https://nitter.net/AlphaMasculini1/status/1527056029351043072?t=_XzCtDaeF4dju7pOvNwHwg&s=19

  • Trouble [she/her]
    ·
    3 years ago

    Lmao that thumbnail. "Women need to go back to 1600, but my ability to conceptualize women as people has been destroyed by porn so my idea of what that would look like is still completely cum brained"

        • SadStruggle92 [none/use name]
          ·
          3 years ago

          Corsets were used for back support (cause skirts were heavy)

          I'm confused about this one; I don't know how the load of wearing a skirt, even if it were made out of a wrought-iron cage, would end up getting distributed onto the mid-back.

          • Ideology [she/her]
            ·
            3 years ago

            I mean, I can feel the weirdness of a new weight distribution just wearing a fannypack. Old skirts were made of thick material with multiple layers, and crinolines/hoops kept all that heavy stuff off your legs so you could walk freely. Outer skirt layers were then worn outside the corset so they sat on all the scaffolding and not directly on your body. Bone-inlaid corsets could also be used like backbraces for heavy work, which is why poor women in some periods would wear them at their jobs and not just at home.

            Also tightlacing was not the norm. Most corset wearers now tightlace because they want to achieve a specific aesthetic rather than use it functionally.

            Correct

            Correct

            Bad

            • SadStruggle92 [none/use name]
              ·
              edit-2
              3 years ago

              Old skirts were made of thick material with multiple layers, and crinolines/hoops kept all that heavy stuff off your legs so you could walk freely. Outer skirt layers were then worn outside the corset so they sat on all the scaffolding and not directly on your body.

              I understand that, what I'm gettin at is, I don't understand how that would end up interacting with the areas of the back that the corset would be supporting ( basically T7-L3 on this chart going by the sources you gave me), since all that weight would be anchored at the top of the hip-bone. I'm just not seeing how the mechanics of it line up.

              Bone-inlaid corsets could also be used like backbraces for heavy work, which is why poor women in some periods would wear them at their jobs and not just at home.

              This part though makes more sense to me, as that's kinda how belts work. They're supposed to assist in keeping the spine in a neutral position when picking heavy things up off the ground; although belts aim to achieve this by making it easier for the lifter to generate intra-abdominal pressure in order to maintain a stable posture, whereas the corsets seem to just use hardpoints to both carry load directly, and to force the wearer to maintain a specific posture.

              • Ideology [she/her]
                ·
                3 years ago

                Bear in mind the more functional ones also had shoulder straps, so they were more like a harness. Strapless corsets and bustiers were more used by people whose job was to sit on fancy couches.