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FASHIONS FOR NOVEMBER

... rie ornament is added at the Ivaist, or towards one shoulder; the greatest novelty in this way, however, is a bunch of blackberries, walnuts, chestiiuts, or some other autumn or winter fruit, imitated in plush or velvet. - Forn more ceremonious toilettes ...

FASHIONS

... unbecoming, tilted over the eyebrows, so that the wearer can see nothing above her boot tips, and trimmed with cherries or blackberries hanging feebly downwards, or, worse still, woollen lumps which resemble nothing in nature. A becoming hat or bonnet of ...

Published: Saturday 03 August 1878
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1389 | Page: 19 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

BOOKS ON OUR TABLE

... in a periodical called sh to The Truth Seeker. ev( !S. of to Almanacks for the coming year are as plentiful as NV, le blackberries; among those before us are the Bolton hi, id Almanack, ' The Protestant Dissenters' Almanackl' CO 'e The Illustrated ...

BRISTOL FINE ARTS ACADEMY EXHIBITION

... rendering a humble subject in an attractive guise. Her hedgerow beauties comprise wild convolvuli and the blossoms of the blackberry plant. The picture has been creditably executed. 078, On the North Sands, Teuby (A. W. Parsons)-We are able to speak of ...

IPSWICH SCHOOL OF ART

... piece which is handled prettily and with much delicacy and care. Miss C. Josselyn, for a study in chalk from the fiat, a blackberry stem and fruit; the foliage is very softly shaded out. the next two medals are given to MlissNotcutt and Mrs. R. Noy, for ...

LOCAL SCHOOLS OF SCIENCE AND ART

... Cecilia ,uxnm enassrce panel; Caroling Gillman, Sepia;twvo reliefs e by iodion,; EmesaLong, Sepia,' fromn the 'cast of blackberries, also some capital elementa~ry desiuns in cslour; Mlartin hu'rlant,: antique figutre dancing fawvn, in chl3k, also outtline ...

WIT AND HUMOUR

... MNIMPORTE.- Host That's right ; help yourself: Guest: Thankee, I haven't tasted such a glass of port since the great blackberry season of 1824. Tu QVoQUE.-Town Belle: The ball was awfully slow last night, the men could think of nothing but their ...

FOLKESTONE ART TREASURES EXHIBITION

... marquee. in the grounds, and, speaking of exhibitions generally, said at the pre- sent moment theywere as plentiful as blackberries, but still, like that luscious fruit, one did not tire of them. Sir E. Watkin, the Duke of Abercorn, and Viscount Folkestone ...

ROYAL SOCIETY OF ARTISTS

... tbemn skir. If the landscape has been depicted from an artistic. standpoint it has first been felt as a poet feels it. 4'Blackberrying by the Seae (411), by Arthur Hopkins, -.W.S.-the picture selected for the first prize of heh Art Union in connection with ...

VARIETIES

... with sheet-lead. Perhaps it al was the same man who saw a white blackbird sitting on a 38 wooden mile-stone, eating a red blackberry. [e A swell, while being measured for a pair of boots t, observed, Make them cover the calf. Impossible l ex- t.. claimed ...

Theatrical Mems

... ct up ?? and Faces. for the remainder of her. C Airey Annie Was played for the last time last S ightl and to-night Blackberries is to be revived, el It is now stated that the London production of G Iepita will be at the Gaiety in October. R 11 ...

Fashions for September

... (pink or rsd), cornflowers, chrysanthemums, or, in fact, any autumn flowers or berries-say a spray or wreath of bramble and blackberries, ripe and unripe. Velvet crowns of the Tam O'Shanter shape are now'worn, with a fancy straw brinm slightly turned up for ...

Published: Saturday 27 August 1892
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1505 | Page: 28 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture