Another article by Ethelwyn Wetherald under the pseudonym Bel Thistlethwaite focused on corsets and the harm they can cause to girls/women. The article is followed by a response from "A Devotee of the Corset". Wetherald then replies "To the Devotees of Corsets"
The article reflects on a research project analysing 300 years of the practice of constraining the f...
The corset is a concealed garment that is closely associated with femininity due to its significant ...
I could arrive from anywhere. Any scarf,any stocking. An old belt. Shoelaces.even when the knives an...
How would you like to wear a corset of iron or steel bands which rigidly held your waistline down to...
Some of the first fitted ready-made garments in production were corsets. Fashions of the Victorian ...
A scrapbook (1885-1901) belonging to Ethelwyn Wetherald. The contents include “The Canadian Bookma...
© 1999 Dr. Leigh SummersThere is perhaps no other garment so quintessentially Victorian as the corse...
The corset in eighteenth and nineteenth century Europe was not merely an article of clothing. The co...
The corset, 1860-1920, goes through a rapid change and disappearance that previously is not seen bef...
Between 1820 and 1850, an active and robust movement to eradicate women’s corsets and the practice o...
An article about the process of having a dress made, written by Ethelwyn Wetherald under the pseudon...
The corset may conjure up images of a busty Nancy singing in a dusty Victorian beer house, or Marie ...
The corset defined a woman’s silhouette for nearly four hundred years. It continues to fascinate and...
The purpose of this paper is to discuss the significance of the corset, or tutu, in ballet during th...
Notwithstanding its title, this Article is only somewhat about transvestites who commit bone-chillin...
The article reflects on a research project analysing 300 years of the practice of constraining the f...
The corset is a concealed garment that is closely associated with femininity due to its significant ...
I could arrive from anywhere. Any scarf,any stocking. An old belt. Shoelaces.even when the knives an...
How would you like to wear a corset of iron or steel bands which rigidly held your waistline down to...
Some of the first fitted ready-made garments in production were corsets. Fashions of the Victorian ...
A scrapbook (1885-1901) belonging to Ethelwyn Wetherald. The contents include “The Canadian Bookma...
© 1999 Dr. Leigh SummersThere is perhaps no other garment so quintessentially Victorian as the corse...
The corset in eighteenth and nineteenth century Europe was not merely an article of clothing. The co...
The corset, 1860-1920, goes through a rapid change and disappearance that previously is not seen bef...
Between 1820 and 1850, an active and robust movement to eradicate women’s corsets and the practice o...
An article about the process of having a dress made, written by Ethelwyn Wetherald under the pseudon...
The corset may conjure up images of a busty Nancy singing in a dusty Victorian beer house, or Marie ...
The corset defined a woman’s silhouette for nearly four hundred years. It continues to fascinate and...
The purpose of this paper is to discuss the significance of the corset, or tutu, in ballet during th...
Notwithstanding its title, this Article is only somewhat about transvestites who commit bone-chillin...
The article reflects on a research project analysing 300 years of the practice of constraining the f...
The corset is a concealed garment that is closely associated with femininity due to its significant ...
I could arrive from anywhere. Any scarf,any stocking. An old belt. Shoelaces.even when the knives an...