the desk is fitted with trays for papers which pull out. Evening Star, Issue 21354, 7 March 1933, Page 2

PEEP INTO MODERN ENGLISH FLAT.—The study in Miss Dodie Smith’s (“ C. L. Anthony’s ”) flat, which is individual, yet at the same time conventional, in the modern convention. Each room is built up on a definite plan, with its own colour scheme. The study has glossy painted walls in a very deep ivory shade, and the floor'is covered with Chinese matting: The furniture is finished with green cellulose, the colour of young leaves in spring, and a silk with green stripes on an oatmeal-coloured ground is used for the curtains and upholstered furniture. Facing each other on the walls are green shelves filled with books, china, and cactus plants. Instead of drawers, the desk is fitted with trays for papers which pull out. Evening Star, Issue 21354, 7 March 1933, Page 2