A Comparison of Historic and Contemporary CorsetsThanks to Robert Doyle author of "Waisted Efforts" I have had the opportunity to view and handle a few corsets from his collection of period pieces. Most of them are found in his book and I had the privilege of photographing two to display here. I hope the details will be visible. I chose the two corsets in the photo below because the pattern must have been very similar and both were black with white lining. I made the corset on the left side using the Laughing Moon "Dore" style pattern (sold in our pattern section of the catalog) and the one on the right is an original from the late 1890's and has almost exactly the same lines. The primary difference is size.
The original corset was made using cotton sateen twill for the outer layer and linen batiste for the inside. The modern one was made using black corset brocade for the exterior and plain cotton coutil on the inside. Both corsets have twill tape sewn into the waist and
both have a draw cord in the upper edge. The draw cord in the modern
one is visible as a white cord encased in the bias cut binding of
the top edge and the draw cord in the "antique" corset would
have been the yellow ribbon just visible threaded through the lace
(most of it had deteriorated.). Both corset have a straight busk,
the antique one is raw steel and seems to be encased in a fine bucram,
the modern one is plastic/nylon coated to inhibit rust. The busks
were similar in ability to flex. The bones in the modern corset were
encased between the two layers of coutil and were made of plastic.
The bones in the antique version were encased in strips of casing
cut from the same fabric as the exterior and sewn onto the outside,
stitching on the inside is visible, these bones are whale bone/ baleen
and narrower than most bones today. While the antique corset was smaller
in circumference by about 5 inches it had a total of 14 more bones!
It may be difficult to see in the photo but there is a lot of boning
in the antique corset. The modern corset came out slightly heavier
(but then it is larger both in length and circumference) and more
supportive. The second set of corsets that I compared, were very different in cut from the others and from each other. The peach coloured corset on the left was made from the Laughing Moon "Silverado" corset pattern (the pattern can be found in the patterns section of the catalog). The white corset on the right is an antique one also from Robert Doyle's collection.
The antique corset on the right is a single layer corset made of fabric identical to our coutil #74-1141-01. The Laughing Moon corset was made with two layers of coutil. Both corsets used have steel bones, those in the antique one were spring steels wrapped in paper and those in the modern version are spirals. Both corsets have straight busks and both have draw cords/ribbons in the top edge incorporated with lace. Similar to the above listed corsets both of these have twill tape supports in the waist indicating that although styles changed, certain methods of construction remained the same. The photo below shows the lining. The corset on the left is the antique, the corset on the right is the Laughing Moon "Silverado" corset.
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