Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 223, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 September 1912 — Lovely Moonlight Rose of White or Silver Gauze [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

Lovely Moonlight Rose of White or Silver Gauze

THE last rose of summer to bloom • In the millinery garden is the most beautiful of all. A dream of rose, a lovely ghost of all the bright colored beauties which have preceded her. This is the rose of white or silver gauze, made of the fabric folded over and wrapped about a rose center in the semblance of a full blown rose. In the illustration a hat (which a French woman would be sure to call ‘ravishing”) is shown trimmed with a wreath of gauze roses and delicate grasses. The hat is a fine dead-white chip faced with moire in pale silver gray. Besides the wreath of roses, a very full bow of white ribbon partially covers the crown, in the trimming. It Itanadorable hat, beautiful in every Setail. Nothing could be better for

midsummer, or any other season, providing the body of the hat is chosen of a material suited to the time of year in which it is to be worn. Other roses branched Into wreath* and bouquets, are made of lightweight ribbons in odd colors. Very high luster in the ribbons makes these ribbon roses unusually effective and attract ive. They are used on mid-season hats of lace and embroidery and on the net and lace caps which are worn indoors and out. Tiny tightly folded 'roses continue to grow in favor, worn like a bar pin at the throat, over small bows, and jabots. They are made of all the most popular of the summer colors, blue, pink, green, lavender, pale yellow and white JULIA BOTTOMLEY.