Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 111, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 May 1914 — Hair Coiffures and Flat Ringlets [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

Hair Coiffures and Flat Ringlets

AMONG the revivals of old and curious fashions that have made a decided succees, the old-fashioned flat ringlet is very much In evidence as a striking example. The two coifTures pictured here illustrate the return to the high coiffure 'in simple arrangements and conservative style. In the first picture the hair is waved loosely, rolled Into a French twist at the, back, and finished with a puff on top of the head. In the second picture there is an older style revived, with the hair waved in the largest and loosest of undulations. It is pompadoured at the front and combed up to the top of the head a r the bark. The ends are

arranged in a coil with an upstanding puff at the center. Small shell hairpins are used for coiffures of this kind. . i Except for shell pins, medium and Bmall in sise, hair ornaments just now are Conspicuous by their absence. The appearance of colored wigs for fancy dresß (of green, jwrple, pink and other impossible colors of hair) brought out shell combs set with colored stones In colors to match. These proved bo attractive that they are being worn, while the fancy colored hair Is simply a freak that serves as an advertising feature in the-dlspUgr of present-day fashions. JULIA BOTTOMLEY.