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Would you wear a radio-active corset?

(31 Posts)
janeainsworth Fri 26-Nov-21 14:15:35

Just that, really.

Sparklefizz Sun 28-Nov-21 18:08:18

maddyone

My grandmother wore bloomers. She really did. They were big knickers with legs which were gathered around the knee, and were quite loose when on.

They were also known as "Harvest Festival Knickers" because "All is safely gathered in...."

MagicWand Sun 28-Nov-21 14:42:41

Wouldn’t you love to be described as an ‘indifferently’ sized woman?!

My mum trotted me off to buy my first ‘panty girdle’ to wear under my wedding dress! Can you imagine how glamorous I would have felt undressing as a new bride!
Thankfully it managed to mysteriously disappear over to our new home 40miles away a couple of weeks before the wedding, never to be seen again!!

janeainsworth Sun 28-Nov-21 14:32:00

Thanks for the link jacky - fascinating, even though tragic for the women involved.

JackyB Sun 28-Nov-21 14:10:39

I am reminded of the "Radium girls" who painted the luminescent faces on watches. Their jaws disintegrated and they were only compensated very late, those that were still alive.

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radium_Girls

aggie Sat 27-Nov-21 09:11:31

My mums all in one , from neck to knees , we called her bathing costume ! It was never hung on the line but dried inside !

sodapop Sat 27-Nov-21 09:05:35

I think they were called directoire knickers maddyone I remember my mother wearing them, usually pink ones. My mother also wore a pink lace up corset although she weighed no more than 8 stones for most of her life.

FarNorth Sat 27-Nov-21 00:42:33

Mine too.

maddyone Fri 26-Nov-21 23:36:00

My grandmother wore bloomers. She really did. They were big knickers with legs which were gathered around the knee, and were quite loose when on.

annodomini Fri 26-Nov-21 23:29:52

My mum wore a toll-on called a 'Silkskin' in a revolting shade known as 'flesh'. When my granny came to stay, mum was embarrassed in case neighbours thought granny's 'unmentionables' on the washing line were hers!

maddyone Fri 26-Nov-21 23:24:01

I remember my mother wearing a corset in the fifties. It was awful, loads of hooks and eyes to be done up as it was put on. Either my sister or my mother, can’t remember which, told me I needed to wear a roll on with suspenders when I started to wear nylons. It didn’t last long, I quickly moved on to a suspender belt, which was rapidly followed by tights.

Hetty58 Fri 26-Nov-21 22:52:14

I was embarrassed by my mother's 'panty corselettes' hitched high on the washing line - for all to see. Decades later, her doctor banned her from wearing them - as the stomach muscles had gone!

Calistemon Fri 26-Nov-21 22:39:54

When were these radioactive corsets banned?

Forsythia Fri 26-Nov-21 22:33:04

My mum wore a roll on, she always took it off after the evening meal and breathed a sigh of relief as she rolled it down. It seemed funny to us at the time.

Calistemon Fri 26-Nov-21 22:29:38

I thought my Mum knew best, MerylStreep, but not in that case!!

MerylStreep Fri 26-Nov-21 19:49:35

Calistemon
I told my ex husband to go and buy me a roll on while I was in the hospital. I could hardly walk ? It came off when I got home and never went on again.

annodomini Fri 26-Nov-21 19:37:04

I was on the tubby side in my mid teens (despite lots of good exercise) when Little X came on the market and my Mum thought it would be ideal for me - more comfortable than a suspender belt for holding up my nylons. I wore something of that sort until I went to live in a hot climate and after that, tights were produced - freedom at last!

Calistemon Fri 26-Nov-21 19:25:02

FarNorth

Shortly after I had my first baby, my mother said "This is when you need your panty girdle." - meaning I should start buying and wearing them.
I never did.

Oh yes! I bought one and wore it for a month or so as I was told it would pull my muscles back in shape. A kind of pull-on thing.
hmm

Calistemon Fri 26-Nov-21 19:22:56

agnurse

Calistemom

Yup. Hubby has an interest in the history and effects of radioactivity and he's told me about a number of the products containing radium that were used back in the day.

Sadly, radium has a tendency to cause cancer, especially cancer of the bones. The reason for this (per what Hubby has learned and told me) is that radium is chemically very similar to calcium, and the body treats it as calcium. One of the common sites for radium-associated bone cancer is the jaw. My suspicion is that this is at least partly due to the fact that the jaw is constantly being remodelled as it is in frequent use. (Bone is not actually a static tissue; it undergoes periodic building and resorption according to how the bones are used.)

Interesting agnurse

DH went on a disaster control course very many years ago, to be actioned in the event of a nuclear bomb.
I don't think it required him to remove radioactive corsets or any other such attire!

FarNorth Fri 26-Nov-21 19:22:04

Thanks agnurse that's interesting.
It's awful to think of people being affected by radiation because of that recklessness.

FarNorth Fri 26-Nov-21 19:19:38

Shortly after I had my first baby, my mother said "This is when you need your panty girdle." - meaning I should start buying and wearing them.
I never did.

rockgran Fri 26-Nov-21 19:18:10

I was grateful that tights became fashionable when I was mid teens so I didn't have to suffer the dreaded suspender belt/corset for long.

agnurse Fri 26-Nov-21 19:16:09

Calistemom

Yup. Hubby has an interest in the history and effects of radioactivity and he's told me about a number of the products containing radium that were used back in the day.

Sadly, radium has a tendency to cause cancer, especially cancer of the bones. The reason for this (per what Hubby has learned and told me) is that radium is chemically very similar to calcium, and the body treats it as calcium. One of the common sites for radium-associated bone cancer is the jaw. My suspicion is that this is at least partly due to the fact that the jaw is constantly being remodelled as it is in frequent use. (Bone is not actually a static tissue; it undergoes periodic building and resorption according to how the bones are used.)

Jane71 Fri 26-Nov-21 19:11:25

The thought of wearing what women did then makes me shudder. How things have chnaged thank goodness.

sodapop Fri 26-Nov-21 18:52:17

Bit scary, I do remember the Little X stuff though. I have no idea why I found it necessary to wear a girdle as I was very slim in my younger days.

Chewbacca Fri 26-Nov-21 18:07:03

Wonder if it's a coincidence that the ads flashing up on my screen are for bras and support wear? hmm