Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 82, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 April 1919 — Easter Millinery in Tailored Styles [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
Easter Millinery in Tailored Styles
She who wears a suit and tailored hat on Easter Sunday may do so with the assurance that she is above reproach as to the correctness of her Easter garb. The most austere of critics will not find fault with her. It is a good rule to follow, that which admonishes us to wear quiet clothes to church. Even tailored hats this spring are less simple than they have bben for several seasons past. There is a great liking for black hats In high luster byaids, trimmed with fancy feathers, ribbons or flowers. Even when they are all black there is nothing somber about them, because the shapes and their trimlmngs_have a brilliant sheen. Here are three black hats that can be recommended for general wear. They illustrate the greater elaboration In making hats that has come in with peacetime millinery. At the top of the group there is shown a braid hat having little loops of silk all over the shape. The same idea appears in hats having loops of beads put on in this way. There is a facing of satin and a -folded baud of satin ribbon about the vrown. A wing is posed flat against the underbrim at the back. - The hat with round crown of lisere braid has an openwork brim of slpperstraw woven from crown to brim edge and back, that makes it very cool looking. It has a collar and tie of narrow “stove-polish” ribbon and a fan Of imitation goura feathers at the back. , •’ On e of the new "cut-out” shapes completes the group. It ls of lisefe braid having the brim faced with
•» * satin and bound with piping braid. The brim is slashed into sections, and each section rolled back. It looks like a difficult bit of millinery work. Loops of silk cord slipped over satin-covered buttons on the crown make a very tailored finish on this model.
