An 1888 anonymous writer to the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal voiced concerns about the fashion of the time in a letter headed simply “Bustles.”Read about the rise and fall of the bustle and other 19th-century undergarments at Smithsonian.
The writer reels off the numerous health problems they see with everyday women’s fashion: corsets squeezing organs, shoes too small and pointed at the toe deforming the foot and particularly the bustle. “The woman with a bustle can never sit down in a natural position,” the letter records. “It is absolutely impossible for her to rest her back against the back of any seat of ordinary construction. I have no doubt some of the severe backaches in women whose duties keep them seated all day are due to, or at least aggravated by, this disability.”
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Monday, April 24, 2017
Bustles Were a Pain in the Behind
Women's
fashions in the 19th century went through many changes, as different
designers tried out the ways they could make a woman look the way she
should. The crinolines of the Civil War era didn't really work in cities
that were becoming more and more crowded, but heaven forbid that a lady
could dispense with overly-engineered undergarments that sculpted her
into the latest fashionable silhouette. The bustle was patented in 1857
and became all the rage until about 1888.
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