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Shop Lingerie
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Written by morgan
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Wednesday, 28 June 2006 |
The negligee is a form of womenswear intended for wear at night and in the bedroom.
It is a form of nightgown; first introduced in France in the 18th Century, where
it mimicked the heavy head-to-toe style of women's day dresses of the time.
By the 1920s it began to mimic women's satin single-layer evening dresses of
the period. The term "negligee" was used of a Royal Doulton run of
ceramic figurines in 1927, showing women wearing what appears to be a one-piece
knee-length silk or rayon slip, trimmed with lace. The word comes from the French
négliger, meaning to neglect, to disregard or to overlook. Although the
evening-dresses style of nightwear made moves towards the modern negligee style
(translucent bodices, lace trimming, bows - exemplified in 1941 by a photo of
Rita Hayworth in Life), it was only after World War II that nightwear changed
from being primarily utilitarian to being primarily sensual or even erotic;
the negligee emerged strongly as a form of lingerie.
Modern negligees were often much looser and made of sheer and semi-translucent
fabrics and trimmed with lace or other fine material, and bows. Multiple layers
of fabric were often used. The modern negligee thus perhaps owes more to women's
fine bedjackets or bed-capes, and up-market slips than to the nightgown. It
spread to a mass market, benefiting from the introduction of cheap synthetic
fabrics such as nylon and its finer successors. From the 1940s to the 1970s,
the trend was for negligees to become shorter in length (e.g. the babydoll of
the 1970s). Negligees made from the 1940s to the 1970s are now collectible items.
In the UK at 2004, negligees account for only four per cent of women's nightwear
sales, women's pajamas having dominated since the mid 1980s. However, UK negligee
sales are said to have been the fastest increasing sector of the market since
1998 (Source: BBC, Dec 2004).
From Wikipedia
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