C.1837 - 1845. A rare set of transitional stays dating from the late Regency- early Victorian
period. This set of stays or corset, depending on the wearer's knowledge of fashionable parlance,
marks the transitional period between long soft bodied stays and the hourglass corset of the
second half of the 19th century.
The stays are made from white cotton drill and are lined in plain white cotton. The corset is
entirely handmade with neat and even sewing using "back stitching" technique. Triangular
gussets, which are typical in mid 19th century corsetry, are seen at the bust and the hips.
The corset is not boned but has slots with "button holes" on the inside, in which to insert
boning. There is a bone channel on the middle of each breast and in a "V" shape at the back.
A wider channel is seen at the front of the corset to allow the wearer to insert a stiff
wooden or bone busk. Having bone channels in which the boning could be inserted and removed
at will, allowed the wearer to adjust the amount of stiffness in the corset according to the level
of activity (i.e. more bones in the corset for formal occasions or have the bones completely removed
for housework duties). It also allowed for easy laundering.From the collection of L. Hidic
corsetsandcrinolines.com