Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
This was especially seen in the adoption of the uncorseted tea gown for at-home wear.
The boy petted her on the hip and found her soft, uncorseted.
In this belittered and uncorseted neighborhood Topper feels more at ease.
Just the thought of it sends a shiver down my (now, thankfully, uncorseted) spine.
The fact that the dancers were uncorseted and gyrated their hips was shocking to Victorian sensibilities.
Her body, uncorseted, was heavy.
In the 1870s, uncorseted tea gowns were introduced for informal entertaining at home and steadily grew in popularity.
And her slim uncorseted body was sure o set tongues wagging and the pulses of men racing.
Uncorseted, buttoned up to the neck, with more fabric in a single leg of those contraptions than in two trumpet-skirts?
In fact, the term "loose" originated to describe a woman who went uncorseted, while "straight-laced" women obeyed societal dictates.
Cue Chanel’s uncorseted, bone-simple sack-dresses and unadorned boaters.
So far,' Rionda said, and laughed so hard her uncorseted belly jiggled under her sundress.
Both pieces, uncorseted by conventional dramatic form, range freely and eclectically from one locale, one mood, one style to another.
Her extreme thinness, for example, set off by the close-fitting, uncorseted gowns she favored, implied to some a quasi-tubercular (read: Jewish) unhealthiness.
The wind blew loose, whitish blond wisps of hair around her face and slashed the faded blue dress into the uncorseted bulk of her body.
The Countess fell into a disapproving silence as a young and handsome British officer offered Lucille a low and evidently uncorseted bow.
His fashions — T-shaped gowns, Greco-Roman and kimono-inspired dresses — celebrated the uncorseted woman in her natural grace.
Poiret established his own house in 1903, and made his name with his controversial kimono coat and similar, loose-fitting designs created specifically for an uncorseted, slim figure.
Under the influence of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood and other artistic reformers, the "anti-fashion" for Artistic dress with its "medieval" details and uncorseted lines continued through the 1870s.