I love it so much I want to get a few more colours to pair with
my other circle skirts because a vintage - loving gal can never have too many cute cardigans in her wardrobe.
I'm the same way - until last fall actually, I never (as an adult) wore a poodle skirt as part of my daily attire for just that reason, but than I got the chance to review a royal blue (modern version of) one and found I could make it work as well as
any other circle skirt and not have it look costume - y.
Not exact matches
In a final test Farman flew from one end of the field to the
other, and
skirted along the fortifications at this point in a large
circle, covering in all more than 2 kilometers (1 1/4 miles) in a flight which lasted for nearly three minutes.
The
skirts are never full
circle skirts apart from the Audrey dresses and the occasional
other rare dress, but usually they are just «full» non-
circle skirts at varying degrees of fullness.
I need another
circle skirt since my
other one is pretty old and shapeless at this point.
The
skirt is flared but not a full
circle, which is another way this dress lends itself to perfect workwear or
other conservative occasions as it lacks the showyness of my usual massively fluffy and bottom - heavy
skirted silhouette.
If I can sort that waist length out and take it in slightly then it will be a lovely dress to wear, even if I am sad that it doesn't have the full
circle skirt that I feel will take this design onto a whole
other level of chic.
There were
other factors involved... but I started thinking about my tan
circle skirt and how I have worn it so much already, since making it in June.
Lately, I have been collecting up more and more full
skirts and
circle -
skirt dresses, and when Lotty Dotty Vintage posted a 32 + waist only purge in a buy sell trade group I'm part of, I miraculously claimed this and two
other gorgeous vintage swing dresses that all fit my ever expanding waistline, and should be easy enough to alter (probably temporarily, just in case I need to sell them later) post baby.
Perhaps more than any
other item, the
circle skirt instantly brings the»50s to mind!
The
other stands beside her, watching the dance unfold: the
circling couples, the clasped hands, the drumming shoes, the whirling
skirts, the bounce of the floor.
«In 1916 a staff member of the socialist magazine The Masses objected to the insufficiently high - minded «pictures of ashcans and girls hitching up their
skirts on Horatio Street» by Sloan, George Bellows and
others of the Henri
circle that illustrated the magazine.