Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 252, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 October 1920 — Something New in Blouses [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

Something New in Blouses

ANYTHING new and “different” in blouses is among the favored in fashions; for which there is every reason to be thankful. So many blouses are made of plain georgette and embroidered in silk or beads that deslgntra appear to have forgotten to think' of them in any other terms. Even so, they are attractive enough to hold the favor of the public, which Will go on for a long time contentedly buying them because they are very pretty and because there is variety in the embroidered designs. But georgette has a promising rWal tn taffeta late arrivals in ♦he realm of blouses. These include also blouses of satin, of duvetyn, and of canton crepe. Crepe-de-chlne used for making blouses Is not at all a new idea, but it la shown In a new departure, that is, In two colors in a gingle blouse. The taffeta blouses ought to prove very successful for winter wear, first, because of their good er than georgette, ana mere is a cuewfttl brilliance about them. They are Hr figured ribbons, which serve tJ

. .. . 4 ( \ 1 - V l ' make collars and cuffia little pockety and frills. . Among georgette blouses there are some lovely models to which plain and figured patterns arW combined. Ong of these, as picture!, discloses this dainty and beautiful fabric In a figured design partly veiled with the plain material. Plain georgette forme wide panels at the back and front and is extended into sash ends that tie aft flounces of the plalp crepe, and there, are tiny buttons set close together as a finish down the front £ Now that little sparkling rhinestoM& are twinkling on the horizon of wtoW fa ah in ns we are sure to find Ji ■ S