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Corsets

Corsets & Bustiers Information

There is so much that can and is said about the corset and the bustier.  Due to my interest in them, I wanted to provide you with a brief history.  I personally see a tremendous value in corsets for the plus size woman.  Being a full size woman myself, I know the back and shoulder pain that we plus size women can experience.  I decided to take the strain off of my back and shoulders and wear a corset 3 times a week!  I find that it has helped me with my back and shoulder pain, maybe it will help you!  I am in no way suggesting that you take my advice over your own judgment, comfort, or your doctor's orders, I am just relaying my experience on to you!  I not only feel sexier while wearing my corsets, but I stand straighter and feel the weight off of my back and shoulders! 

Bustier is a more modern name for the corset.  There are only small differences in the structure.  I will come back and write more on this subject, but in the mean time, I am posting a "history" lesson in corsets for you to read.  

Here are some links for you to see the corsets and bustiers that ThatsHotPlus.com has to offer:

Vinyl Corsets & Bustiers, Leather Corsets & Bustiers, Fabric Corsets & Bustiers, Tatiana Corsets & Bustiers 

 

History of corsets

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Contents:

Corsets have been worn in Europe since the 16th century. As Western nations spread over the globe, so did corsets, attaining the peak of their popularity in the late 19th century. Fashion then turned against the corset. They are currently worn only by historical re-enactors, fetishists, and people with medical problems requiring back support.

Just as fashions in clothing changed over the centuries, so too did fashions in corsets.

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16th to late 18th centuries

The earliest corsets were called "payre of bodies" and were usually worn with a farthingale that held out the skirts in a stiff cone. The payre of bodies, later called stays, turned the upper torso into a matching cone or cylinder. They had shoulder straps and ended in flaps at the waist. They flattened the bust, and in so doing, pushed the breasts up. The emphasis of the stays was less on the smallness of the waist than on the contrast between the rigid flatness of the bodice front and the curving tops of the breasts peeking over the top of the corset.

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Late 18th to early 19th centuries

Stays became much less constricting with the advent of the high-waisted empire style (around 1796) which de-emphasized the natural waist, and so made body-shaping to achieve a narrow waist unnecessary. Some form of stays was still worn by most women (except during the extremes of the late 1790's Parisian high Greek look), but these were often "short stays" (i.e. which did not extend very far below the breasts), and/or without boning, and/or front-fastening. By contrast, corsets intended to exert serious body-shaping force (as in the Victorian era) were "long" (extending down to and beyond the natural waist), laced in back, and stiffened with boning.

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Transition to the Victorian

When the waistline returned to its natural position during the 1830s, the corset reappeared. However, it had changed its shape to the hourglass silhouette that is even now considered typical both for corsets and for Victorian fashion. At the same time, the term corset was first used for this garment in English. In the 1830s, the artificially inflated shoulders and skirts made the intervening waist look narrow, even with the corset laced only moderately.

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The Victorian corset

When the exaggerated shoulders disappeared, the waist itself had to be cinched tightly in order to achieve the same effect. It is in the 1840s and 1850s that tightlacing is first recorded. It was ordinary fashion taken to an extreme. The Victorian and Edwardian corset differed from the earlier stays in numerous ways. The corset no longer ended at the waist, but flared out and ended several inches below the waist. The corset was exaggeratedly curvaceous rather than funnel-shaped. Spiral steel stays curved with the figure. While many corsets were still sewn by hand to the wearer's measurements, there was also a thriving market in cheaper mass-produced corsets.

       

1869 corset    1878 Corset    1890 Corset

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The Edwardian corset

1900 illustration contrasting the old Victorian corseted silhouette with the new Edwardian

 

The straight-front corset, also known as the swan-bill corset and the S-bend corset, was worn from ca. 1900 to the early 1910s. Its name is derived from the very rigid, straight busk inserted in the center front of the corset. This corset forced the torso forward and made the hips protrude.

The straight-front corset was popularised by Inez Gaches-Sarraute, a corsetiere with a degree in medicine. It was intended to be less injurious to wearers' health than other corsets in that it exerted less pressure on the stomach area. However, any benefits to the stomach were more than counterbalanced by the unnatural posture that it forced upon its wearer.

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The corset falls from favor

After about 1908, the small corseted waist slowly started to fall out of fashion. The feminist and dress reform movements had made practical clothing acceptable for work or exercise. The rise of the Artistic Dress movement made loose clothing and the natural waist fashionable even for evening wear. Couturiers like Fortuny and Poiret designed exotic, alluring costumes in pleated or draped silks, calculated to reveal slim, youthful bodies. If one didn't have such a body, new undergarments, the brassiere and the girdle, promised to give the illusion of one.
 

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_corsets  All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.)