
The earliest references to hosiery, also known as stockings go back to the ancient Greeks. Workmen and slaves wore hosiery in ancient times and Roman women wore a short sock (called a soccus) in their homes. Silk or cotton socks were also worn in Japan and China for centuries.
Socks evolved into stockings in 12th century Europe. Breeches worn by men became close fitting, reaching from the waist to the foot like modern tights. Women wore stockings held up at the knee by garters.
After 1545 knitted stockings came into fashion, their seams were often ornamented by elaborate silk patterns, or "clocks". This term is still in use today as "fancy feet" the decorative seam treatments that were popular during the late 40s and early 50s.
William Lee, an English clergyman, made the first knitting machine in 1589. Silk and cotton were the popular fibers of the era. Silk of course was the choice of royalty as the discovery of the New World opened up trade in this rare and luxurious material.
There were many different ways to wear stockings. Silk stockings were sometimes worn several pairs at a time in cold weather. In the 17th century when large boots were in fashion, linen "boot hose" were worn to protect the silk stockings underneath. They had wide lace tops, which were turned over the boots. Men continued to wear silk stockings with garters until the end of the 18th century, but long trousers begin to appear and socks have been worn underneath ever since.
In the 19th century machine-made cotton stockings became available for women. After World War I (1914-1918) short skirts were fashionable and long silk stockings were worn again, once again, proving that fashion and skirt length determine hosiery fashion!
With the discovery and ultimate use of Dupont Nylon in the late 30's and early 40's, the primacy of silk in women's hosiery waned. Silk was ultimately replaced by nylon after the war. But it was not without challenges from other man-made fibers such as Rayon, Bamberg, and Vilene.
Nylon stockings which became popular after World War II (1939-1945) and completely replaced the silk stocking usually had seams until the late 1960's. They were knitted flat and "fully fashioned" which means that they were shaped to fit the leg like modern sweaters. By decreasing the number of stitches as the stocking was knit towards the ankle, a garment was created that was "knit to fit".
By the early sixties, "fully fashioned" stockings were rapidly replaced by modern reinforced heel and toe seamless stockings.
Seamless stockings are made on a circular knitting machines and are shaped by tightening the stitches. Hosiery is often described as being of a particular "denier", which means the thickness of the yarn. The gauge describes the number of stitches in a row.
In the 1960's when skirts were worn very short, many women began to wear tights instead of stockings. To show, "a bit of stocking", was no longer accepted and while stockings fought for market share by becoming extremely long, they became nearly extinct as tights gained in popularity.
But stockings did nevertheless make a comback and are very popular today as witnessed by the range of stockings available at Funtimz. Click here to view Funtimz legs. We also stock very fashionable tights too.
Hosiery Terms
Denier:
This is an Italian measurement for knitting yarn which equals 5 centigrams per meter of yarn. The weight of the denier is obtained by weighing 450 meters of thread of nylon, silk or rayon. If 450 meters weighs 5 grams, the thread is called a 100 denier thread. The base of 450 meters being the standard measure, the weight of the thread will determine its caliber. The lighter the thread (the less number of deniers) the finer the weave. A 15 denier yarn is twice as fine as 30 denier yarn. The most popular denier for day/evening is still 15d, 30 denier has been popularised as "business sheer", 70d as "service sheer". "ultra sheer" or "evening dress sheer" stockings can be 15d, 12d or 10d. The sheerest practical denier is 8d, which is so wispy sheer that it literally disappears on the leg! (and is so fragile that it can barely survive one wearing)
Gauge:
There is much confusion about the meaning of "gauge" in the determination of stocking quality and sheerness. Gauge is an English unit of measure. It is a characteristic of rectilinear knitting machines. It corresponds to the number of needles in a 38-millimeter section of the knitting bed, circular or flat. A 60 gauge knitting machine has 60 needles to a 38 mm section. It is obvious that, the more needles you have in this standard invariable 38 mm section, the finer the needles must be, and the tighter the weave. The monofilament or flat pure nylon thread of 15 deniers was the thread most widely used in the knitting of fine stockings.
The two most common gauges in fully-fashioned knitting were 51g and 60g. 60 gauge stockings have smoother, denser look and feel and are highly prized! 51 gauge stockings were easier to knit as the machines had fewer needles and ran more efficiently than the 60 gauge. These stockings were still highly desirable, but were slightly less expensive, and used for "fashion" and popular priced stockings.
The Process:
Full-fashioned stockings are knitted flat, then fashioned, or shaped by mechanical manipulation by programmed chains that articulated cams to drop needles from the knitting process creating the famous "fashioning marks" on the backs of the stocking. (The little V's on the back near the seams are created when a stitch is cast off, just like in hand knitting a sweater) The stockings are then joined at the back on a looping machine by hand, creating the seam up the back. The actual knitting is done on a flat knitting machine first developed in Loughborough, Leicestershire, by William Cotton in 1864.
The stocking is started at the top with the welt, with an extra-thick section for gartering. Reducing the number of needles at the ankle, then adding needles at the heel, and again reducing the number through the foot shape to the fabric.
Suspenders
You would be forgiven for thinking that suspenders, a mainstray in women’s fashion and one of the surest ways of arousing passion in the most red-blooded of males, were invented in some fashion house in Paris or Milan. But recent evidence suggests that they were actually invented by an ageing crofter in Scotland’s Orkney Isles!
The discovery was pieced together by retired farmer Peter Leith who unearthed recordings from the 1880's of two 90-year old men describing an eccentric local called Davie Taylor. The recordings told how Mr. Taylor, who lived at a croft in the parish of Firth, was a well known 'genius' who invented 'a bib and brace sort of clasp for hooking his breeks up'.
Mr. Taylor was an 'unemployed draper' in the 1891 census while it revealed an apprentice draper called Andrew Thomson, 17, lived in nearby Stromness. Historians believe the pair were associates because, in 1896, a patent was lodged in California for 'a clasp serving to secure the stocking' by Mr. Thomson and fellow Orcadian James Dreever.
Whether the patent was sold or borrowed by other designers is not known. But it was so close to the year suspenders first appeared that historians suspect it has a major influence. Mr. Thomson's great newphew, Jack Rendall, said 'He was such an austere old man, I can't imagine him being young or even thinking about women's stockings.'
You can buy sexy suspenders at Funtimz, Britain’s sexiest online lingerie and sex toys retailer by clikcing the following link - sexy suspenders.