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  2. Host an Amazing Afternoon Tea Party With These Recipes and Ideas

    www.aol.com/host-amazing-afternoon-tea-party...

    Bake Lemon Bars. A spring or summer tea party calls for bright, delicious flavors, and lemon certainly fits the bill! Bake buttery, tart-sweet lemon bars, top them with a dusting of powdered sugar ...

  3. Tea party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_party

    A tea party is a social gathering event held in the afternoon. For hundreds of years, many societies have cherished drinking tea with companions at noon. Tea parties are considered for formal business meetings, social celebrations or just as an afternoon refreshment. [1] Originally, in a tea party, loose leaf tea was provided in a teapot along ...

  4. PF Flyers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PF_Flyers

    By 1944, PF Flyers released their first kids' collection, and created the slogan, "Run Faster, Jump Higher". [1] Fashion trends in the 1940s and 1950s saw PF Flyers expand from gyms and ball fields to become fashionable active footwear; its main competitors were Converse and Keds. "Everything you do is more fun with PF" read one 1947 magazine ad.

  5. Flyer (pamphlet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flyer_(pamphlet)

    A flyer (or flier) is a form of paper advertisement intended for wide distribution and typically posted or distributed in a public place, handed out to individuals or sent through the mail. Today, flyers range from inexpensively photocopied leaflets to expensive, glossy, full-color circulars. Flyers in a digital format can be shared on the ...

  6. Tea gown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_gown

    Liberty & Co. tea gown of figured silk twill, c. 1887. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, M.2007.211.901. A tea gown or tea-gown is a woman's dress for informal entertaining at home. These dresses, which became popular around the mid-19th century, are characterized by unstructured lines and light fabrics.

  7. Tea chest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_chest

    Tea chest Two women in London carry a tea chest to a wagon, 1943. A tea chest is a type of wooden case originally produced and used to ship tea to the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. The conventional tea chest is a case with riveted metal edges, of approximate size 500 by 500 by 750 millimetres (20 by 20 by 30 in).

  8. Tea Party (play) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_Party_(play)

    Tea Party "revolves around a family engaged in a business of sanitary engineering." [5] According to an account published in the New Yorker, the play concerns "a middle-aged self-made business man named Sisson" (whom Pinter later renamed Disson), who engages a young secretary, marries a beautiful young second wife, and takes his new brother-in-law into his business–all in the same day";

  9. Fly (clothing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_(clothing)

    A fly (UK: flies) (short for flyers) is a strip of material covering an opening on the crotch area of trousers, closed by a zipper (often), or buttons. On men's garments, the fly always opens on the wearer's right side; on women's garments, it may open either on the left or on the right.