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DARING FASHIONS ABROAD. Passengers on the Orient liner Orford, which arrived from London recently, said they found England and France on the same level in the production of new* fashions. Mrs Dare-Sinclair, who has come out from London to see her mother, Mrs Lanceley, of Greenwich, said that women were having their hair dyed with a band of grey over one side of the head. On the Isle of Wight the most prominent colour for bathing costumes was white. Some of the costumes were two-piece, the upper piece being a silk ’kerchief attached to the neck with a string of beads, and fastened at the back, and tTie other piece a pair of very short “shorts." Miss Marjory Keogh, who travelled ail over England and the Continent, found that Paris and London had more life in them than any other 'centres. On the French beaches the most daring costumes were seen—brassieres and trunks.
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Bibliographic details
Waikato Times, Volume 112, Issue 18796, 18 November 1932, Page 5
Word Count
155COMING CUT Waikato Times, Volume 112, Issue 18796, 18 November 1932, Page 5
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