Barrettes, Black Capris, Black shoes, Red scarf...? Though, I can guarantee that if you dress like that and go walking around over there, you'll look like an absolute fool. Just come back from France. The women all seem to favour loose fitting tunics, camisoles & dresses. In natural fibres. Lots of flip flops. Dresses seem to be worn shorter regardless of age! Teenagers favour short shorts. This was on the west coast so I'm sure it may differ in inland regions.
Exactly the same as what Westerners wear. The French stereotype is très inaccurate.
Most Frenchmen dress like typical Europeans, which means that they dress more stylishly than US Americans, but with the same types of clothes: button-down shirts, nicely cut jeans, belts, and well-designed shoes.
There is, of course, the stereotypical Frenchman (as portrayed in the US) in a beret with a striped shirt and pantaloons, but no Frenchman would be caught dead dressing like that in real life (unless he was pretending to be a pantomime in Paris' Latin Quarter).
Berets
What is commonly referred to as a French Painter's Shirt, "Chemise" or "Blouse de Peintre", is an ample, cotton or linen shirt which either buttons completely in the front, or merely at the neckline. The characteristic of the shirt is the "manches bouffantes", or billowing sleeves, but with a tight cuff. The shirt is quite practical, comfortable, and lends itself to the ART of painting. The Chemise de Peintre is not meant to be splattered with paint, because its cleanliness, much like the robes of a chef, is an indication of the skill and the precision, the virtuosity of the artist or artisan. In common parlance, Americans may recognize this as a "Poet Shirt" or "Pirate Shirt", without realizing the subtle and intrinsic differences which distinguish all these from one another.
French men wear clothes very similar to those worn by men in other Western countries. A casual outfit might consist of jeans, a button-up or t-shirt, and les tennis (or tennis shoes, as we call them).
they should wear what ever they want because as an artist you should not care what people think. that's why when artist don't sell a painting to someone who thinks its ugly the keep tryong to sell it. DUH
French people normally wear regular clothes and sometimes tacky for fashion
Smock
beret
overralls
moustahce
scarft
jessica hassall jeans
le nom = name le prénom = [first] name appeler = to name [something]
the name Alphonse to me is from the hit anime series Full Metal Alchemist. he is the younger brother of Edward elric.... his full name is Alphonse elric. hiromu arakawa got the name alphonse from a famous french painter. (btw, she got edward's name [edward] from the movie Edward Scissor Hands)
It's not a French name
Nancy is a French name.
Tracey french does not change your name you are Tracey
Paul
Nurse Doctor Bride Chef Dentist Painter
Edouward Manet, 1832-1883, French painter Claude Monet, 1840-1926, French painter
Camille Pissarro.
An impressionist artist of this name is not known. There was an expressionist painter called André Derain.
Dali, Salvador (Spanish painter) Degas (French Impressionist) Devinchi, Leonardo (sp?) Italian Painter Dali, Salvador (Spanish painter) Degas (French Impressionist) DaVinci, Leonardo (sp?) Italian painter Durer, Albrecht German painter and engraver
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Berthe MorisotFrederic BazilleMarie BracquemondFrancois Bonvin
scarf,binoculars
A tie.
For instance Eugène Delacroix, 1798-1863.
Among the most famous ones. Courbet, Corot, Cézanne