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Support System

A certain amount of frankly random fannying about on Tumblr led me to a French website posting about the oldest bra in the world. Further Googling turned up English language articles about said article, and it is a bra which dates to probably the late 12th or early 13th century, and very closely resembles a modern longline bra.
first-bra

I did some extremely rudimentary sketching in pink to show where fabric is missing, and if you notice on the open edge under the arm, the back would have been closed by lacing – there are stitched eyelets:
first-bra_fill-in-the-gaps

It would be around another five hundred years before an undergarment like this was produced commercially and put into common use.

Brassieres for all figures
This is an ad from a 1950s knitting magazine offering bras “scientifically” designed for various figure types. The bra shown at the far left is a very similar shape to the medieval bra in the article linked above.

I actually own a couple of vintage bras, one probably from the 1930s, the other most definitely from the 1950s.
antiquebrafront antiquebraback
This bra probably dates to the late 1930s, if the provenance I have on it is correct. I’m given to understand that it belonged to a sister of one of my parents’ neighbors, a man who passed away about ten years ago? Clear as mud? Right. The woman who probably owned it left behind a selection of clothing from the 1920s through the 1940s when she moved out upon marriage. The 1920s dresses are those of a young teen girl and are quite small. The 1930s/40s dresses are those of a slightly-built young woman. This bra, which barely fit on my dummy when it was set on the smallest setting would best fit someone whose bust was about a 30A. As you can see, the band is a delicate crocheted netting and the straps are actually satin cord. The cups are made of handkerchief linen and cotton lace inserts.

1950slacebrafront1950slacebraback
This little beauty is a genuine Maidenform bra. As in “I dreamed I ____ in my Maidenform Bra
I got it new-old-stock with tags. It was something that my Grandmother had bought at some point in the 1950s, but never ended up using. I’ve worn it a few times when I felt the need for a conical bosom:

It doesn’t show up as well as one might like, on account of the bodice of this dress being cut fairly loosely, but suffice it to say that this bra does a fantastic job of creating that iconic 1950s Dagmar bosom.

I can’t wear it right now on account of my colossal lactating rack, but it’s kind of a cool thing to have in the wardrobe just for reasons.

Unexpected beauty

I was goofing around on Flickr earlier this evening and came across three Daguerreotype photographs from the mid-1850s (probably, judging by the hairstyles and dresses) of women breastfeeding their babies. I thought that these three photos were quite beautiful as a tender moment was committed to a sheet of tin with the top technology of the day.

PC140-2z
This sweet-faced woman seems to have been doing a stellar job at feeding her child. You’d go a long way to find a more bonny baby that that one. I am also finding this photograph interesting from a fashion history standpoint. I notice that the collar and ribbon are separate from the bodice of her dress and were left fastened.

PC140-1z
This aristocratic-looking woman holds a burp cloth at the ready as her baby enthusiastically feeds. You can see that he or she was batting his or her right hand as the picture was taken. Post-processing the photographer daubed bits of gold leaf on to highlight the woman’s ring and earrings. You can see how the structure of her garments dictates her figure to an extent. The corset stops directly below the breasts, making them seem especially prominent. Once again, the woman’s collar remains fastened separate from the dress bodice. I knew these collars were separate from the dress, but I’d always assumed they were attached via pins or buttons. I didn’t realise that they were just tied around the base of the neck like a choker necklace.

PC136-1z
The last photograph of the three is of a woman nursing a toddler. Some odd manipulation has been done to the Daguerreotype which resulted in loss of detail in the child’s dress and half of the woman’s collar. I’m guessing that it had been prepared for hand tinting and that the pigments once used to highlight the image have somehow been lost.

These photographs are the property of Harvard University, part of their women’s history resources. I am curious about these photos. I wonder why they were taken. This is not a common or typical genre of mother-and-child photographic portraiture from the era. They’re all roughly contemporary. Judging by the women’s clothing, they were probably taken within a year of each other, at most. The last woman has a fairly unfashionable hairstyle, but her dress is up-to-date for the mid-1850s. The dropped shoulder line, front-fastening, gathered or pleated front bodice, the tucked trim on the sleeves, and the very full skirts supported only by petticoats are quite typical of the time.

Because I was curious to the brim, I went ahead and used their “ask-a-librarian” form to see if anyone could provide provenance or context for these images. I will share, if I get a response.

It’s funny, but I have never thought of breastfeeding in context of beauty. I have long considered it practical and also very sweet, as it’s built in snuggle time. The level of contentment that radiates from a nursing baby is also hard to top. When you’re living with a very small infant who cannot express any nuances of feeling and is either content or distressed, that contentment is what you strive for and treasure.

Myself, when I’m breastfeeding, I’m all sweaty and sometimes leaking and generally feel like a hot sticky mess. Maybe it might look tender and endearing in the right context, but it’s hard to be very lovely in August in Kansas City. Perhaps since I’ve been spending so much time feeling sweaty and gross while tending to my baby that’s why I am taking such a liking to these elegant, studio-posed photographs of nursing women from a hundred and sixty years ago. Sometimes an idealised image can be satisfying and reassuring.

Movin’ on up

Today, I went through Joseph’s dresser and weeded out all the Newborn bodysuits and phased in the 0-3 month garb. He’s two days shy of two months old, but adjusted for his prematurity he’d be approximately three weeks.

Joel and I tried to measure him this morning – he’s probably 20″ long, maybe. He’s so fidgety that it is hard to tell.
IMG_3609
Joel rigged up a weighing contraption using a Snugli-type carrying pouch and a fishing scale and discovered that Joseph probably weighs somewhere in the neighborhood of seven and three quarters pounds. So, just about the right size for an average newborn. But he’s got a really long torso, and his shoulders were coming out the neckholes of all of his Newborn sized tops. The 0-3 stuff is the right length, though he’s got an awful lot of lateral space in there.

We’ve got his two months checkup on Friday, so I am curious to see how close Joel’s and my home-made measuring came to what they can work out in the clinic, with proper equipment.

I know it’s traditional to feel a bit melancholy when your baby outgrows his clothes, all “oh, they grow so fast,” but because he was born prematurely, each time we have to size up his wardrobe, I feel great relief and no small portion of joy. I’m grateful and exceedingly happy that he’s coming along so well, that he’s growing steadily and filling in. He’s looking so much more robust every day, and I’m so glad that he’s so strong and healthy.

IMG_3571

I know it’s completely irrational but when my water broke a month and a half early, I had this feeling of comprehensive guilt, that already before he was even born, I was failing him. That I was already screwing things up for him by not carrying to term. I wondered, as you do, what I’d done wrong. Maybe I shouldn’t have kept working so long at the grocery store where I was on my feet for seven hour shifts (my last day at the grocery was one week before I went into labor!). Maybe I shouldn’t have been scraping wallpaper at the little house in 97°F heat.  Maybe I’d gotten too dehydrated.  Maybe I’d pushed myself too hard.  Maybe something stupid I did years ago, some injury or another had made me unsuitable for proper gestation.

Now, I know all this is foolishness and I quizzed the doctors at the hospital extensively, and they said to the best of what they could tell from all the tests they ran on me, Joseph, and the placenta, they couldn’t tell why he’d come early.  As best anyone could determine, there was no blame to assign.  So, as Joseph has been growing and thriving, I feel a lot better about his prospects.  He’s coming along nicely as a breastfed baby; he has a phenomenal appetite and a good latch.  He behaves as is appropriate for an infant of his age, perking up for familiar voices and raising and rotating his head during tummy time.  He even, once in a while, rolls himself over, which is quite an outlier achievement, about which I am simply unreasonably pleased:

The day may come when I feel wistful about him outgrowing his clothes and moving on in milestones, but at the moment, each milestone passed and each onesie outgrown is a relief and a triumph.

I’ll show you some things I’ve made recently.

First things first, I’ve got a baby’s butt to keep covered, so I did the mundane, cheapskate thing and made a bunch of diapers. Using this pattern:
KwikSew 3690
I made two dozen diapers. Most of them are just boring, plain white:
IMG_3264 with blue topstitching, but some of them I splashed out a bit and cut a decorative outer layer in this “Wild West” themed craft fabric:
IMG_3543 With the Wild West fabric, I switched to red topstitching, as I thought that would look nice with the brown print.

I modified this pattern a bit. The original design was for all-in-one diapers which are quite a convenience in theory, but in practice, take for ages and ages to dry. So, I took inspiration from some hand-me-down pocket diapers a friend had passed along to us, and left an opening between the lining and the waterproof shell in the back and made removable absorbent pads. That way, I can line dry the shells outside and sun-bleach away the poo-stains and run the absorbent pads through the dryer on hot to dry them quickly. I don’t think the dryer would be at all good for either the waterproof shell or the velcro anyway, so this ends up working out very well.

I’ve also made a pair of footiepants which are comically large:
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And a sleeper which is just about right – big enough to allow for growth, but not so large as to lose the baby within:
Sleeper

This is the result of another of the Sunrise Designs patterns, and I must say, I have had nothing but good results with these old trace-and-sew patterns. They may date back to 1981 and may be from an obscure publisher, but they are reliable and make some cute, cute things. I’ve become a big fan of trace-and-sew patterns because they are so economical. I have a roll of parchment paper, such as you’d use for baking, if (unlike me) you bake anything at all delicate. I use it for tracing patterns as it is semi-transparent and won’t let ink soak through. I have used it to copy my diaper patterns, and also to copy all the sizes of a cute sailor suit and romper pattern that I’m planning on using extensively.

Simplicity 4711 Middy Outfit
I think the romper suit (with the suspenders) will be part of Joseph’s first Tweed Ride outfit next spring. I feel that he should be exposed to dapper dressing upon occasion from an early age. He may grow up and prefer to be a total scruff, but I want him to at least have the opportunity to enjoy smart clothing!

Landfill destiny

I come from a family of scavengers and trashpickers. So does Joel. In fact, in our early relationship, we bonded over an outing on Large Trash Day down in the ritzy Brookside district, when I scored my prized enamel-and-chrome step-stool (1950s vintage) and Joel found a banjo!

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When my sister and I were kids, we loved getting to go to the municipal dump with our folks. We’d pile out of the cab of the pickup and immediately set off on a treasure hunt. Mom and Dad would offload whatever it was they needed to dispose of, and make a circuit themselves. You never knew what (if anything) you might turn up. One time, Mom found some really pretty ceramic vases in a range of speckled orange and yellow in a kind of Danish Modern style. Another time my sister and I found a genuine Little Red Wagon, which saw us through childhood and now serves as a picturesque planter for some of Mom’s indoor jungle:

I was talking to my Dad on the phone the other day, and he was telling me about one of his friends’ collection of half-disassembled import cars, and I was just plain avid to see the lot. Apparently, amongst the scrapyard is a languishing Jensen-Healey and a Lotus Elise. Seriously. In Western Nebraska. Those cars are pretty exotic anywhere in the US, but in the boondocks especially so! Dad’s always had friends with projects, guys who have small, personal scrapyards with several decaying Mustangs or a variegated collection of battered Dodges or some other particular obsessive busted-ass car bent. And I always enjoyed touring these various private junkyards, envisioning how sweet a cherry 1968 Buick Riviera could look out on the cruise.

Much like my love of a good City Dump, my love of junkyards is all about the possibilities. For every thirty battered beaters full of mouse turds, there might be one lurking sleeper that could be turned around into something really special.

1. Hallucinated

2. Passed out*

3. Gone home with a boy I’d never met before

It sounds like I’ve been having wild and salacious times, but in reality, that’s a misleading lead-in to a labor-and-delivery anecdote.

On June 28, I was heading down to KU Med for a routine pre-natal appointment, wherein I expected to be weighed, have my blood-pressure checked, and get to hear the baby’s heartbeat on their little amplified stethoscope gizmo and told, “yep, everything’s great; come back in two weeks.”

Up until 6-28-13, this had been The World’s Easiest Pregnancy. No morning sickness, no stretch marks, minimal fatigue. Really the only complaint I had was swollen feet, but when you are pregnant as hell during the summer, it’s to be expected. Things had been going well. Too well. The superstitious side of me was vaguely uneasy, but the practical, matter-of=fact side mostly told the superstitious side to shut the hell up and enjoy this unwarranted good fortune.

So, that Friday morning bright and early, on Rainbow Boulevard, just across from Bank Midwest, there’s no delicate way to put it: my water broke. I recognised this as Not Good, In Fact Bad, Very Not Good At All. I knew I hadn’t wet my pants for a variety of reasons, mostly boiling down to not being incontinent. So, I pulled into the parking lot, called Joel, and told him that he probably should meet me at the hospital, because I was pretty sure my water had broken.

I checked in for my 9:00 appointment, so that I wouldn’t get a nastygram from scheduling, but I clued them in on the salient fact that my shoes were full of amniotic fluid and that I had Concerns. I tell you what, showing up to ObGyn in a state like that gets you triaged almost faster than immediately. Joel had just enough time to meet me in the hallway before they whisked us off to Labor & Delivery where it rapidly unfolded that the baby we’d assumed we were expecting to arrive in August would be arriving within the forthcoming 48 hours. The plan became “keep Michelle out of active labor long enough to fill her with antibiotics and steroids so that the little fellow’s lungs would get a bit of a jump start before he had to start using them.” This led in to two days laid out flat on a hospital bed, mostly banned from eating, anxious, bored stupid, and kind of freaking out because I had So Much Shit I’d been planning to get done before the baby was to be born.

For the first 24 hours I was in the hospital, I was not allowed to eat, in case I spontaneously went into labor and might require some sort of anesthetic. When I made it through that period of time, they told me to go ahead and carbo-load because I was going to have a hell of a workout ahead of me. Joel brought me a Chipotle burrito, which since by that point I hadn’t eaten in something like 30 hours, was the Most Delicious Food In The World, Ever.

After the Great Burrito of Succour, I was once again banned from food in anticipation of an induction. Now Induction – let’s just say I’d been fed a shitton of horror stories about it and was feeling a whole damn lot of trepidation. Like Pitocin is the Devil and so on. Well, as it turns out, my body was already in the mood to go into labor, and therefore I never needed the Pitocin. Just the whatever-it-was they used to dilate the cervix was enough. Once that got started, the rest of my reproductive system was like, “Okay, I’ll handle it from here.”

As to labor, I’ve got to say, it kind of sucked, but it wasn’t nearly as bad as I’d been led to believe. Of course, I reckon I’m lucky ’cause I was only in active labor for about three hours, so it didn’t physically wring me out like one of those marathon 52-hour-sessions would have done. It was short and fairly wretched. There’s a reason it’s called “labor” rather than “Happy, Goodtimes Cooter Party,” and that’s because it is some seriously hard work. The pains were nothing at all like what I’d been expecting. I was expecting something akin to turbo-charged period pains, but the reality was that it was a series of extreme, violent, rhythmic muscle spasms coming from different directions throughout my lower abdomen.

Also, I could never have known that the pain would make me hallucinate.

I suppose I should make a disclaimer that I’ve never taken any hallucinogenic drugs before. No acid, no mushrooms, no peyote, no X. I’ve lived a singularly plain and chemically un-enhanced life. I have, however, experienced auditory hallucinations after prolonged periods of sleep deprivation. Those, however, consisted of nothing beyond hearing music that didn’t exist (mostly annoying drum-n-bass).

While I was hallucinating my way through labor, I wasn’t really aware that I was hallucinating. Nonetheless, with each contraction, I was seeing tessellated patterns of colored geometric shapes which would form, then rotate, flip, or slide into other configurations, Kaleidoscope-fashion. As they formed and re-formed, they would sprout eyeballs at the corners of shapes with corners, and fangs in random gaps in the pattern. As the contraction neared an end, the pattern would dissipate, like the scattered colored sands of a Tibetan mandala.

Now might be pertinent to note that I had an unmedicated labor. I’d originally went in determined that I wouldn’t have an epidural and all that, that I wanted to be aware of everything that was going on. The irony of it is that because my body freaked out so spectacularly from the pain alone, that I was probably more out-of-it than I might have been if I’d had some pain relief. At a point, I reckoned I couldn’t take it anymore and asked after an epidural or, you know, sweet merciful death, but they inspected me and said, “nope, that ship has sailed – it’s actually time to start pushing.”

So I did, and shortly thereafter, I had a baby, and that was frankly pretty awesome. The actual delivery was less unpleasant (from my perspective) than the labor leading up to it. Granted, because Joseph was so tiny (4lb 14 oz.) he didn’t cause me nearly as much grief as he probably would have done had he waited until he was supposed to get here.

Joseph jumped the starting pistol by about six weeks. We ended up spending a solid two weeks in the NICU while he learned such vital life skills as “how-to-suckle” and “breathing: it’s best if you continue to do so regularly.” Also “Body Heat 101.” Fortunately, he graduated these core courses and they let me take him home on 7-13-13. Since then, he’s been a really great baby; fairly laid back, very into feeding, quite snuggly, and frankly pretty cute, if you ask me. You will have to take my word for it so, far, though because my photographic abilities don’t extend very far into portraiture. Also, I fear my young son has inherited my diabolical inability to retain a pleasing facial expression when confronted with a camera. Nearly every photo I’ve taken of him involves an awkward facial expression. I’m not deliberately taking silly pictures of him, either. Somehow or another, just as I snap the picture, he goes from looking sweet and cute and tranquil to looking like Curly from the Three Stooges. I hope sooner or later both my photographic skills catch up and that he gets over this weird-facial-expression phase.
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If you’re so inclined, here are more examples of my infant-based portrait-photography incompetence. You will have to take my word for it at this stage that he actually is really a cute little guy.

*

*I couldn’t find a good place within the narrative to tell the “passing out” part of the story, so I shall finish it out as a footnote.  At a point just before the whole too-late-for-an-epidural episode, I’d been having a contraction and feeling like hell.  When the contraction passed, I felt really gross, like I was about to be sick.  I asked the nurse who was in the room if there was a bag or bowl or something I could throw up into.  She fetched a plastic basin and handed it over to me.  I leaned over it, in anticipation of being violently sick, when, well, I blacked out.  I remember thinking, “deep breaths, you’ll feel better after you puke,” then feeling better.  Briefly.

I came to with about a half dozen people clustered around me looking extremely worried.  I was seeing little sparks flying all around my field of vision, like looking through a 4th of July sparkler.

No-one knows exactly why I fainted.  At first, the nurse thought it was some kind of seizure.  It may have been from hyperventilating, it may have been a response to the pains, or it may have just been freakishness.  It’s the first time I’ve ever fallen unconscious, so I don’t have a lot of frame of reference for that one.

made on behalf of my pending baby by total strangers in public:

1.  It’s a boy because my face looks “normal,” not puffy.

Ah…okay. Thanks, I think. Oh, by the way, woman-I’ve-never-seen-before-in-my-life, how do you know what my face looks like normally? I’ll grant you that it does look as normal as my face is able to look, but wha???

2.  It’s a girl, because I have a lovely suntan.

Well…no, what you’re seeing is the effect of my having accidentally bought a bottle of self-tanning sunscreen because I liked the scent and didn’t read on the label that it would turn me brown-ish. I bought a bottle of Jergens Glow & Protect a while back, on the merit of its scent, which is delightful. I hadn’t realized that it was infused with some sort of voodoo that would make me appear to have a tropical sun-kissed complexion. It wasn’t until the skin between my fingers turned orange that I realised there was something odd with my body lotion.

3.  It’s a boy, because I’m “carrying high.”

Eeeh? I reckon it’s more a combination of being long waisted, being pregnant with my first, and having originally had a strong core.

It’s refreshing to know that the Old Wives Tales are still holding strong, even in these heady days of science and diagnostics.

I’m just feeling quite fortunate that I haven’t had many people trying to feel on my belly. Because I am not a huggy/touchy person even with my friends, and am especially not-fond of stranger contact. But I suppose my body language and bearing are as such that people don’t find me that particularly physically approachable, and that is fully satisfactory to me.

Romantic Back Stories

The other day, on the way home from work, I discovered a new illegal dump-site. As is my wont, I pulled over to see if there was anything good there. As it turns out, yes, there was.

Janet & John
Here, you see Janet and John. As best I can estimate, these two hail from the 1950s and despite their dusty/muddy state, appear to be in actually pretty good condition, though Janet’s dress has not weathered the passage of time gracefully. This is not a huge concern, as two other dresses were found on site, both in significantly better shape.

The fictionalised back-story for this pair is that they’re fraternal twins, born in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1955, whose misadventures with a wormhole landed them in a shady district of Kansas City in the year 2013.

I call them Stephen & Phyllis
Stephen and Phyllis are fresh out of medical school, and are learning the ways of practical patient care (and falling in love) in a wildly popular afternoon serial drama.

It seems that Stephen and Phyllis may be fairly antique – this website suggests that Phyllis may have been on duty as early as the 1940s.

As these dolls were picked from the trash, I have nothing like a provenance on them. Janet is a Horsman doll, and appears to be Horsman’s answer to the Betsy Wetsy. John is unmarked, but appears to have been well made. He has his “wetsy” drain in his left buttock, in the same manner as the Betsy Wetsy. He also was found wearing a terry cloth diaper covered by a pair of rubber pants. Janet is wearing stockinet underwear. I think it’s pretty cool that she has her original shoes and socks. The shoes are made from a soft rubbery plastic which remains pliant. I think in their day, both were fairly high-end dolls.

I wonder if Stephen and Phyllis were, in fact, tie-ins to some sort of movie or radio drama. I did a search on the maker’s mark found on their necks (MPF Hong Kong) and turned up several other nurses identical to Phyllis, though I found no other doctors. No real information about the dolls, however. They are very, very cheaply made of thin, rather brittle plastic.

A rebuttal:

There’s a platitude been going around Facebook of late, one of those bumper-sticker feel-goodisms which goes: “Be kind to unkind people; they need it most.”

To which I am inclined to say ‘humbug,’ ‘hogwash,’ and ‘balderdash.’

Being kind to unkind people is, to my way of thinking, rewarding assholery. It’s letting cocks dick you over, and it’s not necessary, noble, or rewarding. What, you’re going to turn the other cheek in hopes that the second slap will re-set your dislocated jaw?

To hell with that, I say.

I have no intention of wasting on the undeserving what little good will for humanity I can dredge up on any given occasion. I’d rather spend my energy and time on people who fucking deserve it. People I like. People who like me in return. People whom I respect, admire, and enjoy spending time around.

I simply cannot understand soliciting people who are jerks. When somebody’s rotten to me, be it at work, in the general public, or in my personal life, I hustle to get them away from me. Wrap up your business and take it elsewhere; I don’t have the time or patience to be treated like shit. Why would it be a virtue to try to pander to someone who’s just going to behave badly toward you? I seriously don’t get it.

I got invited to attend a maternity yoga class coming up next week, but I’m afraid I’m still too much of a doofus for yoga. I gave it the ” Facebook Maybe” which is introvert for, “uh, no thanks, but I am too awkward to actually come out and say ‘I won’t be attending.'”

Yoga and I sporadically go back a long, clumsy, ridiculous, embarrassing way. This is because every five years or so, I get the bug to try a yoga class, and am them promptly reminded of why I don’t practice yoga. It is because I am a clumsy dork with the maturity level of Beavis.

The last time I gave in to the cyclical yoga urge was about three years ago, and it was a Yoga For Cyclists class. It was being taught by a woman I know and like, which is why I only stayed for one session. I didn’t want my Beavis-y side to ruin our friendship.

On literally every occasion I’ve tried to yoga, I get self conscious. I fall over, get the giggles, and spend the entire class strenuously willing myself not to fart. I am naturally a shockingly flatulent person under the best of circumstances, and Pregnancy is definitely not the best of circumstances as regards suppression of poots. If, by some miracle, I manage to hold it all in, I’m afraid I’d float up to the ceiling like an airship and Hindenburg myself on a light fixture. Whilst giggling, of course.

Or else I would just have a mental image of said scenario, get the giggles, and fall over.

In short, it is highly questionable that I should be let out amongst the general public, let alone be closed in with a bunch of them in a warm room, trying to center my energy, not fall over, and not rip a bit, noisy toot.

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