<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Anyway, sorry to be Devil's advocate; I know some people claim a
>medical problem when they just don't want to wear a certain thing,
>and it's not up to someone else to insist they can. But what about
>people who can't take the pressure of stays / corset? What are they
>to do?

Which makes me curious. What actual medical issues have people encountered that 
really _do_ mean someone can't wear a corset? I'm sure it does happen -- and it 
seems to me that having some idea of what really are the issues that cause 
problems might help dressmakers decide whether to (1) attempt to exercise more 
tactful persuasion, (2) devise some sort of work-around, or (3) do the best 
they can to make a nice looking garment without corsetry.

Offhand, I can think of two issues where any kind of corsetry or stiffening can 
be a problem. One is for people in wheelchairs: if they are to wear a corset at 
all, it must need to be designed for sitting rather than standing, and I can 
imagine that for someone whow has limited mobility anyway, not being able to 
bend freely at the waist could make some necessary movements very difficult.

I also have a friend who finds that a normal 16th-century corset and fitted 
gown cause too much of the weight of the skirt to be carried by her hips and 
lower back, which she finds very painful. She does much better with something 
where most of the weight of the dress hangs from the shoulders (loose gowns, 
for instance, although she can also wear a fitted gown with a few bones but not 
a full corset). In her case, the medical problem is nerve damage.

Others?


____________________________________________________________
0  Chris Laning
|  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
+  Davis, California
http://paternoster-row.org  -  http://paternosters.blogspot.com
____________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________
h-costume mailing list
[email protected]
http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume

Reply via email to