Retro Shapewear – a Fashion Revival

Retro Shapewear - a Fashion Revival

Retro styling – these days the term is being applied to everything from clothing to furnishing the home. The name retro comes from the Latin meaning ‘backwards’. This article is concerned with retro lingerie, or to be more specific retro shapewear.

Although most of the comments that follow describe the sleek chic girdles from the fifties and sixties, they can equally apply to today’s girdles that are based on the original designs. />

The war years were years of austerity and women on both sides of the channel dressed for comfort, to help the war effort. Women, eager to attract partners at the end of the war, so fashions reflected this desire. Couture house Christian Dior came up with styling needing a sleek, chic silhouettes. Now girdles, corsets or corselets became essential. Suddenly all women wore girdles, and not just women either – all the shapewear manufacturers targeted not just women but teens as well. A variety of girdles for the young adult were produced. Probably the teen girdle that gained the maximum coverage, in more than one sense, was the panty girdle – a tight-fitting cross between a girdle that held the tummy in and one that protected the wearer from advances, whether unwelcome of otherwise!

The girdle had several functions – to give that sleek chic silhouette to the wearer and to hold up the nylon stockings. Girdles generally had a minimum of two pairs of garter clips. There are two at the front and two garter clips, usually slightly offset from the rear. The garters are offset so that when the girdle wearer sits down they do not have to sit directly on the clips! The open bottom girdles usually have the garter clips on elastic straps, which is useful in keeping the nylon stockings taught as the wearer moves about, sitting and standing. The nylon stockings from the fifties did not have spandex or lycra and were non-stretch; without the elastic of the garter strap the stocking would ‘bag’ as the wearer stood up.

The panty girdle, and particularly the long-leg panty girdle often has the garter tab attached directly to the girdle itself. The long-leg panty girdle legs usually completely overlap and cover the stocking-welt, losing the gap of bare thigh above the stocking top. Men usually find the flash of bare thigh and garter strap exciting; however, a long leg panty girdle, although practical, hides all this and has consequently been described (along with pantyhose) as a “passion killer”.

Girdle materials Modern and retro girdles usually feature spandex or Lycra for elasticity, but the original girdles dating from around the 1930s usually used rubber to give stretch. The introduction of rubber was a major step in corsetry – the ultra-rigid corset had suddenly become more flexible. In parallel with its introduction the terms associated with such items of clothing also metamorphosed: from the original corset, the term roll-on came into vogue, particularly in the USA, then came the step-in and the corselette, often known as the ‘all in one’.

Indeed for a while Playtex marketed a girdle molded from pure latex – these have become quite the collectors item these days, partly because of rarity value. Pure latex deteriorates over time and the garment then perishes, so few remain in good condition. It is interesting to know whether the common latex allergy affected wearers, but whatever the reason, these girdles are no longer manufactured by Playtex.

Retro shapewear share the same objective as vintage shapewear did, namely to sculpt the shape of the body. Elasticity can help to hold and control figures but for more rigid control a variety of ‘bones’ have been used over the years. The original whalebone corset did actually use whale baleen – which are the cartilage-like “teeth” which whales use to filter plankton. Each baleen is enormous, around ten inches wide and ten to twelve feet long. It proved an ideal material for corset makers because it consisted of parallel fibres that could be relatively easily split into thin strips; these strips could be shaped by heating them over steam and when they cooled they held their shape. Of course the demise of the whale population led to the supply becoming an issue. Fortunately other alternatives proved suitable – manmade plastics like celluloid, and even flattened steel springs!

Historic background to the corset The forerunner of the girdle was the corset, and that had its origins further back still in ladies stays. Indeed there is archaelogical evidence going back to 3000BC showing women with waists cinched in tightly by a garment that appears ribbed. It was around the fourteenth century that women started wearing a stiffened linen undergarment garment, laced in at the front or back, and by the fifteenth century these ’stays’ were relatively common; the probable derivation of the English corset from bodice (’bodies’) to the French translation of this ‘corps’ which transmuted back to corset. The original corsets were made by stitching together two layers of linen with a paste in the middle of the ’sandwich’ to provide stiffening. By the 16th century corset makers had turned to using whalebone (actually more correctly called baleen) to offer the stiffening. This provided more rigidity than the earlier paste corsets.

By 1940, in both America and Europe, the corset had given way to the girdle, worn in conjunction with a bra.

After the fifties came the swinging sixties, when women were exhorted to burn their bras and stop wearing such restrictive underwear. But as with all fashion, girdle wearing has now gone full circle. Burlesque artists have made the ‘art of tease’ in which girdles, basques and corsets are on show, into popular entertainment. Wonderbra have enticed the burlesque star Dita von Teese to design, model and market a range of retro girdles and bras based on fifties designs.

The burlesque art form is now burgeoning and the esteemed Royal Festival Hall held the worlds largest burlesque lesson in January 2009, evidencing how mainstream this art has become. Original fifties girdles, corsets and basques are found in specialist online lingerie boutiques or vintage stores, but to satisfy the demand all sorts of outlets have now sprung up to satisfy the demands of burlesque. These shops and online stores invariably turn to the forties and fifties for styling inspiration for their retro shapewear – and the biggest item that seems to be in demand is the corset. Fashion really has returned to its roots.

Watch the video related to teens fashion

See more @ www.teen.com The guys of Anberlin are one stylin’ bunch! See how they plan their onstage looks. … video Aberlin “teen.com tv” style fashion classy alloy clothes tour “on tour”

Help answer the question about teens fashion

Fashion Design Classes for Teens in NJ?
I'm a teen in south Jersey who desperately wants to enroll in a fashion design class. Does anyone know of one remotely near me?
Do you know a link for the FIT classes?

About Author

Debbie Mendoza has extensive knowledge of fifties fashions -her specialty is the history of vintage shapewear & stockings. Ten years ago her love for the fifties led to her founding http://www.sleeknchic.com, firstly in the USA and for the past five years in the UK where she has relocated, having married a Brit! Her leisure interests include reading, theatre, cinema and keeping fit.

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13 Responses to “Retro Shapewear – a Fashion Revival”

  1. ChicagoScooterClub says:

    Love The Troggs!

  2. ChicagoScooterClub says:

    WOW!

  3. scoot006davie says:

    Nice one need more

  4. Kady says:

    Women's wardrobes have peices that are in the ranges of dressy, suit like (or buisness outfits), and casual wear. Women in style have fitted clothes, not just revealing or "short and skimpy." ANd their clothes reflect their personality more often and they dress appropriotly for whatever occasion- at least in an ideal world.

    Teens fashion ranges bassed on clique at times, so it goes from stu*y, dark, bright, short, to any look. Teens don't look compleat or put together, their outfits don't have balance. This is wy they are often critiqued but also why they are loved.

  5. henriettadel says:

    The college I attend (Academy of Art in San Francisco) offers pre-college programs for summer, saturdays and online in different majors. Here is a link to the website http://www.academyart.edu/degrees/pre_college.html . I know a couple of people who went during high school and they had really fun experiences.

    Also, check out local colleges around your area too for high school programs and if a local community college will let you take classes too (if they offer some type of fashion degree).

  6. Michelle N says:

    1. The super ugly Aeropostale, Hollister, Abercrombie, and other popular brand graphic tees.
    2. I don't really think so, I have my own, but I know people who are the same stereotype fashion.
    3. Printed hoodies.
    4. Try Wet Seal. So much better. And Forever 21.

  7. TheScourgeResistant says:

    Stunning blonde – stunning soundtrack!

  8. dontletmegonow says:

    Nailed is a very good book, so is Things change, which was written by the same author.

  9. ~Allielee~ says:
  10. __A_YAHOO_USER__ says:

    well TOPSHOP…..best shop ever(online too)…ASOS(amazing also)

  11. dancethenightaway says:

    Tons of stuff in these online german teen magazines. Really not a whole lot different, but if you aren't careful you might look like a 6 year old in some places. j/k

    http://www.allyoucanread.com/german-teens-magazines/

  12. Michi A says:

    orange is sooo in this summer. bright colors.

  13. KaTe☮♥♫ says:

    Zipper Accents
    Relax-Fit Pants
    The Sophisticated Trench
    Hot Pink
    Oversize Necklaces
    Black-on-White Print
    The Oversize Pattern Bag
    Big Bangles
    A Touch of Neon
    Mix-and-Match Patterns
    Pastel Suit
    Sequins
    The Military Jacket
    Color-Block Prints
    ’80s Flair
    Embellished Boho

    OOO btw skinny jeans are on their way OUT.
    haha good luck… and hope this helps!

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