Stockings Were

Stockings Were



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Stockings Were
This article is about the article of clothing primarily worn by women. For the Christmas receptacle filled by Santa Claus, see Christmas stocking . For other uses, see Stocking (disambiguation) .
A pair of dark grey nylon stockings.
Examining the quality of nylon stockings, Malmö clothing factory 1954.
Stockings on display for sale in South Korea .
Kronenberg brand stocking from mid-20th century
A woman wearing stay-up stockings held up by elastic

^ "History of Socks and Stockings" . History Undressed . Retrieved 2016-03-08 .

^ Oxford English Dictionary, quotations [ clarification needed ]

^ Elizabethan England by Kathy Elgin [1] ISBN   978-0-8160-5946-1

^ Handley, Susannah (1999). Nylon: The Story of a Fashion Revolution . Johns Hopkins Univ. Press. p. 48. ISBN   0-8018-6325-2 .

^ Robert Osborne (Host) (1997-08-20). Private Screenings: Ann Miller (Television production). Turner Classic Movies.

^ Christensen, C. Roland (1982). Business Policy: Text and Cases . R.D. Irwin. p. 161. ISBN   0-256-02626-2 .

^ A Brief History of Football Kit Design in England and Scotland
by Dave Moor [2]




This page was last edited on 26 January 2021, at 16:35

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Stock­ings (also known as hose , es­pe­cially in a his­tor­i­cal con­text) are close-fit­ting, var­i­ously elas­tic gar­ments cov­er­ing the leg from the foot up to the knee or pos­si­bly part or all of the thigh . Stock­ings vary in color, de­sign, and trans­parency . Today, stock­ings are pri­mar­ily worn for fash­ion and aes­thet­ics , usu­ally in as­so­ci­a­tion with mid-length or short skirts .

His­tor­i­cally, even though the word sock is at least as an­cient in ori­gin, what men nor­mally wore were often re­ferred to as stock­ings, prob­a­bly es­pe­cially when re­fer­ring to longer hose. [1] [2] [ verification needed ] The word stock used to refer to the bot­tom "stump" part of the body, and by anal­ogy the word was used to refer to the one-piece cov­er­ing of the lower trunk and limbs of the 15th cen­tury—es­sen­tially tights con­sist­ing of the up­per-stocks (later to be worn sep­a­rately as knee breeches) and nether-stocks (later to be worn sep­a­rately as stock­ings ). (See Hose .)

Be­fore the 1590s, stock­ings were made of woven cloth. The first knit­ting ma­chines were for mak­ing stockings. [3] The stock­ings them­selves were made of cot­ton, linen , wool or silk . A pol­ished cot­ton called lisle was com­mon, as were those made in the town of Bal­brig­gan .

Be­fore the 1920s, stock­ings, if worn, were worn for warmth. In the 1920s, as hem­lines of dresses rose and cen­tral heat­ing was not wide­spread, women began to wear flesh-col­ored stock­ings to cover their ex­posed legs. Those stock­ings were sheer, first made of silk or rayon (then known as "ar­ti­fi­cial silk") and after 1940 of nylon .

The in­tro­duc­tion of nylon in 1939 by chem­i­cal com­pany DuPont began a high de­mand for stock­ings in the United States with up to 4 mil­lion pairs being pur­chased in one day. Nylon stock­ings were cheap, durable, and sheer com­pared to their cot­ton and silk coun­ter­parts. When Amer­ica en­tered World War II , DuPont ceased pro­duc­tion of nylon stock­ings and re­tooled their fac­to­ries to pro­duce para­chutes, air­plane cords, and rope. This led to a short­age and the cre­ation of a black mar­ket for stock­ings. At the end of the war DuPont an­nounced that the com­pany would re­turn to pro­duc­ing stock­ings, but could not meet de­mand. This led to a se­ries of dis­tur­bances in Amer­i­can stores known as the nylon riots until DuPont was able to in­crease production. [4]

A pre­cur­sor of panty­hose made an ap­pear­ance in the 1940s and 1950s, when film and the­ater pro­duc­tions had stock­ings sewn to the briefs of ac­tresses and dancers, ac­cord­ing to ac­tress-singer-dancer Ann Miller [5] and seen in pop­u­lar films such as Daddy Long Legs . Today, stock­ings are com­monly made using knit­ted wool, silk, cot­ton or nylon (see hosiery ). The in­tro­duc­tion of com­mer­cial panty­hose in 1959 gave an al­ter­na­tive to stock­ings, and the use of stock­ings de­clined dra­mat­i­cally. A main rea­son for this was the trend to­wards higher hem­lines on dresses (see minidress ). In 1970, U.S. sales of panty­hose ex­ceeded stock­ings for the first time, and has re­mained this way ever since. [6] Be­gin­ning in 1987, sales of panty­hose started a slight de­cline due to the newly in­vented hold-ups, but still re­main the most sold kind of hosiery.

Stock­ings are still some­times pre­ferred to panty­hose in North Amer­i­can Eng­lish, for a num­ber of rea­sons. These may in­clude the per­cep­tion that stock­ings, and the as­so­ci­ated use of garters , lace , high fash­ion, ap­pliqué and the ex­po­sure of the thigh, are more aes­thet­i­cally pleas­ing, or sex­u­ally at­trac­tive and al­lur­ing than panty­hose.

Both nylon stock­ings and panty­hose in being sheer share the ad­van­tage of being quick-dry­ing com­pared to pants. Spare pairs are also easy to carry if they are ru­ined. If lad­dered they can be re­placed 'one at a time' which pro­vides a cost ad­van­tage over tights.

How­ever, stock­ings have a draw­back in colder weather, be­cause more skin is ex­posed to the cold com­pared to panty­hose. Also, panty­hose do not re­quire garters or garter belts, and do not need to be ad­justed as much, whilst also leav­ing a smoother line under form-fit­ting cloth­ing .

Stock­ings can be held up in one of three ways:

In mod­ern usage, stock­ing specif­i­cally refers to the form of hosiery con­fig­ured as two pieces, one for each leg (ex­cept for Amer­i­can and Aus­tralian Eng­lish , where the term can also be a syn­onym for panty­hose). The terms hold-ups and thigh highs refer to stock­ings that stay up through the use of built-in elas­tic, while the word stock­ings is the gen­eral term or refers to the kind of stock­ings that need a sus­pender belt (garter belt, in Amer­i­can Eng­lish ), and are quite dis­tinct from tights or panty­hose (Amer­i­can Eng­lish).

Other terms used with stock­ings in­clude:

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stockings .

Stocking definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
Stocking — Wikipedia Republished // WIKI 2
The Stockings Were Hung - YouTube
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