Women have always tried to enhance their female figures by squeezing themselves into restricting, uncomfortable garments. Waists have been reduced and bustlines have been increased, decreased, flattened or spread out, depending on what was fashionable.
Back
in 2500 B.C., warrior Minoan women on the Greek isle of Crete began
wearing a bra-resembling garment, shoving their bare breasts upward and
out of their clothes! Greek and Roman women later wore a breast band,
minimizing their chest size.
During the Renaissance Period,
women stuffed the chest portions of their undergarments with silk
pouches and hankies, binding them in place as well as could be expected
to create an alluring bustline. Since there was
nothing much to hold the pouches exactly where they should have been,
there was a tendency for them to shift into laughable positions.
Marie
Tucek patented the actual first 'breast supporter' in 1893. Her
foundation garment was similar to the bras sold today, having pouches
for the breasts to sit in.
Then in 1913, Mary Phelps Jacob of
New York and her maid, Marie, devised a backless bra to be worn under a
sheer evening gown. She made this from two handkerchiefs, some ribbon
and cord and amazingly started getting orders for it that very night.
Not willing to let loose of a good thing, Jabobs showed up at the patent
office in 1914 with sketches to finalize her patent. Her invention was
awarded the title 'Backless Brassiere'.
It should be noted that
Jacob's brassiere design was intended to flatten the breasts and not
enhance them. Her invention didn't even have cups.
Without
publicity, her brassiere business was doomed to sag and Mary sold her
company to Warner Brothers Corset Company for just $1,500!
Ida
and William Rosenthal went into business as the Maidenform Company in
the 1920's as a protest against the notorious flat-chested flapper girls
of the Roaring 20's. Ida was the actual inventor of brassiere cups and
designed bras for every female figure from budding teens to the mature
matron.
You wouldn't expect to see a mention of billionaire Howard Hughes here, would you?
Hughes
used his aeronautical engineering knowledge to take an unknown starlet,
Jane Russell, and turn her into an overnight star. Hughes designed a
bra that took Russell's chesty assets and put them fully in the face of
all gawking America.
Century-Fox had cancelled the agreement for
Hughes to allow them to release 'The Outlaw'. Critics that had already
seen it were panning it left and right. Censors were having a fit about
Jane's breasts being overexposed due to Hughes' wonderfully inventive
brassiere improvements. Millions of dollars stood to be lost.
Hughes
had all his managers start a chain reaction of calling ministers,
women's clubs and housewives telling them about the 'lewd picture'
Hughes was about to release starring Jane Russell. They responded by
protesting and wildly trying to have the film banned -- just the
publicity Hughes needed to turn around the entire profit system and have
the most incredible publicity machine in full gear. It was the bra that
saved Hollywood.
Over the years, other innovations have been
added to the basic bra such as the use of uplifting elastic, uses of
lace and other elastics within the fabric.
Recent developments
have surfaced in the health field. Some researchers say that full-time
bra wearers are 21 times more likely to develop breast cancer than their
non-bra wearing counterparts. The reasoning behind this is limiting of
the functioning of the lymphatic system and the decreased removal of
toxins from the breasts. This study was sharply criticized for not
taking into consideration lifestyle differences such as smoking,
alcohol, weight, etc.
Statistics show the average American woman
owns six bras. Out of those six, one of is a strapless bra and one is a
color other than white.
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