Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

Youth Sets Fashion Barbaric “Jewellery”

If you run through the names of si people famous in the British dress world rr you will see that youth has a great ti deal to say In the matter of modern j; modes. You will find also that some of p the designers who have made names for ti themselves are young men. It seems f< queer, but there it is.- tl After all, women do dress, in some n degree, to win men’s approval and, as o young men are admittedly critical, it is not, perhaps, very surprising to find s them telling us what to wear and how a to wear it. c The latest recruit to the roll of youth- n fid designers is Neil Roger, a Scotsman of 25 or so, scion of a well known fam- s ily, and educated at Edinburgh. t He held his first show a short time ago r and, unlike the majority of designers v this season, gave a display full of colour, with only a few’ black models. This £ was good. Although black is the perfect

background, it is refreshing to get away from it at times and revel in the cheering warmth of red, pink, purple, yellow and golden tones, and in tfie coolness of the green and blue ranges. Here, as in other collections, are shown fitted jackets “zipped” from hem to throat; also a number of straight coats swinging loose from the shoulders. And, besides the tight skirts to which we have become accustomed, with a few pleated ones to vary things, there are very full gathered skirts —for days as well as evening. Something “Different.” A model that pleases is developed in peasant brown surah silk—the material that is having a great success this seaCrusted Canary Pudding. Four oz. flour, 3 oz. sugar, 2 oz. butter, 2 eggs, 1 teaspoon baking powder, milk. Cream the butter and sugar together until thick, and smooth, and add each egg separately. F eat well, then stir in the flour and baking powder as lightly as possible, and add milk gradually until the mixtuie drops readily from the spoon. Pour into a buttered mould and steam fCr about an hour. If you like it in the old-fashioned way serve it now. If you want to be modern, turn the pudding out and let it cool. Make a meringue with 4 egg whites and 8 tablespoons of sugar, and cover the cold pudding and bake in a

son. The skirt, rather longer than the majority now being worn, is gathered at the waist, and there is a short bolero jacket with fitted sleeves. The third piece of the ensemble is a dainty lacetrimmed white crepe blouse, and the fourth is a brown felt hat inspired by that worn by a Mexican priest! A 1938 note is the extremely wide buckled belt of brown suede. In particular one liked the green fine serge suit, made with a pleated skirt, and a straight “zipp” fastened- coat, the coat bound,, as are a number of the best models this year, with black braid. Colour flashes from beneath the straight jacket of a navy blue town suit, the waistcoat being made of rows and rows of navy gibbon gaily embroidered with multi-coloured flowers. With a black face cloth frock gaiety, comes again in the form of a rich blue gros-grain bolero and a vivid red scarf draped to hide most of the dress bodice. A black cloth skirt is worn w'ith a white linen jacket which has three pockets each side and black button fastening s, a delicate blue tucked chiffon blouse completing the ensemble. The jacket is cut quite high to the neck and has small revers and no collar, but very deep revers and a moderately deep, flat collars are suggested by piped stitching giving a “double revers” effect. With a navy blue day frock, the bodice pleated in front and the skirt pleated at the back, goes a leaf green coat, full, pleated, swinging jauntily over the dark background. More green is shown in the silk jersey dress, cleverly draped at the top to give a bolero line, and accompanied by a cyclamen jersey coat. The alliance of green and cyclamen is not startling—why should it be, since the natural cyclamen flowers have their own green foliage? A touch of rust colour relieves the sombre appearance of a black duvetyn frock which, by the way. follows the vogue for fringe by having deeply fringed epaulettes. The dress is one Dart of a two-piece ensemble, the second part being a coat cut in alternate panels of rust and black. This Brightness. In the afternoon you may care to toy with the idea of a geranum red chiffon model, the brilliance nicely toned down by a draped black sash and black gloves. You can, if you like, carry a fan at an afternoon par this season, and if the fan is black, with the red dress and other black “trimmings,” so much the better. Another bright bit—a cerise gros-grain suit, worn with a daintv black lace blouse, a picturesaue black hat —and a gay little flower posy placed, not in its appointed place, but on the top of the left sleeve. To wear with evening gowns. Neil Roger has had some uncommon—what you might call “barbaric looking”—jewellery designed. With an Empire model in black chiffon yop are invited to wear a satin coat heavily embroidered with “near jewels’ of many colours. There is vcllow embroidery on the dress, and the jewel work on the wrap is repeated in a somewhat massive neck lac.

Coconut Kisses. Take 2 egg whites, a pinch bait. 1 cu sugar, 2 cups cornflakes', and 1 cup core nut Beat the eggs very stiff, add corn flakes, sugar and coconut. Prop from spoon into well oiled rui. Rile rathi high than flat. Bake in moderate over very slow oven for about an hour uni the pudding is a golden brown an crusty. The decorations can be to you own fancy, but candied orange, pine apple, big nuts and Lat prunes all g very well, not forgetting that extra das of colour from a cherry. Canapes. Canapes are made usually bv cuttin bread in slices, a quarter of an inc thick, or strips, four Inches long by a inch and a-half wide. The bread ma be toasted, fried in deep fat, _ unt brown, or buttered and browned in tl: oven. It should then be covered with useful highly-seasoned mixture of egg

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM19380716.2.164

Bibliographic details

Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXXII, 16 July 1938, Page 14

Word Count
1,088

Youth Sets Fashion Barbaric “Jewellery” Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXXII, 16 July 1938, Page 14

Youth Sets Fashion Barbaric “Jewellery” Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXXII, 16 July 1938, Page 14