tea-shade

See also: tea shade and teashade

English

Noun

tea-shade

  1. Attributive form of tea shades.
    • 2013, Robert McGill, chapter 1, in Once We Had a Country, London: Jonathan Cape, published 2014, →ISBN, part 1 (Come Home, America):
      He glances up to take in Fletcher’s shaggy blond hair, his tea-shade glasses, and his thin line of moustache.
    • 2015, Hal Rubenstein, “We Loved You, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah: The Beatles Make Over the World, 1965”, in The Looks of Love: 50 Moments in Fashion That Inspired Romance, New York, N.Y.: Harper Design, →ISBN, page 185, column 2:
      Pepper’s world was way more colorful, as if viewed through Lennon’s new tinted wireframe “tea-shade” glasses.
    • 2016, Lu Min, “‘Open’”, in This Love Could Not Be Delivered, New York, N.Y.: Simon & Schuster, →ISBN, chapter 2 (1990), section 2:
      After getting her first month's salary, she got her hair done with stylish vertical bangs and wore tight pants and white sneakers or a light poncho with holey, stone-washed jeans. Naturally she complimented it with tea-shade sunglasses whose branding was carefully preserved…