skirt pad
Summary
Rounded stuffed pad with straight top edge, tape binding extending as ties, the two layers caught together in three places.
Display Label
At various points in history, women have worn padding which is specifically aimed at enlarging the rump area. Often this has been associated with a generally full skirt, but sometimes the focus has been extreme, as in the 1880s shelf-like bustle which protruded horizontally outwards from the waist and looked bizarrely artificial. A range of styles of bustles, skirt pads or "false rumps" were manufactured in the later eighteenth century and throughout the nineteenth century. The 1830s, 1870s and 1880s were the peak periods for these pads, but smaller ones were worn periodically during the 1890s and 1900s. Each time, advertisements and prints portrayed an exaggerated type of hourglass figure, with emphasis on the bottom balanced by similar stress on the bust and full gigot sleeves. Materials employed by the makers of these artificial aids were varied, including horsehair, buckram, covered cane and even metal wire or rubber.
Object Name
skirt pad
Date Created
1890-1900
Dimensions
Size: 5.25ins x 6ins
accession number
1947.3729
Collection Group
Medium
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