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  2. Metal corset - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metal_corset

    Hinged iron corset with back clasp opening. 1580–99. York Castle Museum. A steel corset in the Stibbert Museum, Florence, Italy, is dated to the mid-16th century, and thought to be similar to the metal stays recorded as having been made by a corazzaio mastro (master armour-maker) for Eleanor of Toledo, and delivered to her on 28 February 1549. [5]

  3. Tightlacing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tightlacing

    Although the structured, corseted wasp-waist made a resurgence after World War II in the form of the New Look, there was soon backlash with hippie culture; meanwhile, the rise of popular fitness culture meant that diet, liposuction, and exercise became the preferred methods of achieving a thin waist. Corsets were no longer fashionable, but they ...

  4. Hourglass Angel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hourglass_Angel

    Hourglass Angel sells corsets with hook-and-eye enclosures and steel stays, or boning.It also offers waist cinchers made of latex. he company also offers products that are less intense than corsets: exercise leggings that purport to battle cellulite, "butt-lifting" jeans and "slimming" support tank tops for men.

  5. 'Bridgerton' is making corsets cool again. But are they safe ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/corsets-safe-wear-know-try...

    Bhatia also notes that, while corsets can give the illusion of a smaller waist or an hourglass figure, they cannot lead to weight loss or permanently change the shape of one’s body.

  6. Training corset - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Training_corset

    An example of a training corset. It has long, stiff shoulder straps which raise the lower ribs. A training corset is generally a corset used in body modification.A training corset is believed to help orthopedic issues (such as in attempt to correct a poor posture) and it is believed to help cosmetic issues (such as waistline, commonly called waist training or in more extreme cases tightlacing ...

  7. Bone (corsetry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone_(corsetry)

    The earliest corsets had a wooden busk placed down the center fronts of the corsets; these early busks were different from the more modern steel busks which have clasps to facilitate opening and closing the corset from the front. Corsets of the 17th and 18th centuries were most often heavily boned, with little or no space between the bone channels.

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