You can find drawers in the late 1500s and forward. For the ladies with meat
on their thighs it is a chaffing matter. For most it is underwear.
De

-----Original Message-----
You'll find drawers starting to creep into women's clothing starting in the
1840's and 50's.  They really really started to become common when women
started to wear cage crinolines in the later 1850's.  With crinoline there
were suddenly not as many layers right next to the body (nothing but the
chemise and a single petticoat) and women probably started wearing them for
modesty and comfort.  By the time the crinoline fell from fashion they had
become typical and women just continued to wear them.

  Maggie Halberg










-----Original Message-----
From: WorkroomButtons.com <[email protected]>
To: Historical Costume <[email protected]>
Sent: Wed, Sep 14, 2011 4:36 pm
Subject: Re: [h-cost] split drawers


Okay, dumb question, but... why did they need drawers at all?  Chemise,
layers
of petticoats, and long skirts -- everything totally obscured, so why bother
with drawers?

Dede O'Hair

--- On Wed, 9/14/11, Kim Baird <[email protected]> wrote:
Victorian women NEEDED split drawers. They wore a long chemise over the top
of the drawers, and a corset laced up tightly on top of that, so the only
way to "drop a penny" was to have the drawers split. You just couldn't get
at them to pull them down from the waist.
_______________________________________________
h-costume mailing list
[email protected]
http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume


_______________________________________________
h-costume mailing list
[email protected]
http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume



_______________________________________________
h-costume mailing list
[email protected]
http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume

Reply via email to