432
ARTICLES
IN
MUSLIN.
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g put on to a belt.
The body is a nearly triangu
lar piece of muslin.
Straps pass from the top
g of the body across the shoulders, to the belt at t the back. lI /I ,IN’
Next is a night-cap of cambric, the head-piece
of which is straight, and the crown large and loose.
A piece of insertion joins the head-piece
to the crown. At the back there is a. casing, E made sufficiently large to admit wide strings of §hemmed cambric, with which to draw it.
Edouble embroidered rutfle trims this cap.
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Next is an apron of white plaid muslin; or it. may be made of black silk. The skirt is full, $li“.
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ive also a pattern of another night-cap, which
ifl'ers from the preceding in the shape of the cad-piece, and likewise in the crown coming further forward on the top of the head. This cap is trimmed with a narrow band of insertion and row of edging laid on each side of the band.
In the front of the number are given engravings