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Milliner's Shop by S. F. Fores |
In the first
decade of the Georgian Era, bell shaped skirts were all the rage. This
silhouette was accomplished with hoops of whalebone tied together in a cage
around the waist. By mid-18th Century, oblong or fan hoops called panniers
(French for basket) spread a lady's skirt to the sides. Proponents claimed this
style made for ease of walking and kept importunate gentlemen at a distance. As
always, however, such fashion came at a price. Women were forced to turn
sideways when they passed through doors, and climbing into a coach was a
logistical nightmare. So in the last quarter of the century, the emphasis
shifted from the hips to the rump.
Pads filled
with fabric or cork were tied at the waist and draped over the derrière,
poufing the skirt in the back. Cartoonist were quick to lambast this new “bum
roll” or “cork rump” trend. (Check out the 1787 print by S.F. Fores called The
Milliner's Shop above. A bum roll is hanging on the wall to the right of the
mirror.)
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Chloe's Cushion or the Cork Rump by Matthew Darly |
Typical of
the ridicule was the print by Matthew Darly from 1777 entitled Chloe's
Cushion or The Cork Rump. (Notice the puppy perched on the back!) Satirists
like Peter Pindar composed poems about the style. In 1815 he published The
Cork Rump, or Queen and Maids of Honour. He'd already offered a
backhanded criticism of the fashion when he extolled the virtues of the common
maid in his 1794 poem, The Louisad:
“With Nature's hips, she sighs not for
cork rumps,
“And scorns the pride of pinching stays
and jumps;
“But, pleas'd from whalebone prisons
to escape,
“She trusts to simple nature for a
shape…”
Cork rumps
were a popular subject in newspapers and broadsheets as well. One gentleman
observed in the December 16, 1776 issue of The Weekly Miscellany:
“A most ingenious author has made it a
question, whether a man marrying a woman…may not lawfully sue for divorce on
the grounds that she is not the same person? What with the enormous false
head-dress--painting--and this newfangled cork substitute--it would be almost
impossible for a man to know his bride the morning of his nuptials. If the
ladies look on this invention as an ornament to their symmetry, I will engage
they shall be excelled by almost any Dutch market-woman or fat landlady in this
kingdom.”
There is an
account in History of the Westminster Election of a riot on May 10, 1784
in Covent Garden between proponents of the three candidates standing for
Parliament. The Guards were called and subsequently fired upon the crowd. Two
ladies lost portions of their wigs, several were “deprived of their eye-brows”
and one woman had her cork rump shot off.
But perhaps
no story was more outrageous than the one which appeared on October 4, 1785 in The
Morning Post. A lady reportedly fell into the Thames and was saved from
drowning by--you guessed it--her cork rump. (Click here for the entire article:
http://chasbaz.posterous.com/ the-cork-rump-as-a-life- preserver
Eventually,
the cork rump faded in popularity, replaced by the Grecian silhouette and
empire gowns of the Regency. But as the saying goes, you can't keep a good
thing down. The exaggerated tush returned mid-19th Century in the
form of the Victorian bustle.
Joanna Waugh lives on the southern shore of Lake
Michigan and writes Regency romance.
Her book BLIND FORTUNE is available in Kindle format at http://goo.gl/3HEpB
website: http://www.JoannaWaugh.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/ JoannaWaugh1