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Stays

Unknown

The Victoria and Albert Museum

The Victoria and Albert Museum
London, United Kingdom

Stays were an essential item of underwear for women during the 18th century. By the 1780s, the fashionable torso consisted of an inverted cone shape. Achieving smoothness of profile and firmness of contour were the primary function of 18th-century stays, rather than emphasising the bust or constricting the waist. Although custom-made and very intricately designed, stays were usually very plain. On these stays a simple silk ribbon and linen tape serve as decoration and functional finishings.

The narrow rows of very fine, even handstitching form the compartments into which thin strips of whalebone were inserted. Although the stays appear very rigid, whalebone was quite flexible. It had the added advantage of softening with the heat of the wearer’s body, allowing the stays to mold to her shape. When worn, the shaped and boned tabs at the lower edge would splay over the wearer’s hips, giving further fullness to the petticoat tied at the waist over the stays.

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  • Title: Stays
  • Creator: Unknown
  • Date Created: 1770/1780
  • Location: England
  • Physical Dimensions: Length: 47 cm, Width: 96 cm, Circumference: 85 cm chest, Weight: 0.63 kg
  • Provenance: Given by the family of the late Mrs Jane Robinson
  • Medium: Wool backed with linen or canvas, stitched with linen thread reinforced with strips of whalebone, lined with glazed linen, bound with linen twill tape, fastened with plain weave linen tapes and decorated with silk braid and silk ribbon
The Victoria and Albert Museum

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