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Primary
Source of the Month

"Tight Lacing, or Fashion before Ease," by Bowles and Carver after John Collet, London, England, ca. 1770–1775. From the collections of the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.
CONTENTS
"Tight Lacing: Taking Great Pains with Fashion"
Primary
Source of the Month
Teaching
Strategy
Colonial Williamsburg Teaching Resources
Teaching News
Quotation of the Month
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The Will of the People
October 16, 2008
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"Tight Lacing: Taking Great Pains with Fashion,"
by Susan Pryor
Throughout history the human body has been pulled, poked, squeezed, and generally manipulated into many and various confining devices designed to enhance one bodily feature or detract from another; all in the name of beauty and fashion. With the possible exception of Chinese foot binding, perhaps no form of confinement is better known than the European custom of tightly lacing stays.
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More
Primary
Source of the Month:
"Tight Lacing, or Fashion before Ease"
Stays or corsets were believed to encourage
good posture, provide support, and form
a fine figure. During the 1700s, doctors
and other enlightened educators admonished
women to at least avoid tightly lacing,
or "straight" lacing, their
stays. Women who did so out of vanity
were openly mocked in satirical prints.
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More
Teaching
Strategy:
"Extreme Fashion" in the 1700s
Fashion refers to styles of food, literature, art, architecture, and clothing which are current in any given culture at a particular time. Changes in fashion are especially noticeable in forms of dress. This lesson begins with a general discussion of fashion and what it reveals about society, followed by a slide presentation showing images of "extreme fashion" from the 1700s.
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Colonial
Williamsburg Teaching Resources for Your
Classroom
Colonial
Williamsburg offers a variety of quality
instructional materials dealing with 18th-century
life, including:
- Eighteenth-Century Clothing at Williamsburg (book)
- Hands-On History: Lady’s Pocket (object kit)
- What Clothes Reveal (book)
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More
Teaching
News
Colonial Williamsburg’s A Day in the Life series is now available on DVD!
The A Day in the Life Series, now available on DVD, series gives student a glimpse of daily life in the 18th century. Through stories of people from the past, students experience colonial life from multiple perspectives: working-class young men, women, gentlemen, merchants, enslaved and free African Americans, and more. Learn about how their lives intersected and how society functioned in early America. The 3-disc boxed set includes:
- Two DVDs with eight, 18-minute video episodes on 18th-century daily life
- One CD-ROM with teacher materials, lesson plans, and primary sources (PDF)
- Betwixt Folly & Fate, a 3-D immersive role playing game
- A link to the "Dress the Part" Web activity on clothing and social status
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Colonial Williamsburg Educators Mailing List
The Colonial Williamsburg Educators List (CWEdList) is mailing list comprised of teachers, librarians, media specialists, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation staff, and other individuals interested in history education. We hope members will share ideas and teaching strategies, and freely and openly discuss issues related to teaching history and social studies in the classroom.
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Quotation
of the Month
"There
is one peculiarity in all fashions, which
is whimsical and unaccountable; and that
is the sudden transformation from one extreme
to the other."
Variety: A Collection of Essays, No. 19,
London, England, 1788
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