This method has been promoted on the 18th century Rev War list as well.

Susan
NJ



On Jan 8, 11, at 8:45 AM, Carol Kocian wrote:


For 18thC stays, which have straighter lines than the later era corsets, a possibility for making a "muslin" is to use cardboard. Ordinary heavy fabric won't have the vertical stiffness. The cardboard will help determine if the stays are too long, digging into an armpit, etc etc. And, of course, se duct tape to hold the cardboard pieces together! :-)

-Carol


On Jan 7, 2011, at 9:56 PM, Pierre & Sandy Pettinger wrote:

A note on fitting corset muslins:

A hint I got several years ago - don't remember from where - was to create two strips out of heavy material - old jeans will do in a pinch. Make them at least double thickness, and put a narrow bone of some sort along the edge fold. Then put in grommets about every inch. Make them longer than you think you'll need for any possible corset style you might ever make. These can then be basted into a muslin so you can lace it up properly to check the fit, without having to put in grommets, try to pin it to fit (not happening), or making slits that then rip out after one fitting. Once you have the fit, remove them and use them for the next corset muslin.

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