If she wears a strapless evening gown with a corsage, she's unexpectedly dazzling and radiant. |
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He had given her corsage made of carnations just like these with little pieces of Queen Anne's lace mixed in and tied with a blue ribbon. |
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All that was missing was the corsage, and he almost felt guilty for not bringing one. |
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We know we deserve to be met at our flat, perhaps given a corsage, before we step out. |
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The corsage is on, dinner reservations are made, picture appointments are scheduled, and of course, you're wearing the perfect dress. |
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Perhaps best known as a corsage flower for a prom, wedding, or other special occasion, a gardenia also makes a great gift as a potted plant. |
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A modest corsage or arrangement of flowers from your own garden is much more meaningful than an expensive purchase from the floral shop. |
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Quietly, he reached into a box and pulled out a corsage, a lotus flower, and pinned it to the strap of Diana's dress. |
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Mark was in the florist shop, picking out a series of flowers to place in a corsage. |
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The proper way for the corsage to be worn is the flower going upward and the stems down. |
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Jordan reached out a hand tentatively to finger the large, vibrant tiger lily that lay amongst some greens in a small corsage box. |
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As we pulled up to Mike's, he walked outside in his tux, corsage in hand, and a huge smile on his face. |
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A very light rouleau of swansdown bordered the corsage and the fronts of the dress. |
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Knowing how well-dressed she usually was, I imagine she would have added a few sequins, a corsage or a rope of pearls. |
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I asked him about his famously resplendent Afghan hound photographed in a designer corset-collar and white silk rose corsage. |
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Except the world-renowned rugby player had swapped his mouth guard for a corsage and his number two jersey for a tuxedo. |
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The dress is sewn with a garden of silk roses, outrivalled by the natural roses in her corsage and those fallen from it. |
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Her beautiful clingy dress that she had worn last night was in a heap on the floor along with her stiletto heels, aluminum crown, and corsage. |
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Maryann wore a wrist corsage and the other bridesmaids had posies of roses. |
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As for flowers, a small corsage you can pin on her coat gives you a reason to be face to face with her for several seconds at meeting. |
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Twenty-two years later, as Duchess of Lauderdale and already somewhat florid, but with a defiantly low corsage, she sat again for Lely with the Duke her husband. |
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Worn since the 18th century, the corsage has become especially popular in the 20th century. |
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Come spring, you needed a date, a white dinner jacket and a corsage. |
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Instead of a corsage, he brought me a plastic duck he'd stolen from a chi chi's restaurant. |
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Colorfully designed wrist corsage bursting in blooms of purple, pink and orange, adding splendor to your occasion. |
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The best option under a halter dress is a strapless bra, a halter bra or a corsage. |
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Some of the young girls asked if Sister would throw her corsage for them to catch. |
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In red felt with black ostrich feathers, it came with a matching corsage. |
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The satin tablier in front was gracefully draped with white tucked Brussels net, and the corsage was made high to the throat and ruched at the neck. |
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If she is wearing a strapless gown, you need to buy a wrist corsage. |
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She was dressed in a fancy, long dress with a tight-looking corsage, and was holding an umbrella on one hand and apparently the same locket they had found on the other. |
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The nose on the best of these is a little like the bouquet du corsage. |
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A woman helps a man put a corsage on his jacket at a citizenship ceremony. |
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Flower bouquets that are carried include the nosegay and corsage. |
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