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"décolleté" Definitions
  1. (of a dress, etc.) with a very low top that shows a woman's shoulders and the top part of her breasts

39 Sentences With "décolleté"

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

I put it on my décolleté, so you look nice, and on my hands.
I gave it a good shake and liberally spritzed my face, neck, and décolleté.
To help pick a shade, look at your neck and décolleté because that's truly your color.
Also, leaving the house without applying sunscreen on the face, neck, décolleté, and back of the hands.
Even those who wear sunscreen on their face every day seem to forget the décolleté and hands.
If you use anti-aging treatments on your eyes and face, it's time to start focusing on your décolleté.
She wanted the small band sleeves of her décolleté-baring dress to form a straight line from shoulder to shoulder.
Lather on a pump of this firming décolleté concentrate each night to soften the appearance of lines on your neck and chest.
Which included Paris Hilton in a black silk negligee gown with plunging lace décolleté and black suede thigh-high lace-up stiletto boots.
If you were a woman, no matter what you were wearing—décolleté or a head scarf—someone would give you a dirty look.
Her makeup artist Simone A Siegl covered up the dress in paper towels so she can go to town painting foundation on Bell's décolleté.
Today she takes a different approach than just chiseling out her cheeks: she uses this firming concentrate from Lancer to give some firm,defined shape on her neck and décolleté.
Throughout history, a combination of legislation, local regulation and social pressure has influenced the way women have dressed — corsets and décolleté, hoop skirts and bustles, the controversial advent of pants.
Later on, right before you go to sleep, use an oil balm or nighttime moisturizer — I love the Pro-Collagen Neck & Décolleté Balm from Elemis — and massage it into your skin.
In the directions, Beckham lays out the intended application, explaining that the priming moisturizer is to be used daily, with one to two pumps smoothed evenly over face, neck, and décolleté.
Fast forward to the middle if you're not interested in Kardashian's routine, which includes witch hazel as toner, a moisturizer, foundation, her own BB cream and a sunscreen application on her décolleté.
Ms. Rubin writes: Throughout history, a combination of legislation, local regulation and social pressure has influenced the way women have dressed — corsets and décolleté, hoop skirts and bustles, the controversial advent of pants.
All the experts agree that cleansing your face, neck, and décolleté every single night to remove dirt and environmental toxins from the skin surface is the most important thing you can do to protect your skin.
But perhaps the most luminous part of her glam was her décolleté and legs, which were coated in her new Body Lava Body Luminizer in Brown Sugar and topped off with the Fairy Bomb Glittering Pom Pom.
For the first two weeks, you're advised to use a few drops of the lotion applied to a dampened cotton pad, patting across the face, neck, and décolleté (without rubbing or passing over the same area more than once).
" Ms. Hepburn insisted on seeing Mr. Givenchy's designs in progress, and felt they were perfect for the character; one was a dress with a square, above-the-collarbone neckline that would come to be known as the "décolleté Sabrina.
Lee, who was previously at French label Celine, kicked off the show in all leather looks - a décolleté dress, zipped biker jacket and trousers - and plenty of A-line quilted skirts that were held at the front with chunky golden chains.
"The Diamond Perfection body treatment is great before a special event, as the full-body gentle exfoliation will help boost your pre-awards glow—especially if your dress exposes the décolleté, shoulders, back, or legs," Whitford said of the spa's most popular pre-Oscars treatment.
The first women's branded razor, the Milady Décolleté, hit the open market, and an advertisement for depilatory powder, published in a 20163 issue of Harper's Bazaar, advised "the removal of objectionable hair," warning would-be flappers that "Summer Dress and Modern Dancing" could lead them to flash too much underarm hair.
It was common for women in his court to wear bodices through which their breasts, cleavage and nipples could be seen. In 1450, Agnès Sorel, mistress to Charles VII, started a fashion trend when she wore deep, low, square décolleté gowns with fully bared breasts in the French court.
While painting a portrait, Graff always focused the light on the person's face. In Graff's portraits it was always the face that got the attention and the light, except when the sitter was a lady. In that case he also focused on the lady's décolleté. Graff was a master of light and shadow.
In 2017 he was found guilty of sexual acts with an 14-year old girl in his hotel room in Zurich. The acts were giving her three French kisses, stroking the girl's back and waist and kissing her on the décolleté. He denied all allegations.Starclown Larible geht nicht noch einmal vor Gericht, NZZ.
Nearly a century later, also in France, a man from the provinces who attended a court ball at the Tuileries in Paris in 1855 was disgusted by the décolleté dresses and is said to have said; "I haven't seen anything like that since I was weaned!".Gernsheim, Alison. Victorian and Edwardian Fashion. A Photographic Survey.
The government made many rules dictating the specifications of costumes. For example, actors performing in Auto Sacramentales had to wear silk or velvet and women were forbidden to wear strange headdresses, décolleté necklines, or wide-hooped or non-floor length skirts. As well, actors were only allowed to wear one costume per play, unless it was specifically stated in the text.
Annually the Counts booked the Whitewood Commercial Hotel for the Frenchman's Ball. "Many pretty dresses of the style of the late eighties were in evidence, souvenirs perhaps of better days across the sea. The vivacious Frenchwomen of gentle birth and breeding in fashionable décolleté gowns and jeweled neck and arms lent an air of distinction in spite of the incongruity of the crude setting". Remains of this settlement still exist and many residents of the community are proud of their connection to the Most Romantic Settlement in the West.
High collars were the norm for ordinary wear. Towards the end of this period, the full collar was in fashion, though some décolleté dresses were worn on formal occasions. For that purpose, the Bertha neckline, which lay below the shoulders and was often trimmed with of lace or other decorative material, became popular with upper and middle-class women but it was socially unacceptable for working-class women to expose that much skin.AO, The Iconic Women's Fashion of the Victorian Times, History Things, 2020-05-31 Multiple pearl necklaces were worn to cover the décolletage.
In 1989, Lacroix launched jewelry, handbags, shoes, glasses, scarves, and ties (along with ready-to-wear). In this same year, he opened boutiques within Paris, Arles, Aix-en-Provence, Toulouse, London, Geneva, and Japan. With his background in historical costume and clothing, Lacroix soon made headlines with his opulent, fantasy creations, including the short puffball skirt ("le pouf"), rose prints, and low décolleté necklines. He referenced widely from other styles—from fashion history (the corset and the crinoline), from folklore, and from many parts of the world—and he mixed his references in a topsy-turvy manner.
It was in operettas that he came to share the stage in 1923 first with Jean Gabin in La Dame en Décolleté and then with Charles Boyer and Falconetti in Simili in 1925. 1927 found him appearing in the review of Au Temps de Gastounet (written by Rip) with Jacqueline Delubac. It was Paul Colin who created the first billboard for the young singer. After appearing in the operetta "Lulu" with Fernand Gravey, he embarked on a transatlantic journey to Rio de Janeiro in the company of Georges Milton and Alice Cocéa for the inauguration of the Copacabana Palace (1928).
1850, page 8, Little Arts, 1987, In the 16th century, when Spanish conquistadors colonized the Inca Empire, traditional cleavage-revealing and colorful Inca dresses were replaced by high necks and covered bosoms.Joyce E. Salisbury, The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Daily Life: 15th and 16th centuries, pages 229–230, Greenwood Press, 2004, In European societies during the 16th century, women's fashions with exposed breasts were common across the class spectrum. Anne of Brittany has been painted wearing a dress with a square neckline. Low, square décolleté styles were popular in 17th-century England; Queen Mary II and Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles I of England, were depicted with widely bared breasts.
Publications advised women against "unmasking their beauties". 18th-century news correspondents wrote that "otherwise polite, genteel women looked like common prostitutes".Tracy E. Robey, There Was Never a Time When Western Society Wasn't Weird About Cleavage, Racked, 2017-12-21 During the French Enlightenment, there was a debate about whether female breasts were merely a sensual enticement or a natural gift to be offered from mother to child. Not all women in France wore the open-neck style without modifications; a self-portrait by Adélaïde Labille-Guiard (France, 1785) shows the painter in a fashionable décolleté dress while her pupils have their bosoms accessorized with gauzy handkerchiefs.
Décolletage (or décolleté in adjectival form) refers to the upper part of the female torso, consisting of the neck, shoulders, back and chest, which is exposed by the neckline, the edge of a dress or shirt that goes around the neck, especially at the front of a woman's garment.neckline, Cambridge Dictionary neckline, Collins Dictionary neckline, Dictionary.com The neckline and collar are often the most attention- grabbing parts of a garment, effected by bright or contrasting colors, or by décolletage. The term is most commonly applied to a neckline that reveals or emphasizes cleavage and is measured as extending about two hand-breadths from the base of the neck down; both in the front and the back.
She also wore ensembles by fashion companies such as Versace, Armani, Chanel, Dior and Clarks. Among her iconic outfits are a décolleté by David and Elizabeth Emanuel worn by a newly engaged Diana at a charity event, a cocktail dress by Christina Stambolian, commonly known as the "Revenge Dress", which she wore after Charles's admission of adultery, an evening gown by Victor Edelstein that she wore to a reception at the White House and later became known as the "Travolta dress", and a Catherine Walker pearl-encrusted gown and jacket dubbed the "Elvis Dress", which she wore for the first time on an official visit to Hong Kong. In early 1980s, Diana preferred to wear dresses with floral collars, pie-crust blouses, and pearls.
117, New York University Press, 1998, The Flapper generation of 1920s flattened their chests to adopt the fashionable "boy-girl" look by either bandaging their breasts or by using bust latteners.Marlen Komar, The Evolution Of Cleavage "Ideals", Bustle, 2016-01-20 Corsets started to go out of fashion by 1917, when metal was needed to make tanks and munitions for World War IJihan Forbes, A Brief History Of The Bra, Elle, 2013-11-13 and due to the vogue for boyish figures.Jill Fields, An Intimate Affair: Women, Lingerie, and Sexuality, page 75, University of California Press, 2007, In New Zealand, the early appearance of décolleté clothes in 1914 was soon superseded by the "flat" fashion.Sandra Coney, Standing in the Sunshine: A History of New Zealand Women Since They Won the Vote, page 115, Viking, 1993, Breast suppression prevailed in the Western world so much the U.S. physician Lillian Farrar attributed "virginal atrophic prolapsed breasts" to the fashion imperatives of the time.
In 2002, Wigge stated working on TV broadcaster VIVA . He also presented comedy clips on the British daily show London Calling. On that program, Wigge made what was called the longest donkey ride in music television history. On his ride, dressed as Henry VIII, Wigge visited Queen Elizabeth on her 50th jubilee at Buckingham Palace . In 2003, Wigge returned to Germany to work on the comedy program The Chancellor’s Bungalow on WDR. He portrayed the satirical reporter “Dr. Wigge”doing interviews with the Chancellor of Germany and the President of Germany. From 2004 to 2006, Wigge interviewed celebrities for Sarah Kuttner – Die Show (VIVA and MTV). Under the heading “Wigge on a Mission” he conducted interviews using insane quirks and confusing statements. Ben Stiller wants to cancel the interview, Hale Berry puts Wigge's eyelash in her décolleté and Angelina Jolie calls him a “crazy but fantastic man”. Wigge also appeared on the ARD Morning Show”as a special reporter for the Olympics Summer Games and the 2004 European Football Championship. Wigge also produced Wigge BIG in Japan (VIVA, 2004) and Kulturschock (MTV, 2006).

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