Dictionary Definition
petticoat n : undergarment worn under a skirt
[syn: half-slip,
underskirt]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A woman's garment worn under a skirt, a kind of slip, especially one that has ruffles or other adornment and may be worn to make the skirt fuller.
Synonyms
Translations
- Portuguese: anágua
- Spanish: enaguas , combinación italbrac Colombian Atlantic Coast, fondo , fustán , peticote italbrac Panama, sayuela italbrac Cuba
Extensive Definition
A petticoat or underskirt is an article of
clothing for women; specifically an undergarment to be worn
under a skirt, dress or
sari. The petticoat is a
separate garment hanging from the waist (unlike the chemise).
- In historical contexts (sixteenth to mid-nineteenth centuries), petticoat refers to any separate skirt worn with a gown, bedgown, bodice or jacket; these petticoats are not strictly speaking underwear as they were made to be seen.
- in both historical and modern contexts, petticoat refers to skirt-like undergarments worn for warmth or to give the skirt or dress the desired fashionable shape. In this context a petticoat may be called a waist slip or underskirt (UK) or half slip (US), with petticoat restricted to extremely full garments. Petticoat can also refer to a full-length slip in the UK, although this usage is somewhat old-fashioned.
- Petticoat is the standard name in English for any underskirt worn as part of non-Western clothing, as with the sari.
History
The practice of wearing petticoats as
undergarments was well established by 1585. Petticoats were
worn throughout history by women who wanted to have the currently
fashionable shape created by their clothing. The petticoat(s), if
sufficiently full or stiff, would hold the overskirt out in a
pleasingly domed shape and give the impression of a smaller waist
than the wearer actually had. It would also complement the desired
large bust.
Elaborately decorated petticoats were worn under
open-fronted gowns and looped overskirts from the mid-sixteenth
century. Eighteenth century petticoats of wool or silk were often
quilted for additional warmth and were worn with matching short
gowns or jackets, which could be fashioned like a man's jacket with
military details and trimmings. These ankle-length petticoats
remained a rural fashion, especially in the UK, into the nineteenth
century and are a part of Welsh national
dress.
Elaborate, lacy petticoats were worn with elegant
silk dresses in the eighteenth century in much of Europe and
America, sometimes supported by whalebone frames. The Laurel and
Hardy film adaptation of Auber's comic opera
Fra
Diavolo offers a glimpse of the intricate petticoats, corsets, and other underwear worn in the
eighteenth century, especially in a scene where actress Thelma Todd
prepares for bed, assisted by a maid. Colored pictures, called
"fashion plates," were used to advertise the popular dresses and
lingerie of the eighteenth century, a practice that continued
through the nineteenth century until the introduction of photography around
1840.
In the early nineteenth century, dresses became
narrower and simpler with much less lingerie. Then, as the waltz
became popular in the 1820s, full-skirted gowns with petticoats
were revived in Europe and the United States. By the mid nineteenth
century, petticoats were worn over hoops, which were placed over
other underwear, including a corset cover, a corset, and drawers. The popular novel
Gone
with the Wind provides considerable, detailed descriptions of
these fashions. One scene in the 1939 film adaptation with actress
Vivian
Leigh gives a good idea of the layers of petticoats and
underwear that were worn in the 1860s.
The sheer weight of the clothing, along with the
tightness of the corsets, sometimes caused women to faint. The
voluminous, layered Victorian
petticoats were not worn to hide the legs, as twentieth century
commentators later claimed; they actually enhanced the stylish
figure in the centuries before female attractiveness was defined in
large part by how much naked leg was revealed, as has been
the case since 1960.
The use of multiple petticoats continued to be
popular until the 1870s, when the bustle was introduced, resulting
in a return of narrower skirts. Some full-skirted gowns with
petticoats were revived in the 1890s into the early twentieth
century, but most women continued to wear relatively narrow skirts.
The "Gibson Girl"
look with white blouses and long, narrow skirts was very popular at
the turn-of-the-century.
Modern petticoats
For the first two decades of the twentieth
century, multiple petticoats fell out of fashion; narrow, sometimes
tight, skirts became more common. Then, in the late 1920s, chiffon
dresses with several sheer petticoats became fashionable. With the
Great
Depression in the 1930s, narrow skirts returned and petticoats
again were unpopular until the end of the decade when revived for
some evening, prom, and wedding gowns. World War II, with its
rationing and general shortage of materials, brought an end to
petticoats.
Petticoats were revived by Christian
Dior in his full-skirted New Look of
1947 and
tiered, ruffled,
stiffened petticoats remained extremely popular during the 1950s, especially
with teenage girls.
Most of the petticoats were netlike crinoline, sometimes made of
horsehair. Increasingly, nylon chiffon, taffeta, and organdy were used in petticoats.
Many department stores carried an extensive variety of styles and
colors of petticoats until the early 1960s. They were also
available through the famous
Sears and J.C. Penney
catalogues. Typically, at least three single petticoats were worn,
until manufacturers began making double and triple layer
petticoats. A narrow slip was usually worn under the petticoats,
especially the crinoline type, because they tended to be
"scratchy".
Famed designer Edith Head
designed a number of gowns and dresses, supported by multiple
layers of petticoats, for actresses such as Grace Kelly
and Doris
Day, who appeared in Alfred
Hitchcock films in the 1950s. Dinah Shore
frequently wore dresses with petticoats on her NBC television shows
Actress Connie
Stevens, who appeared in television series and movies, said she
wore petticoats as long as possible because she had wide hips.
Other entertainers who often wore petticoats were Brenda Lee,
Connie
Francis, and Patti
Page.
By the middle of the 20th
century, the full petticoat was somewhat rare, having been
commonly replaced by simple, ungathered underskirts/waist slips
(UK) or half slips (US). However, petticoats were still worn for
proms and weddings.
Ruffled white or unbleached cotton petticoats
were a brief fashion under Prairie
skirts in the 1970s, and remain a
component of Western
wear. Short, full petticoats in the 1950s style are also
commonly worn by
squaredancers.
There was a major attempt to revive separate
petticoats in 1987. However, by that time, most women who wanted
very full skirts for proms, parties, or weddings bought dresses or
skirts with attached crinoline petticoats.
Petticoats today
Lately the full, tiered petticoat has made a small comeback in the alternative subcultures, especially the gothic and Lolita subculture. They have also been popular with some cross-dressers. Various petticoats have also been used in films and musicals dealing with the 1950s, such as Grease, West Side Story, Peggy Sue Got Married, and Back to the Future, as well as occasional vintage rock music festivals, especially in Germany. Although the traditional purpose for the petticoat is no longer in fashion, the general design has stayed the same with minor alterations including ripping and/or the usage of bright or generally non-traditional colors.Petticoats are also making a comeback due to
recent trends towards lavish weddings and grandiose bridal attire.
Petticoats are commonly worn under bridal gowns with full skirts as
a means of maintaining the gown's intended silhouette.
Manufacturers such as White
Clover are updating the bridal petticoat and designing-out its
historical shortcomings by using modern material such as Velcro,
elastic and Spandex.
Also, people who dress in period costumes have
begun wearing petticoats for a more authentic look. A number of
websites offer a great variety of petticoats for sale, while other
websites show historic and modern photographs of petticoats, often
worn by models.
The everyday use of petticoats in the 1950s and
early 1960s appears to have passed. Most women today dress more
simply and practically. Even dresses and skirts are not as popular
as they once were, with many women regularly wearing jeans and
shirts or pantsuits. However, there are women (and cross-dressing
men) who still like the look of a dress or skirt with petticoats,
as well as the use of corsets, girdles, or garter belts
with nylon
stockings instead of pantyhose. Comedian Amy Sedaris
has appeared on television wearing a 1950s gown with multiple
petticoats.
Asian petticoats
A petticoat is the main undergarment worn with a
sari. Sari petticoats
usually match the color of the sari and are made of satin or
cotton.http://www.indiangarment.com/myshop/buyinless/lesspetticoats.php3,
A notable difference between the western petticoat and sari
petticoat is that the sari petticoat is rarely shorter than ankle
length.
References
External links
petticoat in German: Petticoat
petticoat in French: Jupon
petticoat in Dutch: Petticoat
petticoat in Japanese: ペティコート
petticoat in Swedish: Petticoat
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Balmoral, Skivvies, bloomers, body stocking,
brassiere, briefs, bustle, camisole, chemise, combination, corset, crinoline, distaff, drawers, female, feminine, foundation garment,
gentlewomanlike,
girlish, gynecic, gynecoid, gynic, kittenish, ladylike, little-girlish,
maidenly, matronal, matronlike, matronly, muliebral, pannier, panties, pants, shift, shorts, singlet, slip, smock, tournure, underpants, underskirt, undervest, union suit,
vest, womanish, womanlike, womanly