TRIUMPH OF THE MUFF
The muff has quite definitely come back again. But not, I venture to think, in . the form the furriers expected it to take, write a London correspondent. Yesterday I saw two muffs; the night before I saw three. But not one of them was made of fur, or even trimmed with it. The day-time affairs were charming little things about the size of a jam rolypoly made for a family. They just held the hands of their owners, and had quaint little frills to cover the wrists. One was of astrachan, with a bunch of Parma violets nearly as big as the muff pinned to the centre. Another was of black satin, with a bole and turned-back frills in the fashionable turquoise tint. The evening muffs were fascinating. A girl in a iong white satin frock carried a small gathered one of the same material as her gown. When she danced she held it in her left hand just poised against her partner's shoulder, • An elderly woman had a black velvet muff to match her gown, and there was a charming little brocade thing of Eastern colourings to brighten a frock of black satin.
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Bibliographic details
Waikato Times, Volume 109, Issue 18309, 21 April 1931, Page 5
Word Count
198TRIUMPH OF THE MUFF Waikato Times, Volume 109, Issue 18309, 21 April 1931, Page 5
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