The Victorians Did Love Pink! – Original 1860s Bodice

1860s Pink Ball Bodice front
1860s Pink Ball Bodice front

Several years ago I acquired this original bodice that I date to the 1860s. It’s very well made by both hand and machine. Here are some highlights of this darling, but unusual garment. And yes, it is PINK.

(Click on the photos for a larger view.)

1860s Pink Bodice back
1860s Pink Bodice back

It’s made from a pink silk taffeta – and I mean PINK. Even though most of the color has faded over time, when I opened up the sleeve
hem this Lisa Frank pink reveled its bright self. Can you imagine the whole gown in that color?

1860s Pink Bodice Taffeta
PINK Bodice taffeta that is unfaded

 

Here’s the inside showing the two different underlining fabrics (and more goodies):

Bodice inside showing boning placement
Bodice inside showing boning placement

The underlining is created by both a natural cotton muslin with a medium hand and a similar fabric in polished cotton. The dart and side seams as well as the armholes are hand whipped to finish the edges. It is boned at both front darts, side seams and back princess seams with ¼” whalebone. The center front and back both have fat 1/8″ wide whalebones supporting the hand made eyelets.

 

What strikes me as so unusual about this bodice is the lacing at both the center front AND back. (The very top photo is of the front and the one just below that is the back.) What a weird thing! You almost can’t tell the sides apart.

Evening bodices of this period usually closed in the back with lacing or hooks & eyes. In the early 1870s you see evening bodices with a front button closure. So this one is quite unique with the double lacing.

Bodice front dart bones
Bodice front dart bones

Because the front and back look so similar with the straight neckline, symmetrical short sleeves and hem points, the only way I could distinguish the opening (at center front) is because of the darts. You can see them above, angling to the center front point. The girl who wore this was not large busted at all which only added to the mystery of deciphering what was the front.

Neckline facing and topstitching
Neckline facing and topstitching

The neckline looks like the silk was mounted to the underlining then the silk body laid on with the raw edge (near the neckline outer facing part) turned under and all hand whipped down. Perhaps the dressmaker was running out of fabric and therefore had to piece the bodice together but make it look good too. That facing part is around the entire neckline including the shoulders.

 

Tiny center back waist with the faux lace closure
Tiny center back waist with the faux lace closure

Look how tiny the center back panel is at the waist. The shape of the seams is the key to visually making the waist smaller without overdoing it with tight lacing. Below is the inside showing the bones in a cotton casing along the back princess seams. Notice how they don’t go very far up the back. They didn’t have curving spiral bones, which were not available til the late 1890s.

Center back bones
Center back bones

 

The top and bottom raw edges are both finished with a narrow bias piping – the neckline having one tiny cord and the bottom with double
piping of slightly larger (and softer) cords. Below is the center front point.

Double Hem Piping
Double Hem Piping

And the center back point. Look at that shape! Amazing workmanship. The silk has worn away so we can peek at the cotton or linen cord that was used for the piping.

Extreme center back point - with double piping!
Extreme center back point – with double piping!

 

And for further amazement and education – the inside of that little point:

Inside view of the center back point
Inside view of the center back point

The bias showing on the inside is really only about 5/8″ wide. I believe the double piping was made from one strip of bias as was usual in the era according to dressmaking books. (The secret is to sew it all by hand.)

 

The eyelets are quite tiny. Not more than ¼” in total diameter and many of them much smaller than that. The lacing cord is about 1/8″. Notice the long metal aglet on the end to prevent fraying and help lace the eyelets.

Tiny faux lacing center back closure
Tiny faux lacing center back closure

What are your thoughts on this unusual bodice with the lacing on both front and back? Have you seen another original with the same application? Please share!

7 thoughts on “The Victorians Did Love Pink! – Original 1860s Bodice

  1. Jessamyn says:

    Thank you for sharing the “intimate details” of this lovely evening body. I particularly enjoyed seeing the finish of the front point, and the unfaded pink color hidden inside!

    After looking at this more closely, I am fairly certain that this body was made up initially as a Swiss waist, and then converted – in period, apparently. Various styles of corselets were popular in the 1860s, meant to be worn as a sort of cross between a belt and a vest over white muslin bodies or even over dresses. Some were more like laced belts, others had straps, but almost all had deep center points. They were often made with lacing at both front and back, and you can easily see how extra material was added at the top to your example. This explains the EXTREMELY unusual fact that the lacing does not go all the way up the back – I don’t think I’ve ever seen an 1860s body that could not be opened entirely at either the front or the back.

  2. Lauren says:

    Hi!
    I’m quite interested in this post, as I have a bodice VERY similar to this and was not certain when it was from. I’ll have to share pics on my blog someday. Thanks so much for sharing yours!

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