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Corset and bodice
Corset and bodice lacing became a mark of class, front laced bodices being worn by women who could not afford servants.

Corset and worn
* Corset, a garment worn to mold and shape the torso

Corset and .
Women also found opportunity in The Royal Worcester Corset Factory, a company that provided employment opportunity for 1200 women ; it was the largest employer of women in the United States in 1908.
In the 19th century the community styled itself as " Corset City.
The District Council is Harborough District Council, with its offices in the town centre being the former Symingtons Corset Factory.
The Harborough Museum is in part of what was once Symington's Corset Factory, and shares the building with the council offices and library.
Corset style back braces and other medical braces often incorporate straps made from webbing.
In summer 2010, a documentary was made about Rasputina called Under the Corset by Dawn Miceli.
* Women ’ s Corsetry 1850-1989: A Case Study into the Spirella Corset Company of Great Britain.
Past exhibitions include: London Fashion, which received the first Richard Martin Award for Excellence in Costume Exhibitions from The Costume Society of America, The Corset: Fashioning the Body, and Gothic: Dark Glamour.
It is from Le Corset 1935, but is from an older source.
His father and uncle opened the “ Comfort Corset Company ,” a unique venture for the family, which had many show business connections, including vaudeville performers and theater owners.
* Doyle R. ( 1997 ) Waisted Efforts, An Illustrated Guide To Corset Making.
Image: Corset ElastiqueFrench1803. gif | Short stays circa 1803
Image: Perfect Health Corset. png |" Perfect Health " Corset c 1890.
One of the great iconic photos of the Twentieth-Century is " The Mainbocher Corset " with its erotically charged mystery, captured by Horst in Vogue ’ s Paris studio in 1939.
Designers like Donna Karan continue to use the timeless beauty of " The Mainbocher Corset " as an inspiration for their outerwear collections today.
Camp and Company correlated breast size and the degree they sag to letters of the alphabet, A, B, C, and D. Camp's advertising featured letter-labeled profiles of breasts in the February 1933 issue of Corset and Underwear Review.
Corset from 1873.
* Original Victorian spoon busk corsets shown in the Late Victorian category of the Antique Corset Gallery.

bodice and worn
Day dresses had a solid bodice and evening gowns had a very low neckline and were worn off the shoulder with sheer shawls and opera-length gloves.
In one version, a tartan pattern skirt is worn with an over-the-shoulder plaid, a white blouse and petticoat, and a velvet bodice.
A tutu is a skirt worn as a costume in a ballet performance, often with attached bodice.
In historical contexts ( sixteenth to mid-nineteenth centuries ), petticoat refers to any separate skirt worn with a gown, bedgown, bodice or jacket ; these petticoats are not strictly speaking underwear as they were made to be seen.
The Cottee was a tight elongated bodice that was worn under clothing.
It was made up of stiff linen and worn under bodice, as fashion evolved, so did the Cottee ; it became tighter and stiffer to better serve the fashion of the time.
Historically, camisole referred to jackets of various kinds, including overshirts ( worn under a doublet or bodice ), women's négligées and sleeved jackets worn by men.
This construction was standard for fashionable garments from the 18th century until the late 19th century, and had the advantages of allowing a voluminous skirt to be paired with a close-fitting bodice, and of allowing two or more bodices to be worn with the same skirt ( e. g., a high-necked bodice and a low-necked bodice allowed the same skirt to serve for both daywear and evening wear ).
In modern usage, bodice typically refers to an upper garment that has removable sleeves or no sleeves, often low-cut, worn in Europe from the 16th century to the 18th century, either over a corset or in lieu of one.
The bodice was different from the corset of the time because it was intended to be worn over the other garments.
In one version, a tartan pattern skirt is worn with an over-the-shoulder plaid, a white blouse and petticoat, and a velvet bodice.
They have existed in some form since at least medieval times, when they were carried or worn around the head or bodice.

bodice and shape
* Classical Tutu ( pancake ): A very short, stiff skirt made with layers of netting that extends straight outwards ( from the hips ) in a flat pancake shape, and has a fitted bodice.
The busk was typically made out of wood, horn, ivory, metal or whale bone, it was then carved and shaped into a thin paper knife shape and inserted into the Elizabethan bodice and was faceted and held into place by lace.
The fashionable corset now had gores to individually cup the breasts, and the bodice was styled to emphasize this shape.
To achieve a fashionable shape and support the bust, the bodice was frequently stiffened with bents ( a type of reed ), or whalebone.

bodice and torso
The light models the volumetric geometry of her form, defining the conic nature of a small torso bound rigidly into a corset and stiffened bodice, and the panniered skirt extending around her like an oval candy-box, casting its own deep shadow which, by its sharp contrast with the bright brocade, both emphasises and locates the small figure as the main point of attention.
The corselet was originally a piece of armor, covering the torso ; the origin of the English word comes from cors, an Old French word meaning " bodice ".

bodice and .
The bodice beneath was buttoned and, withdrawing his lips from hers, he set her upright on his knee and started to undo it, unhurriedly as if she were a child.
Mrs. Eustis Reily's olive-green street length silk taffeta dress was embroidered on the bodice with gold threads and golden sequins and beads.
* Basque, a tight, form-fitting bodice or coat.
" The carnation duly proved to be in the Duchess's bodice, from which Maximilian carefully removed it.
During the Edwardian era, women wore a very tight corset, or bodice, and dressed in long skirts.
It was a simple bodice with tabs at the waist, stiffened by horn, buckram, and whalebone.
Very light and loose dresses, usually white and often with shockingly bare arms, rose sheer from the ankle to just below the bodice, where there was a strongly emphasized thin hem or tie round the body, often in a different colour.
Betty Boop wore short dresses, high heels, a garter, and her breasts were highlighted with a low, contoured bodice that showed cleavage.
A dress is a garment consisting of a skirt with an attached bodice or with a matching bodice giving the effect of a one-piece garment.
She pulled one of her breasts out of her bodice and struck it with the sword, frightening the natives, who fled.
The term for female bodice, the choli is derived from another ruling clan from south, the Cholas.
The younger " mod " generation preferred, in general, a miniskirt on their versions of the dress and designers catering to the youth culture continued to push the envelope-shortening the skirt even more, creating cutouts or slits in the skirt or bodice of the dress, using sheer fabrics such as netting or tulle.
A typical Aboyne dress consists of a dark bodice or elaborate waistcoat, decorative blouse, full tartan skirt and some times a petticoat and apron.
Chanel revolutionized fashion — high ( haute couture ) and everyday ( prêt-à-porter ) — by replacing structured-silhouettes, based upon the corset and the bodice, with garments that were functional and flattering to the woman ’ s figure.
It consists of a Basque ( or waistband, it can either be part of the bodice or a separate band ) and the skirt itself might be single layer, hanging down, or multiple layers starched and jutting out.
* Bodice: The tutu bodice can use from 6 to 15 panels of fabric.
The bodice is a separate piece of the costume attached at the waistline or high on the hip ; sometimes it's put together just with elastic tabs to allow for movement.

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