Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 204, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 August 1913 — VEIL ADDS MUCH TO EFFECT [ARTICLE]

VEIL ADDS MUCH TO EFFECT

Selection of Material and Its Adjustment Are Matters of the Utmost - Importance. One reason why the French woman —aristocrat or bourgeois—invariably looks so smart, is because of the care with which Bhe selects and puts on her veil. Just now she is wearing with her tailored hat a complexion veil of flesh-colored fine maline which, from a short distance does not show at all, and which makes her skin seem of dazzling fairness. On this veil, in the center of a threadlike flower spray or leaf pattern in self tone, is embroidered a "beauty” spot in black, and the strip of gauze is adjusted so that the spot strikes the face wherever it most becomes it —on one cheek, on the chin or at one corner of the mouth. This complexion veil, like many of those in all-over chenille-dotted or small hexagon mesh or in flower motifs or Irregular mesh, is drawn closely about the face and its ends tucked neatly awaj under the hat’s brim at the back. Craquele meshes in either bold or modest floral jar scroll pattern, Shetland and Chantilly lace veils, are worn with elaborate hats about which they are draped in a flowing, loose manner and their ends allowed to fall gracefully over the back of the figure.