The History of Corsets and How to Fit One Properly
Since the beginning of time, women have worn corsets. The
reasons for doing so are the same as it has always been, she is
taking care of her physiological or physical needs, or
expressing her beauty-loving feminine personality. Womanly
beauty is a matchless attribute; in all creation, there is no
beauty to surpass it. Women are serving an elemental purpose
when they foster and cultivate it, spend thought and endeavor in
keeping our bodies as perfect in appearance as we can. There is
an important lesson to be learned by each of us, one seldom
taught us by our mothers, and that is how to properly fit the
corsets we wear. No sensible woman expects to buy a perfectly
fitting shoe without trying it on. Likewise, she does not
nowadays expect to find day-long comfort and support in her
foundation unless she fits it personally. The object of good
corset is not constriction. Nature intended the organs of the
abdominal cavity to move about, and a correctly fitted corset
will permit the same freedom. The function of corsets is to
supplement the efforts of weak muscles in this cause, and the
introduction of elastic into corsets over the past few decades
has made it possible for corsets not only to augment the service
of the muscles by holding firmly, but to do so while at the same
time permitting movement. The essence of the corset is that it
is never completely rigid. Rigid in certain places it may
usefully be, but few corsets are made now without some panels or
gussets of elastic to allow for expansion and "give" in
breathing and moving, with inestimable gain to the wearer in
comfort, as well as health.
For the purpose of sizing the garments they manufacture,
different firms have adopted some different classifications of
figure types, though all are based on fundamentally the same
selective principles. Speaking broadly, figures are shaped in
one of three ways. Either they are "average or normal," which is
to say not disproportionately wide in any one place; or they are
full at the bust and small at the hips; or they are small in the
bust and big at the hips. This gives the three main basic types
and they are:
Normal or average: Figure with a difference in measurement
between waist and hip of about 10 inches. Hip heavy types: With
a difference up to about 15 inches. Top heavy types: With a
difference down to about 6 inches. As shown above, very definite
characteristics mark the differences between each of these three
basic types. These characteristics carry in their train certain
equally noticeable tendencies. For instance, where the figure is
a hip heavy type and the difference between waist and hip
measurement is anything between 12 and 15 inches, the thighs as
well as the buttocks will be heavy and fleshy, and to
accommodate and control these, as well as the prominent back
curve, the customer will need a long, strong garment. The
difference between waist and hip, and between bust and hip, is
the guide to the type of average figure to fit. It should also
be realized that in each case there will be "small" or "full"
versions of the average type. The type of body one has is a
major determining factor is how well the corset will fit and if
it will be flattering or not on the woman.
CONTACT INFORMATION: Anna Maria De Santiago Lingerie of
Hollywood http://www.lingerie-of-hollywood.com