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Discover LudwigThe phrase "alabaster skin" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone's skin that is very pale, smooth, and often has a luminous quality, typically in a poetic or descriptive context.
Example: "She walked into the room, her alabaster skin glowing under the soft light, captivating everyone around her."
Alternatives: "porcelain skin" or "ivory skin".
Exact(38)
No make-up on her Celtic alabaster skin, her red hair thick and vivid.
She has large, piercing eyes, a high, aristocratic forehead and alabaster skin.
Her alabaster skin flushes with the effort to contain the vulgarity of feeling that sometimes overwhelms her characters.
Along with a hubba-hubba figure, she possessed a great smile, alabaster skin and dark, curly hair.
Mr. Bettany, who plays the Young Gangster, has the alabaster skin of a figure in a Renaissance portrait.
Wendy Whelan, her red costume lending her alabaster skin an even more otherworldly glow, is all fragility.
Similar(22)
Their alabaster skins and black hair and mutual fondness for bright lipsticks; the suggestion of a flagrant and decadent sex life.
Stepping out on kitten-heeled mules, the models, with alabaster pale skin and upswept hair, wore A-line shapes emphasized by a birdcage of a dress.
Powdered wigs, alabaster white skin, and rouged cheeks disappeared in favor of a more natural and simple style.
In the white-skied, alabaster-skinned UK, we have taken to artificial methods of darkening our skin with particular vigour.
She deepened the colors, rendering his skin alabaster white, his lips rosebud pink, and his eyes a lovely but artificial shade of blue.
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