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Mrs. Shortcake, Vancouver Age and Occupation: 24, Marketing Manager/Children's Lit Writer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 24, Master's Student/Personal Trainer Engagement Date: August 7, 2007 Wedding Date: October 2008 Blogging Since: Venue: Ceremony in a historic church, tented lawn reception at a golf and country club About Me: 1950's housewife sent to the future, reborn as crafting-obsessed, jill of all trades. I enjoy decorating, writing, baking sweet things, singing show tunes/dancing in public, wearing pearls, and knitting sweaters for my furbaby, Harvey, to chew upon. I heart pink, and believe that sparkles are the new black.
About Mrs. Shortcake

What To Wear Under There

February 10th, 2008 @ 1:52 pm by Mrs. Shortcake

IMAGINE…

The opening notes of a bridal march is heard, and the heavy doors swing open. The congregation stands and turns their eager, expectant faces toward the rear of the church, and there she is, the lovely, radiant bride!

She begins to walk, and as she does, the fabric of her heavy skirt tucks itself between her legs, turning her dress into the bridal version of MC Hammer’s parachute pants.

Tripping her way to the end of the aisle, she bends to hug her grandparents, and as she does, her boobs (technical term: ‘breasticles’) fall out her dress, much to the delight of the junior groomsman standing by the altar….

This could be YOU.

*gasp*

IF, you don’t read and swear by the following:


HOW TO CHOOSE YOUR UNDERGARMENTS:

STEP ONE: GETTING THE ‘OVERSKIRT’

A) Choose a dress.
B) Change your mind a million times.
C) Purchase a dress.
D) Gush about your new dress on WB

STEP TWO: IDENTIFY YOUR TYPE OF DRESS

A) Does it have straps, sleeves, or is it strapless?

= unless you have “mosquito bites” you will need a bra. Period.

B) Is it a big gown (ball gown) or a medium gown (a-line, mermaid, trumpet) or a small gown (sheath), or an itty-bitty gown (micro-mini, sundress)?

=Ballgowns (bell or a-line shaped) need hoop skirts and petticoats

= A-lines need a petticoat (and sometimes a smaller, A-line hoop skirt)

= mermaids and trumpets need slips sometimes

= small gowns need full-coverage underwear, and sometimes for vintage looks, petticoats as well

STEP THREE: IDENTIFY WHAT YOU’RE WORKING WITH

A) What kind of fabric is used? Is it fully-lined?

= if it isn’t fully lined, you will need a slip so that your ‘curious george’ undies don’t show through. If the silhouette is a ball-gown or A-line, you will need petticoats as well, to fluff out the dress.

B) Is it sheer?

= you will need a slip, and a bra/pasties

C) Is it itchy?

= you will need a slip or a hoop skirt to keep it off of your legs

Some visual clarification of what I’m blabbering about:

THE BUSTIER

Often decorative, the bustier can also be found in wedding-lingerie sections for the Big Night, and for its waist-cinching and boob-holding-upper abilities on the big day. Should use sturdy boning and/or elastic for best results. NOT for waist “training” (ie, hardcore corseting)

BEST FOR:

hot sex
strapless dresses
clubbing
big boobs

THE LONG-LINE BRA

Uses elastic to hold your tummy in (you can also try waist-cinchers), and your boobies up.

BEST FOR:

dresses with straps or sleeves
big boobs

THE STRAPLESS BRA:

BEST FOR:

strapless dresses
girls who don’t need waist-line control

THE NU BRA

A silicone-based, “realistic” adhesive bra.

BEST FOR:

backless or low back dresses
smaller (not DD+) boobies
people not allergic to adhesive

THE HOOP SKIRT

Think Scarlett O’Hara. Worn to hold a skirt in a particular shape (bell, a-line, bustle-bum, etc). Hoop skirts are made of fabric (cotton, polyester) and hold enclosed rings within their stitches. No longer made of whalebone, the hoops themselves are usually lightweight steel, nylon, or plastic. Because they use lighter materials, hoop skirts are MUCH lighter now than say, a hundred and fifty years ago.

BEST FOR:

ball gowns and large A-lines
keeping itchy fabric or petticoats off of your legs

WATCH OUT FOR:

sitting down - practice this!
don’t wear a g-string - the swinging hoop during dancing can give onlookers a glimpse of your lady bits!

THE CRINOLINE


(old style, made with fabric and wire)

Think mini crini by Vivienne Westwood. Another historical undergarment, crinolines are nowadays constructed of layers of net or tulle - much like a petticoat, and can contain light, flexible hoops, like a hoop skirt. Many manufacturers will call anything that goes under a skirt, a “crinoline,” so beware of this catchall phrase.

BEST FOR:

adding volume to a ballgown or A-line gown.

WATCH OUT FOR:

velcro closures on the waist - they can snag on your dress
cruddy manufactures that will call anything a ‘crinoline’ because they don’t know any better
overheating with the material directly on your legs

THE PETTICOAT

The petticoat has many guises; it can be fuller than full or barely more substantial than a slip. It adds volume to a dress and can help give it shape. Most often made of tulle, net, nylon, cotton, and can be dyed in your washer to match your wedding colours. In the UK, petticoat = slip.

BEST FOR:

adding volume to a dress without built-in netting
adding more volume on top of a hoop skirt
preventing your gown from becoming see-through

WATCH OUT FOR:

overheating, itchyness (see hoop skirt, slip)

THE SLIP

Worn with simpler styles of wedding gowns, to prevent the dress from tucking tail between your knees, and to protect your legs from possible irritation from your wedding dress. Made in silk, cotton, polyester, etc.

BEST FOR:

sheer dresses
sensitive skin
sheaths, mermaids, trumpets, mini dresses (in an appropriate length)

WATCH OUT FOR:

busted elastic -you don’t want your slip to show
a too big-slip - you don’t want it to bunch under your dress

****************************************************

Now, gird up thy loins and sally forth, appropriately-clad bride-to-bees!

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20 Responses to “What To Wear Under There”

1.
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Bee
Miss Dahlia (message)  412 posts, Helper bee

Good job, Shortcake, of explaining everything- while I knew about the various bras, I had wondered about the difference between a crinoline and a petticoat.

Only thing I would add as an option would be to get cups sewn into a dress, which can be especially helpful if the material is thin enough that a bra would show through.

 
2.
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Guest
mhb

If I might add to your extremely informative post, I found a pair of shapewear briefs (kind of like this: http://www.maidenform.com/catalog/product.jsp?productId=71283&categoryId=32&wtlCategory=Flexees%20%AE%20Shapewear&parentCategoryId=3)
to be indispendable for my lightweight, summery, somewhat fitted dress.
It looks dorky as all get out, but it works like a charm, especially after a week of pre-wedding feasting with family and friends!:-)

 
3.
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Guest
Linda

OMG, thank you. I hadn’t considered what I was going to wear underneath. Thank you, thank you! I also realized I probably need to walk around in my dress a little more.

 
4.
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Guest
Kay

Hi Miss Shortcake ..

Your post was great but now you have me thinking .. if my dress is not “poofy” and I want it to be would wearing a large petticoat be better than getting crinoline sewed in?

 
5.
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Guest
jp

love the illustrations! =)

 
6.
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Bee
Miss Shortcake (message)  446 posts, Helper bee

kay, you dress has to have a certain amount of give/fabric in order to become “poofy” - ie, a sheath cannot become a ballgown. If you do have that fabric allowance, add a hoop skirt, and on top of that, add an extra large petticoat. You need the hoop to keep the extra ’stuffing’ off of your legs.

try the ebay seller angelsbridal

 
7.
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Guest
fizzyg

Cute guidelines & pictures :)

I had a pretty basic a-line dress with straps, and I wore a lace thong and had sewn-in cups put in the dress. It went a long way toward the ‘comfort-level’ of my day.

 
8.
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Guest
Anns

You are amazing. Informative and hysterical.

 
9.
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Guest
janet

WOW… thank you for all the details!!! An amazing job!!!!

 
10.
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Member
DesignBee (message)  46 posts, Newbee

Super helpful, Miss Shortcake. I am wearing a dress that has a big keyhole back, and was planning wearing a nubra, but I am worried that it will let go if I sweat (outdoor reception in June). Has anyone worn one and had an issue with it letting go due to sweat or anything else? Is there anyway to prevent it?

 
11.
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Guest
R

Miss Shortcake,
Thanks for the detailed post! I have a full A line skirt with lots of “stuffing” as you put it. I was wondering if the skirt is already full, is a crinoline or hoopskirt still necessary? Do most brides still buy a skirt undergarment or just use the fullness of the original dress?

Thanks~!

 
12.
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Guest
jnicholea

You are totally reminding me of Trinny and Susanna on the British What Not To Wear right now (which by the way is the only What Not To Wear that you should ever watch, not that corny rip-off American version)

 
13.
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Guest
Busylizzy

Congrats, fantastic post!

 
14.
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Guest
Married in Sept07

I had the under there plan all together, but didn’t realize that my less than designer dress would stretch a little with body heat…resulting in my having the only bridezilla moment of my day directly before the ceremony by kicking everyone out of the room (except my sister and MOH), throwing off my bra and corset (because they were showing at the back of my strapless dress because it had stretched out slightly), and going commando from the waist up for the rest of the day. THANK GOODNESS for a fabulous seamstress/tailor!

 
15.
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Bee
Miss Shortcake (message)  446 posts, Helper bee

Designbee, I’ve only worn an adhesive type bra once, and it stayed on through my sweating, and on through the night. However, that was also the night before the day I got diagnosed with an adhesive allergy (no bandaids even!)…so I’m speaking from past experience.

You should be fine, but maybe someone else has newer insight??

R, if you dress is already stuffed, either wear a slip (to keep the dress off your legs), or get a smaller circumference, a-line hoopskirt (most can be adjusted anyways). With really stuffed skirts, you can develop an unsightly waddle as the netting and such gets between your legs!

jnicholea, thanks, I haven’t watched the british show, but I heard it’s great!

Marriedinsept07 - you are very lucky!

 
16.
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Guest
ChicagoSarah

This is both practical and hilarious - great post! What does Miss Shortcake recommend for a halter-style dress?

 
17.
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Bee
Miss Shortcake (message)  446 posts, Helper bee

chicagosarah, try a nubra or an adhesive bra, or duct tape (eek! joking!). you should also get some of that double sided boob(?) tape to keep the v of that halter neck ON your skin (so pictures from the side don’t get a peek of your boobishesness *coughmirssgummibear*)

 
18.
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Member
jma19 (message)  498 posts, Helper bee

So what do you recommend to alleviate the itchyness and hotness of a petticoat? I have an August wedding and just in trying on my dress I was getting hot. I can just see myself a la Julia Roberts with my sister pointing a fan up my dress! Any suggestions?

 
19.
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Member
deluscious (message)  21 posts, Newbee

I know you wrote this a while ago, but thank you so much for this post, miss shortcake! awesomely informative and comprehensive! i think i didn’t post when i first read it cuz it appeared while at work ;)

 
20.
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Bee
Miss Shortcake (message)  446 posts, Helper bee

@jma19: try a slip or a hoop skirt (with narrow hoops)

 


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Mrs. Shortcake Mrs. Shortcake, Vancouver Age and Occupation: 24, Marketing Manager/Children's Lit Writer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 24, Master's Student/Personal Trainer Engagement Date: August 7, 2007 Wedding Date: October 2008 Blogging Since: Venue: Ceremony in a historic church, tented lawn reception at a golf and country club About Me: 1950's housewife sent to the future, reborn as crafting-obsessed, jill of all trades. I enjoy decorating, writing, baking sweet things, singing show tunes/dancing in public, wearing pearls, and knitting sweaters for my furbaby, Harvey, to chew upon. I heart pink, and believe that sparkles are the new black.
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