The frail little Oriental moving the diaphanous blue robes across the dock did not go around.
He glanced down at himself and found himself solid, though surrounded by the diaphanous white robe, which seemed to be more mist than material.
One of the women in diaphanous robes, the eldest but still young, leaped gracefully to her feet.
She moved among them in her diaphanous robes and she laughed and drank and flirted with them.
They were lounging on divans by the courtyard pool, nibbling bits of roasted meat that slavegirls in diaphanous robes popped into their mouths.
Marie Sallé discarded tradition and her corset and danced in diaphanous robes.
She wore a diaphanous robe tight against the contours of her body.
Helen of Troy, if she lived, was not a princess of classical golden-age Greece, elegant in diaphanous robes.
In 1911, Fuller, a dancer, conducted an experiment where she used film footage and projected it onto diaphanous robes.
Both wore diaphanous white robes, and neither gave so much as the flicker of an eye to the gateway, opening into his apartments in Illian.