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Show i ' H , ' : tA j Scientific Color Scliemc for Every Type of Deauty Known, by an Expert. 0e00000 I COLORS FOR ALL COMPLEXIONS. 0 ' : 0 Here Is a list of color schemes as given out by experts at the dress- makeis' exhibition: PERFECT BLONDES Cold greens, cold blues, pale pink, yellow, red 0 and pure white. , 0 0 BRUNETTES Warm greens, red, warm blues and black. 0 BROWNIES "Warm browns, pink, pale blue, navy blue and dark 0 green. . ' " - . : - 0 RED-HAIRED WOMEN Sea greens, pale blues, purples, lavenders 0 0 and black. e2 Here is a table that every woman should cut out and stick Into a corner of her mirror. It is a color scheme for every type of beauty from blonde to brunette, formulated formu-lated by Mrs. T. VIolette Morse, head of the Art Crafts Institute, Chicago. If its specifications are followed out to the letter it is warranted to make every woman a living example of perfect per-fect harmony of color. TThen to Avoid Blue. It is a formula built up on the scientific scien-tific and artistic study of years and is said to be absolutely infallible. Every one of the items has an artistic and scientific basis, as Mrs. Morse has set forth before the women attending the National Dressmakers' convention at the Sherman house in Chicago. There are, however, a few extra points which were brought out in Mrs. Morse's explanatory lecture. One of them was that blue-eyed women wo-men should not labor under the delusion that they should' always wear blue. I Much depends upon the iiair, and if the hair Is not of a harmonizing shade the color Is to be avoided rather than to be sought, despite the blue eyes. For Blondes Only. Another of them is that almost all women may wear some sort of green. Very golden-haired blondes wear pale pink better than tawny-haired blondes, and blue-eyed blondes are beautiful in pale green. Yellow is also proper and effective for yellow-hatred, blue-eyed women. I "It Is easy," says Mrs. Morse, "to . suit the decided blondes and the decided I brunettes with the proper colors. It is the 'in betweens' that give the dress-l dress-l makers the trouble. J "The proper combination can, however, how-ever, be worked out on an artistic and scientific basis by studying the composition com-position of the colors and analyzing them into their elements. "Given certain basic principles, then, we can work out the result. There is absolutely no reason why any woman should go dressed in an unbecoming i color." |