Hatters, milliners, and haberdashers were highly regarded professionals, and every town would have numerous hatshops. |
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We shall see in the making the band of handicraftswomen who will be the future housewives, cooks, nurses, the dressmakers, and milliners. |
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Clever seamstresses, milliners, and tradesmen quickly reproduced the latest in sleeves, bonnets, and furnishings for their wealthy clients. |
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Highly paid occupations included forewomen in various industries, cigar-makers, machine operators and milliners. |
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Her parents had been milliners in Clapham, just down the road, and had run a millinery and drapery shop. |
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The poet rushed to Palais Royal to be outfitted from head to foot, and he duly found the area lined with milliners. |
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From ace architects to thoroughly modern milliners, women are at the cutting edge of creative Scotland. |
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Many of them were skilled artisans, such as silversmiths, masons, milliners, cobblers, singers and tailors. |
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At the time of the 1851 census in Britain, there were 268,000 milliners and dressmakers, as against 502,000 people working in cotton textile manufacture. |
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As far as I can make out, she belongs entirely to her milliners. |
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Signac's two milliners, on the other hand, are at odds with each other. |
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Many of these grads find work at the corporate headquarters, or as costumers and milliners, or as freelance costume designers for other local theaters. |
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Pity that hyper-fashionable mantuamakers and milliners were not a little quicker at taking hints from some of our Doctors of Divinity. |
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