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Callot

American  
[ka-loh] / kaˈloʊ /

noun

  1. Jacques 1592?–1635, French engraver and etcher.


Example Sentences

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In the second volume of “Remembrance of Things Past,” the Narrator asks his beloved, Albertine, “Is there a vast difference between a Callot dress and one from any ordinary shop?”

From The New Yorker • Mar. 16, 2015

Hortense Acton, with La Pietra as her lavish stage set, wore her Callot Soeurs gowns to entertain; her parties drew everyone from Gertrude Stein and Sergei Diaghilev to Winston Churchill.

From The New Yorker • Mar. 16, 2015

The Callot Soeurs gowns found in the trunks belonged to Hortense Mitchell Acton, and are being shown for the first time in the photographs here.

From The New Yorker • Mar. 16, 2015

From the tunics of Callot Soeurs to the cylindrical day dresses of Vionnet to the drop-waist skirts of Chanel in the 1920s, fashion's deflation followed the Cubist embrace of the plane.

From Time Magazine Archive

Sometimes St. Michael is overcoming Satan; and sometimes St. Anthony is attacked by various devils of most clumsy forms—not of the grotesque and limber family of Callot!

From Curiosities of Literature, Vol. 1 by Disraeli, Isaac