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Corset come-back

(38 Posts)
vampirequeen Mon 23-Mar-15 18:44:04

I didn't realise that basques and corsets had gone out of fashion. I just thought that the time and reason for wearing them had changed grin

Coolgran65 Mon 23-Mar-15 18:42:04

I do have a stretchy all in one thing that I do on occasion wear... wedding or the like. It can't remove bulk.... but it does smooth it about and stop too much wobble. A bit of smoothing of the flab body lets a garment hang a little bit better.

janerowena made me laugh and reminded me of the time at a family get together lunch in a mid summer heatwave. I was wearing a maxi linen dress, bare legs and flat sandals looking nice and cool but underneath I was dying from the overheat of wearing an all-in-one. Into the ladies and wheeked it off and into my handbag. Of course that meant all booby support was also removed. I didn't care.

granjura Mon 23-Mar-15 17:43:27

If any yougnster is interested in learning about the history of corsets (oops anyone really, sorry) and all the 'technical' aspects, say students in fashoin or texitle- then a visit to Market Harborough Museum which is situated in the old Symington Corset factory is really interesting.

But not, not for me, thanks!

merlotgran Mon 23-Mar-15 15:17:36

My mother used to refer to her 'foundation' garment. She had a lovely slim figure but always insisted it needed support. hmm

Teetime Mon 23-Mar-15 15:14:16

Believe me I can jiggle in anything

petallus Mon 23-Mar-15 15:00:58

I look back with fondness on my rubber Playtex girdle. I felt very 'held' when I wore it and safe from lustful male eyes looking for a jiggly bum in my clinging skirt.

You don't jiggle in a girdle.

janerowena Mon 23-Mar-15 14:34:17

Women seem to have split into two far more distinct camps. The very natural ones and the glamourpusses. I can't see many young girls willing to keep that fashion going for too long, once they have tried it, especially after years of wearing stretchy denim and leggings.

Teetime Mon 23-Mar-15 14:29:09

I read an article in The Telegraph last weekend about this saying that corsets 'are back'. I thought the women's movement fought long and hard to free women from the tyranny of garments designed by men to squeeze and supress women into unnatural forms for their delectation. Did we burn our bras for this?

janerowena Mon 23-Mar-15 14:28:58

I really hope they are just a fashion item, it's bad enough with people encouraging you to wear 'shape-forming' underwear. Has anyone ever tried to wear any on a hot day under a posh frock when you can't park in a city and are trying to find a church in high heels? My first and last time, ever. It's the equivalent of wearing a duvet under your clothes, all that nylon.

HildaW Mon 23-Mar-15 14:28:09

Was reading about this in Sunday papers....and its not about corset lookalikes....but actually squeezing-in corsets that do untold damage. Evidently its something to do with the new (much hyped) Cinderella movie. The actress is quoted as living on soup and having dreadful indigestion.

If young girls ignore all the historical evidence of organ displacement (including wombs) and poor circulation and breathing problems they will be very foolish. I had to abandon support tights (for dodgy veins) a couple of years ago because the minimal amount of pressure they afforded on my tummy, really aggravated my developing prolapse.

Hells teef! I though we had moved away from fashion that mutilated us and restricted our life styles!

loopylou Mon 23-Mar-15 13:21:43

They'll soon find out why they went out of fashion! Basques were 'in' weren't they, but didn't stay (groan) last long?
Definitely for the younger generation me thinks......thank heavens smile

jinglbellsfrocks Mon 23-Mar-15 13:20:15

I can never understand where all the flesh is supposed to go. If I try to squidge it in, it always feels as though it is trying to get out "down there! Which is worrying, to say the least. hmm

DinahW Mon 23-Mar-15 13:14:17

Am I being unreasonable? Or perhaps just old and fuddy duddy?

I'm alarmed that some of my g daughters are buying or saving up to buy a corset. I thought those things went out my MY grandmother?

Like many of us here I remember the discomfort of girdles, long line bra etc of the late 1950 and 1960s. Am I the only one to have suffered agonies in a marks and spencer firm control girdle at a hot dinner dance when young?

Do we really want to go back to bones, busks and lacing?

D