Oh! A cotton house dress was popular up through the 1970s. Made of cotton (before polyester was standard addition to 'cotton' clothing), a house dress was plain or printed fabric, with buttons or snaps up the front, and short cap sleeves (flared usually). Worn without hosiery (just bra, panties, and comfortable slip), the house dress was used when a woman was doing housework, or just because a house dress was more comfortable than being more dressed up. A woman wore no jewelry except maybe a watch or necklace, and of course her wedding ring, while wearing the house dress. Most women had a pair of flat, comfortable shoes, or slippers, to wear with a cotton house dress.
A tiring house is like the dressing room.
Click on your house. Then you click on the curtains in your house!
If you go out your door, it will be around your house and your garden.
go to your dressing room.it is near your house
House recipe
To mention a white collar worker conjures an image of dressing an image of dressing well on a crowed bus or subway and struggling to afford a house.
The tiring house was what the dressing room was called during the Elizabethan era, when Shakespeare's plays were being written and performed.
Tiring is a contraction of attiring, meaning dressing. This is related to the word "attire" for clothes. A tiring house is a place to dress, a dressing-room. It also served as a place to store scripts and costumes, and to repair costumes and props.
Ken's Foods. Marlborough, MA
More context, please! (Architectural? domestic? furnishing? culinary? etc.)
Just called the people who make Ken's Steak House dressing, the woman told me the dressing is good until the expiration date. I even asked if that was true for the creamy caesar (I dont't feel to good about that, has anchovy), she said yes!
Click on the map and then on the map, next to your house, there is a room with a washing line by it. That is the dressing room. Click on that and then you are there.