Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 266, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 November 1912 — COME IN SAILOR SHAPES [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
COME IN SAILOR SHAPES
Among the new importations for fall are moire hats with velvet facings in regular sailor shapes. Straight crownß and fiat brims are among the smartest models, developed in white and black. The brims of these flat shapes are-wide and ‘the trimming very simple, but very chic. A pretty example of this style is shown here with erown of moire and brim of velvet. A . collar of velvet ribbon and a long stiff plume of ostrich made up the trimming. A similar shape has a narrower brim and lower crown. It is covered with real brown velvet and trimmed
with long augur feathers that encircle the crown and curve over the brim. It is one of the finest of the new hats. A pretty French sailor with slightly rolling brim is all white except for the facing of black velvet. The low crown is rather small and admits the very graceful trim of ostrich feathers, without destroying any outline of brim or crown. A feather band, like a long plume, about the crown, and a half plume at the left side, curving over the brim edge and on the facing, make up an excellent example of the best millinery, art JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
