corset & stays & bag



corset & stays & bag

Summary

Pale blue glazed woollen damask over stiff foundation, lined with white linen. Bound with pale blue twilled wool. Curved front section tapering from side back to blunt point at waist, with curved whalebone at top edge. Narrow high back, boned and fastening centre back with fourteen worked holes for lacing. Four tabs placed over each hip. Shoulder straps. Narrow chequered white silk ribbon covering boned seams down centre front and each side. In printed linen and cotton bag, probably original. Possibly earlier than stays. (ie 1730s)

Display Label

The corset as we know it today developed in the fourteenth century from the "cotte", a close-fitting woman's stiffened underbodice. From the fifteenth century, this became known as a "body" or pair of bodies, and by the seventeenth century the usual term was a pair of stays. These could be stiffened with cane or whalebone, creating a flattened front with the breast pushed upwards and not separated. The firm front of the stays could be covered with a decorated stomacher or else the stays themselves might be displayed. Stays were always worn over a linen shift or chemise, never next to the skin, and this protected them from inner dirt and minimised rubbing or chafing from the rigid edges. It was, of course, almost impossible to wash stays which were constructed from so many different materials. This striking pair of red stays from the Filmer Collection dates from the second quarter of the seventeenth century, and has a matching stomacher which could be laced in place. These are the earliest stays in the collections. The pale blue stays are from the 1770s and show the similar rigid formal shaping provided. The later brown pair are from about 1840 and have much more emphasis on the waist; by this date the French term corset was prevalent. The prints show a woman being laced into her stays around 1815, a male dandy about to be strapped into his stays, and a farmer's wife wearing stays over a skirt as she serves at table. Padded underbodices for children were still called "staybands" although they later became known as "liberty bodices".


Object Name

corset & stays & bag

Date Created

1740-1760

Dimensions

Length (front): 35.6cm
Length (back): 41.9cm
Waist: 58.4cm

accession number

1947.1622

Place of creation

United Kingdom

Medium

Legal

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