trisher
Elegran
Girls in their teens would not have worn the flapper dresses until they were "out" at 18 or so.
Well a certain class of girl wouldn't, but most working class girls left school at 14 and were buying their own clothes. They undoubtedly wore what was fashionable. Flappers could be very young en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flapper
By November 1910, the word was popular enough for A. E. James to begin a series of stories in the London Magazine featuring the misadventures of a pretty fifteen-year-old girl and titled "Her Majesty the Flapper".[14] By 1911, a newspaper review indicates the mischievous and flirtatious "flapper" was an established stage-type.[15]
So young girls were binding their breasts then.
Oh, for goodness' sake, trisher. You really will invent any theory you can to back up your increasingly batty claims.
It is remotely possible that some 12 year old girls in 1910 (the school leaving age didn't rise to 14 until 1918) would have the money to buy clothes, and that of those, some would have the time, knowledge and inclination to bind their breasts to fit into the flapper dresses that they could wear at all the cocktail parties that working class pre-teens went to, but on the whole they would go into service and have a half day off a month, or stay at home and help their mothers with the other children.
That is really not relevant to the Lush binder issue though. This is not 1910, or even 2010, and this is not about party dresses or pencil skirts. It is about children trying to prevent their bodies from developing because of the notion that they are 'in the wrong body', and about a high street store colluding with the company that is profiteering from their confusion.
To suggest that it is ok for this to be going on behind the backs of their parents, however tricky it would be for them to deal with it is deluded, as the Keira Bell case demonstrates on welbeck's link.


