Some Definitions Please!

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  • ghoulstonstreet
    Detective
    • Jan 2009
    • 150

    #16
    Stays weren't in the Way

    Thanks all again. The stays are mentioned I think by a coroner who says that they "did not get in the way" of the killer's knife. Interesting. Maybe since they are a bosom gadget they were high enough to be out of the way. I think this regards Chapman's murder.

    Comment

    • lynn cates
      Commisioner
      • Aug 2009
      • 13841

      #17
      graphic depiction

      Hello All. This may be of help.



      Cheers.
      LC

      Comment

      • curious
        Chief Inspector
        • Oct 2009
        • 1578

        #18
        Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
        excellent. and who can forget the scene in "Gone With The Wind" when Scarlett is holding onto the bedpost and Mammy is pulling her stays tighter and tighter to get her to fit into the dress she was determined to wear!

        It's no wonder women of the era were always fainting -- they couldn't breathe wearing those contraptions.

        curious

        Comment

        • lynn cates
          Commisioner
          • Aug 2009
          • 13841

          #19
          anoxia

          Hello Curious.

          "It's no wonder women of the era were always fainting -- they couldn't breathe wearing those contraptions."

          That's right.

          The best.
          LC

          Comment

          • ghoulstonstreet
            Detective
            • Jan 2009
            • 150

            #20
            Originally posted by curious View Post
            excellent. and who can forget the scene in "Gone With The Wind" when Scarlett is holding onto the bedpost and Mammy is pulling her stays tighter and tighter to get her to fit into the dress she was determined to wear!

            It's no wonder women of the era were always fainting -- they couldn't breathe wearing those contraptions.

            curious
            Thanks, curious! Now I've got the picture. Would have called that thing a corset.

            Comment

            • curious
              Chief Inspector
              • Oct 2009
              • 1578

              #21
              Originally posted by ghoulstonstreet View Post
              Thanks, curious! Now I've got the picture. Would have called that thing a corset.
              thinking about it, it probably was. The stays are shorter, I suspect. Never having worn either one, I'm not positive.

              Comment

              • lynn cates
                Commisioner
                • Aug 2009
                • 13841

                #22
                comparison

                Hello Curious.

                "The stays are shorter, I suspect."

                That's correct. And that's why the stays were no obstacle to the mutilation, whereas a corset would have been.

                Also, the primary function of the corset is to slim the waist; secondarily, perhaps, to emphasise the bosom. With stays, those 2 functions are inverted.

                The best.
                LC

                Comment

                • Suzi
                  Superintendent
                  • Feb 2008
                  • 2167

                  #23
                  Great stuff- faint faint!!!

                  B U T the poor dears trawling the streets had no chance to get hold of anything remotely beautiful or whalebone related - to breathe in and out was probably their best plan for survival!!-

                  I seem to recall there was some sort of thing at the time-that was made of some sort of stiffened cotton or something- whatever it was (Must remember!)- it was cheap tho !!! Was it cambric??

                  1 - 2 - 3 -After me- B R E A T H E
                  Last edited by Suzi; 12-26-2009, 08:09 PM.
                  'Would you like to see my African curiosities?'

                  Comment

                  • Sam Flynn
                    Casebook Supporter
                    • Feb 2008
                    • 13333

                    #24
                    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
                    "What does a deerstalker hat actually look like?"

                    Remember the old Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes movies? The hat he wore whilst sleuthing was one.
                    A more rudimentary form of deerstalker was also commonly worn by dockyard labourers of the period.
                    Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                    "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                    Comment

                    • DVV
                      Suspended
                      • Apr 2008
                      • 6014

                      #25
                      Hi Sam,

                      with 2 peaks also?

                      Amitiés,
                      David

                      Comment

                      • Sam Flynn
                        Casebook Supporter
                        • Feb 2008
                        • 13333

                        #26
                        Originally posted by DVV View Post
                        Hi Sam,

                        with 2 peaks also?
                        I wouldn't know if they did, Dave - all I know is that it wasn't just middle-class sleuthing types who wore 'em!
                        Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                        "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                        Comment

                        • DVV
                          Suspended
                          • Apr 2008
                          • 6014

                          #27
                          Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
                          I wouldn't know if they did, Dave - all I know is that it wasn't just middle-class sleuthing types who wore 'em!

                          Too bad, Sam.
                          Shabby-Genteel and Sailor-Man with the same cap...

                          Amitiés,
                          David

                          Comment

                          • Archaic
                            Chief Inspector
                            • Mar 2009
                            • 1903

                            #28
                            Stays

                            Hi, Ghoustonstreet.

                            I'll see if I can explain 'stays' to you: Do you know what a bustier or a corset looks like?
                            It's a garment that covers the chest and some of the abdomen & serves as both a waist-cincher & a semi push-up bra.
                            Bras as we know them today hadn't been invented yet, so 19th & early 20th C. women had few options.

                            Corsets didn't offer the kind of support and elasticity that modern lingerie does, instead they used a combination of stiff support rods- the stays- and tightly criss-crossed lacing to achieve "control". An extremely small waist was fashionable, so corsets were often cinched very tightly to achieve that ideal.

                            The "stays" are specifically the firm supports sewn within the corset; in the LVP they were usually made of slender lengths of whale-bone.
                            The phrase "stays" eventually came to mean the whole corset, and that's how the doctors use it in discussing the Whitechapel victims.
                            Corsets were made in different lengths, depending on how much "control" the lady wanted or could afford.

                            To not wear a corset in public was considered indecent and made one "a loose woman" -literally!

                            Here's a link explaining the terms more fully: http://www.corsetsandcrinolines.com/...s.php?index=10

                            Hope that helps.
                            Best regards, Archaic
                            Last edited by Archaic; 12-27-2009, 07:19 AM.

                            Comment

                            • robhouse
                              Inspector
                              • Feb 2008
                              • 1222

                              #29
                              I have just heard it said (on the BBC's radio show "My Word") that the Wideawake Hat was named because "it was made of some kind of felt which didn't have or didn't take a nap."

                              Comment

                              • Wickerman
                                Commissioner
                                • Oct 2008
                                • 14900

                                #30
                                Originally posted by robhouse View Post
                                I have just heard it said (on the BBC's radio show "My Word") that the Wideawake Hat was named because "it was made of some kind of felt which didn't have or didn't take a nap."
                                Which then begs the question, "what is a nap?"

                                Luckly, I'm trusting my wife here (ex weaver), the "nap" is the length of hair? or fibre, or that which can be brushed. A leather hat has no nap, a silk hat has a short nap which is brushed in one direction only.

                                If this is the case then a Wideawake hat is made of a material which does not require being brushed, is that what we are to understand?
                                So a Wideawake hat is not a style but refers to the material it is made from?

                                Anyone care to ellaborate?

                                Thanks, Jon S.
                                Regards, Jon S.

                                Comment

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