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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1908)
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL', PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER, 22, 1908: FRENZIED in-One Gown, Stockings WitK Tassels, Pantaloon Skirts, New TanagraGowns WitK ..Corsets Sewed Into Tnem, a Four-Dresses-AU- Boneless Corsets, Fourteen-Foot"; Hats and Paris ienne Effects in "Knicters FASHIONS By Mrs. Cholly ' Knickerbocker. WHEN the split directolre gown made lt appearance last spring you thought the limit of the risque in dress had been , : " reached -didn't you? You held up your hands In righteous horror and shut your eyes at least you pretended to shut your eyes, but it's , my private opinion that you tdok care to keep one corner open. It wouldn't do . to miss anything, you know. But now you - must rlose your eyes and bold your breath, because here is something mora shocking, more scandal ; us, more sensational than the split sheath skirt ever thought of being. The French designer must have spent Wnatlon chemise and "knickers" ' of finely woven silk, which, being elastic, hugs the form like its own skin. The other is a corseted frock. Think of corset and gown In onet A consummation of French genius, one thinks, that were , it not for the un deniable' expense of the clever notion it would spread like wildfire in popular -lty. v- . But this latest clever thought of on of the great French modistes Is not In expensive. For only the most skilful of stav-makers are employed to make the corset, which Is fashioned of the lining of the frock. ' He builds It abso lutely as he would an ordinary corset, following the measurements carefully. When completed it Is returned to the modiste, who then proceeds to build the gown upon it. ' And such a perfect fit as results! And such a slenderness! But only for the long : of purse Is duces 'the underclothing to a minimum. . edly downward in dimension. If not in For the iucky, lucky woman who is price. not cursed with superfluous flesh the . The - transparent .' fabrics of evening edict of 'No corsets with Tanagra costumes, of course, demand 'something gowns" should be of the greatest Inter- In the way of an under petticoat, but if est The great dressmakers all agree . you must wear a petticoat It must not that even the lightest corseting spoils the svelte lines demanded by these ar tistic frocks. The graceful droop at the waist, the lax poae of the figure, the languid air of the whole silhouette is best obtained when few underclothes and no corsets at ail are worn. This does sound a bit startling at first, but It is an actual fact, that with some of the more extreme of the new Grecian and Tanagra 'costume effects the corset will be dispensed, with alto gether. inTftrplace will be worn a lit tle contrivance or rather two , con trivances of satin, which, while giving the necessary support at the bust and keeping the figure flat below the -waist 1 n rront. will leave n! wcnicr. auair be of lingerie. To a princess jersey of knitted silk, so fine that you could al most draw the whole garment through a finger ring. Is attached a knee-deep flounce of lace-trimmef net, with per haps an under flounce of softest chif fon. k ; r -4 And since the multiplication of under garments amounts almost to a crime, according to the present way of think inf, corsets and petticoats and corsets and knickerbockers are now turned out all made. in one by enterprising design ers and manufacturers. Thus we find ftettlcoats of finely woven silk, cllng ng in the extreme, built In one piece wrai iigntiy, oonea corsets, the whole ' ' i 3 ) 4 f V t ffj if $f ;f - ' " i f 4i i U i bars. It would be more charitable to imagine hat he ate a great quantity of pate-de-foie-gras - sandwiches and drank many glasses of absinthe, after which he had a nightmare of the worst description. Result: This latest split gown. From the .hack they look qiflte ordi narylong, tightly-fitted. But the front view leaves you in doubt as to whether the wearer's nether limbs are per part of boned corset cover, which, it you are - reasonably slia-ht. -does awav with the need of mora substantial cor- ,nn,rrPlfrfellnfne12tS thischeme possible, for! ofour.e. It utely free and unhampered at the waist H'M"? :,KrfecLitn r.nI,"i this horror In feminine att re or, per- mPAn. - corset for each mwn. Vh line. ; kJilckers of silk or lingerie with anup- hum i wAiui rn mnni phnritah a tn . ' ' , . " . . .! i . -, t ... , .n...n i.a mavm Tier .Dtri or nonea cnraec cover, w aress is actually maoe ana sewea upon An iuuiuniur,! uan.i -It Rut tar thn. shn ran atfnwA tt ithf this season's fashions ignore the Is a luxury . worth considering. No uooer part of the figure that the lines "hj mora uncertain corseting to mar the fit from the waist down are all that count, seung.fi; : This may weu De so, ror wim waist r Ana just at present - xnicxers are lines creeping up under the armpits quite the most attention-holding part of there is not much to be corseted above our feminine toilette, petticoats having one's sash. - . been given such a '"knockout" blow. For another thing, much lower-busted And when one comes, to " think of It, corsets are favored by the artists In fancy a Naiad, or the winged Vlctorv. the newest costuming, no woman lacea rigidly Into one of the unyielding high corsets recently in vogue could possi bly have the lissome, unconfined grace of form imperatively necessary for true classic outlines. But as the Inches are clipped off the top of -the new cor nets thev are added to the bottom, and the tendency of new- models is assur- of one's adored frock; for every woman knows that even the best of corsets Is an uncertain thing, apt .one day to be too tight, another refusing to' lace even ly. But with this corset -and-gown-ln-one arrangement all this Is done away with. And. as 1 said just before, it re- --1 m 0 V 1 A-1 :s the Very Newest of New Ideas in the Dressmakers' Art. They Now Malte the Gown Onto Corset, Which lhus Becomes Lining of the Dress. til . l X or any or the joveiy arapea creatures r M . i f -ff ?' ;- , f I" it f t'W it from whose gracious outlines- the cos- II V- t f J v 5 ? . it l '. 1 tume, designers profess to be taking T i ' h f - V v - f II UfA,f, Kfi 1 -'jfV ' -';' ' bly have the lissome, unconnnea grace tneir inspiration in petticoats. -No, " yW - f -J if v j v t ' B s S 1 ' ' v v 'w :'- '.''- of form imperatively necessary for Bisters; If we are to be classic let th vA V f -V NJ . ' . a i ffyt if mi . r V- - true classic outlines. But as the Inches thing be done thoroughly. A petticoat (fy. V -1 " t r fi f f f f f Jf j,: ?'. , . are clipped off the top ofthe new cor- In. a tradition, to be sure, but what a Trxi K J i f . ? k,i , M '-i , f " ,,J nets they are added to the bottom, and trifle Is a tradition in the acquirement llvk') V v I - - - '( - ! ' if f ' ' I . - x t ' the tendency of new-models 1 assur- of artl v s , ivy At - ft ' ; . t , y' x i ' ' ' s T'l V 7 H'AJ5.. VJ'. Jl ffJ ' -Vt -v.-y Ys Her . p n m, ';i m : -- j j? WMwWv , ! r. AmM . " "WMi !. tff$h ' The Toreador .. SfF WtMm onVofLitest .r. ytS- ' : lIj r ec&fflllf .encased In masculine or feminine at tire. Anything more , like trousers, when, in reality, they are not trousers, you never saw. They remind you of ; the ancient joke about the poor suffra gettes about "wom.n's rights" being "man's lefts" and you wonder if the perpetrator of this practical Joke in the way of women's clothes had an "ink ling inkling Inkling" that the strong minded sisterhood is going to demand the rlKht to don man's attire as well as casting votes. Some people, you know, are prepared for all emergencies. But, as In the comment-provoking dl rectoire skirt, th split's the thing. H starts at the hem directlv in the renter of the front and runs up. divid ing the skirt to about 10 inches below .': thA natural ra!at Una Th. . nm nr t . pieces of the skirt are then drawn back . and fastened by elastics to the center back seam of the skirt. As thn skirt is very narrow In cut this virtually forms two trouser legs, completely out lining the limbs of those courageous or outrageous enougn 10 wear it. Oh, It's a horrid thing In clothes, I assure you. And I sincerely hope they will suppress It before it has a chance 4o cross the ocean, and inflict Itself upon us here. But anything for a sen sation the more risque the better so perhaps, the hope Is a vain one. The war against hips has now been raging for some time, but It still goes Badly on. Fat women etrueK-linir to be . mm ana tnm women striving to be thinner still. It is not In this day the matchless figure that draws admiring and envious glances, but the figure like a match. And so desirable has this attribute nf wlllowyness become that the modish Ideal Is almost that represented by the attenuated , Bernhardt. ,of whom they used to say: When she took her bath he had to be very, very careful to keep the stopper in the -tub lest in an un watchful moment she might be car ried down the drainpipe with the water! If you have hips prepare to shed them now, is the uncompromising edict. And very single Woman being from the vine-like, creature who has a slender waist, but unfortunately "Is waistline all the Way up." to the comfortable soul who bulges generously wherever her ... corset will permit It has fallen Into the procession and enthusiastically taken up the slogan: "Down with Fat:" Ah, that we were all paper dolls from whom a facile clip of the scissors might eliminate the too redundant outlines! However, such accommodating surgery la not possible even in these day of ac complished beauty doctors, and the road to slenderneea Is apt to be a hard and bleak one, the goal to be attained only by arduous dieting,: expensive cor seting and that bugaboo of the average woman, etranuourt exerciser'' The vital nuestlon. after the desirable attenuation has been attained. ' is how to bs clothed in order to correctly ex press the fashionable silhouette; how to reduce th under-garmenting to the least possible bulk in order that flowing outer fabrics may cling 'artistically without Interfering lumps and humps beneath.' , v - I'eUicoats for some time have been banished from the fashionable Ameri can woman's toilette, but ,now the l-eneh woman has aone her one better, f"r. be a process of limine tlnn.1 she has . 1 .rnuiiit Iim" garrmnt down to of 'iime. hetiide her ehoes and stockings J iNi two! 1 ' una cf th'esa, two garments la com : Hussars Been Borrowed This Dashing ' Little Shako. Pi?r Htt A Qreatloo That la Simply StaggerU52-Fourteea Feet in Circumference. THE FOUR-DRESSES-ALL-IN-ONE-GOWN. . I Gown with overskirt draped 00 one hip, the long ehda of the overskirt. descending to the ground and .ending ia tassels. .2 The overskirt is still draped on the hip, but on the opposite side is lifted to the shoulder and held .there by a metallic ornament 3 The overskirt la lifted , on to both shcal&rs, falling in graceful folds across the bust end down below the waist in front In the hack It ftangs almost to the floor.' 4 This very varied overskirt .takes the form of a Ion enveloping cloak- It hangs straight in front and in the back, with slight folds from each shoulder. ' . 'V I N.1