KERAMIC STUDIO 
109 
Miss Cameron 
Mrs. Wilson Mrs. Hilditch 
Mrs. Hilditch 
Mrs. Francis King 
repeat the gold background. Miss Mary E. Harrison, the 
club's president, had an individual breakfast set of lavender 
and soft green which was a distinct success. It was a pure 
complimentary scheme in which the blue purple of light value 
and of a subtle grey quality was the major hue, with the green 
playing up as second. The tray was white with a single line 
of the dominant color and the cloth had a bit of embroidery 
employing the color and motive used in the set. The beauty 
of the porcelain was preserved in large areas, being choicely 
decorated rather than generously curved. 
Miss Ehler's pair of book ends touched a distinct field. 
A quiet golden harmony. The brown wood mounts carried 
each a tile with formal landscape in flat lines of dull golden 
browns, reds and brown greens. These would be a delight on 
any library table. Miss Ehlers had two suggested tea sets, 
one in a close analogous scheme of greens and blues, the other 
reaching the limit of an analogous selection running from 
yellow green through gold into yellow pink, both of which 
charm but the former of more distinction. Miss A. Wurtman's 
very successful jar in blue green in which both lustre and color 
was employed, attained a balance so good that the chief fac- 
tors of its beauty was all round harmony and suitability of- 
design treatment and coloring, making it a useful flower vase. 
The values selected were admirable, in balanced steps. It 
was altogether satisfactory. Miss Louise McDougal's all- 
over decoration on a vase was charming and beautifully bal- 
anced and of fine color scheme. Mrs. Straubach's tea caddy 
was in design and color thought so pleasing that one wished 
Miss Charlotte Kroll 
Mrs. F. N. Waterfield 
Miss Nora Foster 
