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33 Sentences With "coifs"

How to use coifs in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "coifs" and check conjugation/comparative form for "coifs". Mastering all the usages of "coifs" from sentence examples published by news publications.

At this time of year, women emerge from the city's salons with elaborate coifs.
In 18th century Europe, big, billowing coifs were the hot ticket for men and women alike.
In addition to their mod coifs, the males had blood-red eyes, which were visible even without binoculars.
NEW F4 ARE actors-turned-musicians with pebble-smooth chins and artful coifs (the "F" is short for "flower").
Normally smooth-talking designers and retail execs, with their perfect coifs and vicuna-trimmed rolodexes, were left stumbling for words.
The lady behind many of the envy-inducing Kardashian coifs is celebrity hair stylist and close friend of the KarJenners, Jen Atkin.
Priests with their black and white collars and aging nuns wearing coifs filed into the church when the doors opened at 9 a.m.
But it is a step down from the structured coifs that we're used to seeing from other royals, and honestly, it's refreshing as hell.
She also maintains the coifs of Lauren Conrad and Lucy Hale, two women with lust-worthy locks who've both also played around with pink hues.
Its hero, Jesus (Héctor Medina), is a gay hairdresser who dreams of becoming a drag entertainer at the nightclub where he coifs the noisy, squabbling divas.
While these women's coifs are near-identical, the difference between these two scenes is what happens after Villanelle gets the object of her current attention's hair down.
The salon that minted the coifs of a certain breed of "Sex and the City"-era socialite, not to mention tended to Martha Stewart and Hillary Clinton, has left the building.
But if there was merely a wind in the air, rumor has it you'd see folks walking backwards to sacrifice the back of their teased-up coifs in order to save the bangs.
The costumes are an explosion of cross-chronological thrift-store kitsch, faded Disney T-shirts meeting tight Victorian coifs, on endless procession around this Anyhall, U.S.A., the crisp late-afternoon autumn light filling it, then gradually dimming.
The pin-tight curls and super-thin eyebrows of the 1930s are a nod to poet Julia de Burgos, while the swept-back coifs were a signature of actress Diosa Costello in the Broadway musical Too Many Girls.
Then you see your Afros, 1940s-inspired coifs, dyn-o-mite Soul Train looks, cornrows with baby hair like you often saw in the 80s, "mixed girl curls," and then a very Afropunk-esque, orange-dipped fro-hawk.
Chief executives, bankers, hospital administrators, heads of public relations firms and publishing houses, lawyers, marketers, caterers: Certain standards of appearance have long been de rigueur for women in these positions, from being reasonably fit and appropriately dressed to displaying attractive coifs and manicured nails.
So, rather than offer fussy tips that will require more time in the morning, the Paris hairstylist David Mallett, who tends to the coifs of Charlotte Gainsbourg, Clémence Poésy and Léa Seydoux, suggests rethinking the way you approach hair care in the first place.
Close-fitting caps covering the ears and tied under the chin called coifs continued to be worn by children and older men under their hats or alone indoors; men's coifs were usually black. A conical cap of linen with a turned up brim called a nightcap was worn informally indoors; these were often embroidered.
By the 1630s, the crown was shorter and the brim was wider, often worn cocked or pinned up on one side and decorated with a mass of ostrich plumes. Close- fitting caps called coifs or biggins were worn only by young children and old men under their hats or alone indoors.
507 In October 1565, Nichola had a new bed hung with green plaiding.James Balfour Paul, Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer, vol. 11 (Edinburgh, 1916), pp. 420-1. Mary gave her one of her old white gowns. In 1564, she was given a blue velvet bonnet, linen, and Jacqueline was given canvas to make her six smocks or chemises and coifs.
Wigs and false hairpieces were used to extend the hair. In a typical hairstyle of the period, front hair is curled and back hair is worn long, twisted and wound with ribbons and then coiled and pinned up. A close-fitting linen cap called a coif or biggins was worn, alone or under other hats or hoods, especially in the Netherlands and England. Many embroidered and bobbin-lace-trimmed English coifs survive from this period.
Planché explains that in the 11th century, shortened tunics became popular as did shorter hairstyles and beard lengths. Piercings also became fashionable for men as did golden bracelets. During this era, men continued to wear tunics, cloaks, and trousers which did not vary much from their previous counterparts. Coifs became popular head-coverings and appeared to be "flat round cap[s]".. Long stockings, with feet attached, were in style, and leg bandages and shoes continued to be worn.
Instead, they don coifs that are arranged in folds over their hair. Also unlike the Wise Virgins, the five Foolish Virgins hold their cressets inverted with oil vessels hanging from them. Beneath the virgins is a pattern described as “medallions of beasts.” A young figure is also pictured sitting upon a church with the head encircled by a nimbus (halo). There is a discrepancy as to whether the figure is male or female, and to the object that is held in the figure’s hand.
Close fitting caps of fur were worn in cold climates. Linen caps called coifs were worn under the fur cap, hood or hat. In warmer climates including Italy and Spain, hair was more often worn uncovered, braided or twisted with ribbons and pinned up, or confined in a net. A Spanish style of the later 15th century was still worn in this period: the hair was puffed over the ears before being drawn back at chin level into a braid or wrapped twist at the nape.
Charles B. Howdill became fascinated by the technical aspects of photography, and was an early adopter of the Autochrome colour process developed by the Lumiere Brothers. He gave his first known illustrated lecture, entitled Carillons, Canals and Coifs, in Leeds in 1897 and went on to give hundreds more. Among his most popular talks were the melodramatically entitled The Blazing Balkans and Corsica - Isle of Unrest. Ever the showman, Howdill would sometimes wow the room by taking a colour portrait of an audience member and developing it on the spot.
A general taste for abundant surface ornamentation is reflected in both household furnishings and in fashionable court clothing from the mid-16th century through the reign of James I. A 1547 account of the wardrobe of Henry VIII shows that just over half of the 224 items were ornamented with embroidery of some kind,Hayward 2007, p. 360–361 and embroidered shirts and accessories were popular New Year's gift to the Tudor monarchs.Arnold 2008, p. 9 Fine linen shirts, chemises, ruffs, collars, coifs and caps were embroidered in monochrome silks and edged in lace.
The gable hood, a stiff and elaborate head-dress, emerged around 1480 and was popular among elder ladies up until the mid 16th century. Women of the merchant classes in Northern Europe wore modified versions of courtly hairstyles, with coifs or caps, veils, and wimples of crisp linen (often with visible creases from ironing and folding). A brief fashion added rows of gathered frills to the coif or veil; this style is sometimes known by the German name '.Kõhler, History of Costume The general European convention of completely covering married women's hair was not accepted in warmer Italy.
Along with the medical equipment were also personal items belonging to the barber-surgeon, including an expensive silk velvet coif identical to those worn by the members of the Worshipful Company of Barbers in this painting by Hans Holbein the Younger from 1540.Kirstie Buckland, "Silk Hats to Woolly Socks: Clothing Remains from the Mary Rose, Silk caps or coifs" in Gardiner (2005), pp. 35–37. The cabin located on the main deck underneath the sterncastle is thought to have belonged to the barber-surgeon. He was a trained professional who saw to the health and welfare of the crew and acted as the medical expert on board.
Pope Boniface VIII had urged the marriage as early as 1298 but it was delayed by wrangling over the terms of the marriage contract. Edward I attempted to break the engagement several times for political advantage, and only after he died in 1307 did the wedding proceed. Isabella and Edward II were finally married at Boulogne-sur-Mer on 25 January 1308. Isabella's wardrobe gives some indications of her wealth and style – she had dresses of baudekyn, velvet, taffeta and cloth, along with numerous furs; she had over 72 headdresses and coifs; she brought with her two gold crowns, gold and silver dinnerware and 419 yards of linen.
Women are divided into a small range of social categories, each one signified by a plain dress in a specific color. Handmaids wear long red dresses, heavy brown boots and white coifs, with a larger white coif (known as "wings") to be worn outside, concealing them from public view and restricting their vision. Marthas (who are housekeepers and cooks, named after the biblical figure) wear long, loose-fitting muted green garments and cover their hair with headwraps. The Wives of Commanders (who are expected to run their households beautifully) wear elegant, tailored dresses in blue and various shades of teal, cut in styles evoking the 1950s.
The Strategikon states the Huns typically used mail, swords, bows, and lances, and that most Hunnic warriors were armed with both the bow and lance and used them interchangeably as needed. It also states the Huns used quilted linen, wool, or sometimes iron barding for their horses and also wore quilted coifs and kaftans. This assessment is largely corroborated by archaeological finds of Hun military equipment, such as the Volnikovka and Brut Burials. A late Roman ridge helmet of the Berkasovo-Type was found with a Hun burial at Concesti. A Hunnic helmet of the Segmentehelm type was found at Chudjasky, a Hunnic Spangenhelm at Tarasovsky grave 1784, and another of the Bandhelm type at Turaevo.
They were loose with, as the Cunningtons describe, a "pointed cowl" and were attached to a robe stretching to the shoulders. The cape was usually a single piece of material and thus had to be put on over the head. The Cunningtons state that the "pointed Phrygian cap," or the "small, round cap with stalk or with a rolled brim and with or without the stalk" or the "stalked soft cap, resembling a beret" were worn. Travelers wore "hats with large brims and low crowns…over the hood" which tied under the chin.. Small hats with round crowns and, the Cunningtons say, "turned-down brim, decorated with a knob instead of a stalk" were also worn, as were coifs, which was a "close fitting plain linen bonnet which covered the ears and confined the hair" and tied under the chin.. The coif could be worn with other hats or hoods.

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