Copyright (c) Jane Austen’s World.
Hear what a male writer has observed on the fashion of exposing the bosom! A woman, proud of her beauty, says he, may possibly be nothing but a coquet: one who makes a public display of her bosom, is something worse.” – The Mirror of Graces, by A Lady of Distinction, 1811, p. 120
Could the above statement possibly be true in light of our modern assumptions that the Georgian bossom was displayed in all its soft glory for all to see?
Our modern perception is heavily influenced by the caricatures of the period that make fun of unrestricted Regency gowns. But how much did contemporary cartoonists exaggerate? And what sort of woman would have exposed her bosom to such an extent that she would have been regarded as worse than a coquet? To be fair, the above image depicts a time (the 1820s) when the waist had gone as high as it could go under a woman’s bosom, skirts had widened and become conical shaped, and hems were festooned and decorated and shortened to reveal slippers and ankles.
Regarding the bosom, the proof is in the pudding, and the best way to assuage our curiosity is to view contemporary examples year by year.

From left, upper row: 1794-1795 walking gowns. 1795-1800 round gown. From left, lower row: 1797 Countess of Oxford. 1798, round gown.
Gentle reader, as you peruse the gallery of images, please look for a pattern. You shall begin to see a distinction between day and evening dress, regardless of the time of year.

1st column, top: 1800, Salucci family. Bottom: 1800 V&A gown. 2nd column, top: 1801 April day gowns. Bottom: 1801 Marie Denise Villiers
While I believe that a variety of cleavages were on display during the Regency era (and I shall delve more into this topic later), the top left portrait of Mrs. Salucci is one of the few instances in which a shadowed cleavage is clearly painted or drawn.
Why is this? One can safely assume that a voluptuous woman with large breasts, even when wearing a dress with a modest neckline, would reveal some cleavage. Thin girls or women with small bosoms would not have as much difficulty following the rules of decorum. Before the 20th century, the feminine ideal was a woman whose curves were bounteous and whose figures were pleasingly plumb. Rich husbands and fathers were proud to show off their well-fed women. Only the poor, who toiled all day and never had enough to eat, or the sick, or those who were metabolically overchallenged, were thin and scrawny. Thus, it made sense that during the Regency heaving bosoms were de rigueur. But were they?

In this image I have included both French, English, and American gowns. Left to right, clockwise, starting at the top. 1803, Costume Parisien. 1803, Mirroir de la Mode. 1805, American neoclassical gown. 1805, English cotton muslin, Kyoto costume Institute. 1804, three French Promenade dresses.
Regardless of nationality, a woman could choose to be as modest (or daring) as she liked. As far as I can tell from fashion images and portraits, modesty won hands down. High necklines, chemisette inserts, and high collars ruled the day. But night provided a different story.

1806 gowns. Top left, Binney sisters. Top right, Opera and drawing room gowns. Bottom image, Lady Codrington.
In the above composite image of 1806 gowns, more of the bosom is revealed than in previous images. Consider the sources. The Binney sisters and Lady Codrington, who were sitting for their portraits, would have chosen their best gowns to wear. Full dress, or evening dress, revealed more skin. The third image also depicts evening wear. In those two images you can more readily understand why empire gowns created such a stir at first:
Observers of the period frequently deplored the absence of modesty conveyed by a style that was predicated on the prominence and exposure of the breasts and on the barely veiled body….Sheer, narrow dresses … caused a sensation at the beginning of the nineteenth century, more because of their contrast with the elaborate hooped costumes of previous decades than for any real immodesty. – Source: Two dresses [French] (1983.6.1,07.146.5) | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
By now you have seen enough examples to have noticed a trend. Examine the above fashion plate images. Which necklines belong to full dress, or evening gowns, and which belong to day gowns or walking gowns? Of the five necklines, only the top left can be construed as revealing. And this neckline, depending on the size of the woman’s breasts, could be both modest or plunging.
The 1810 Regency gowns demonstrate a variety of necklines and layers of clothing. As in Cassandra’s portrait of Jane Austen, chemissetes were widely used. Fichus, shawls, tippets, and pelerines were also popular. The widow in the evening mourning gown (top middle) wears a cross that lies inside her cleavage. The white embroidered gowns (top right and lower left) demonstrate how the neckline is determined by whether the gown is worn for day (top right) or for evening (lower left, image of French gowns, Metropolitan Museum of Art.)
In the image painted by Cassandra, Jane wears a simple gown, much like the Binney sisters were wearing. You can observe her chemisette under the low neckline, which created a more modest look for day time.
Princess Charlotte’s 1814 bellflower court gown (lower right), while breathtaking, did not reveal her bosom. The image of the 1812 full dress (second from top on the left) is a bit misleading, for the decorative drooping elements give the illusion that the neckline is lower than it actually is. (In this example, it is hard to see the line of the silk fabric running across the top.) The other day gowns cover the torso quite modestly.
The high necklines of the 1815 morning gown at top left and Mrs. Jens Wolff’s 1815 satin dress at top right would make a Quaker lady proud. The two 1816 evening gowns show a relatively modest neckline (lower left) and one that could be quite daring (lower right).
Until now I have not discussed the role that corsets played in propping up the bust line. Regency stays, which were darted and laced in the back, were quite short and were much less constricting than earlier Georgian models that cinched in the waist. The purpose of the Regency stay was to support a woman’s bust and create the distinctive Regency “shelf” silhouette.
A rigid wood or bone busk, which served to separate the breasts and encourage good posture, was inserted in the stays (or corseted petticoat).
Busks might provide one explanation of why so few drawings and paintings of the era depict a deep, shadowed cleavage, for the breasts were splayed aside. The busks were often hand-carved and decorated by a woman’s sweetheart. The exerpt from a poem entitled: On a Juniper Tree, cut down to make Busks, waxes eloquently about the tree’s sacrifice for beauty.
She cut me down, and did translate,
My being to a happier state.
No martyr for religion died
With half that unconsidering pride;
My top was on that altar laid,
Where Love his softest offerings paid:
And was as fragrant incense burned,
My body into busks was turned:
Where I still guard the sacred store,
And of Love’s temple keep the door.
By 1817, the stark neoclassical outlines of empire gowns at the turn of the century had given way to a fancier more decorative outline, in which embellishments were added both at the top of the gown and at its hem. The 1817 portrait of Princess Charlotte (top left) is bittersweet, for she died in fall of that year in childbirth. Once again, the popular princess fails to exhibit her cleavage.
Rolinda Sharples’ painting of the cloak room at Clifton Assembly Rooms (top right) shows a woman with a small bust wearing a low décolleté ball dress. Countess Blessington (second from bottom, left) also wore a daring neckline for her sitting for her portrait by Thomas Lawrence. The two evening gowns at the bottom are modest, and the 1820 beige walking dress with its high ruff neck demonstrates the Tudor influences in dress embellishments. Also note the lowered waistline.
By 1823, Jane Austen had been dead for six years. She would have been shocked to see how many furlebows, tucks, rows of lace, and ribbons decorated ladies gowns. At this time, the waistline was gradually lowering back to its natural position. Gone was the neoclassical Regency empire silhouette. Note how the three ball gowns shown in this series of images provide hardly any chance for a lady to show off her cleavage.
One can see the hint of shadow of the woman’s breasts in the large 1823 La Belle Assemblee image in the center and how the artist accommodated the influence of the busk. I included the plain every day green 1825 American gown to show the kind of dress an ordinary woman would sew for herself and wear.
I hope this post has cast a light on a Regency lady’s bosom. A Lady of Distinction wrote in 1811:
Let the youthful female exhibit without shade as much of her bust as shall come within the limits of fashion, without infringing on the borders of immodesty. Let the fair of riper years appear less exposed. To sensible and tasteful women a hint is merely required.”
A tasteful hint? I can only conclude that exposing too much of one’s bosom was not considered lady-like behavior. Thin and small breasted women experienced an easier time following society’s strictures. The well-endowed had a tougher row to hoe, although an enterprising young virgin could always insert a handy nosegay to hide her feminine bounty or add a pretty bow or a lace embellishment at the precise spot where a gentleman’s eyes should not stray.
Brazen hussies, light skirts, and women of easy virtue could bare as much skin as they pleased, having no reputation to protect. A very rich matron, whose place in society was secure, might be tempted to show more of her bosom than was prudent, but even she would refrain from displaying too many of her feminine allures before she was married!
Next, I will discuss heaving bosoms in Regency films and on book covers, and how the two media have influenced our perception of Regency bustlines.
More on the topic:
Thanks for this enlighting post regarding the myths and facts about Regency bustlines; you knew I was curious! ;)
Busks “were often hand-carved and decorated by a woman’s sweetheart.” Really?! Now that is something to think over… seems rather intimate.
Would that be a betrothed sweetheart, or just any interested young man hoping to court her?
“Please insert this carved symbol of my love into your corset, and as it lies against your breasts, think of me…”
Alright, I’m off to persuade my husband to decorate my bras. :P
That is what I read. Sailors especially whiled the time away carving scrimshaw on whalebone busks (and other objects). I imagine that an upper class gent would not be carving his fiancee’s busk, but would purchase one that was elaborate and costly. :)
What a really interesting post! The Mirror Of Graces is one of my favourite books of the period, for the mirror it itself holds up to the society of the time. You have illustrated the topic beautifully.
Janet, thank you. Whenever I need to know about how Regency era people thought, I turn to the Mirror of Graces and to An American in Regency England. There is nothing like a first-hand account!! Vic
Excellent blog, Vic. On C18-l we had some tasteless comments (salacious too) from long ago about Keira Knightley (in Atonement but who also can be seen in the 2005 P&P). Your blog lifts the conversation into the sensible, reasonable, informative.
Sheerly anecdotal, when I was in Bath with my two daughters, we had some fun downstairs in the JA Museum, trying on the clothes and using corsets with them. The corset in particular was designed to hold the young woman in (contain), make her look slenderer and stand up straight. Posture was part of it — and in film adaptations you will hear actresses discuss how they have to hold their bodies differently because of the corset effect.
Ellen
Trying on those corsets must have been fun, Ellen! I, too, have read that actresses feel that the costumes help them get into character.
I’d never realised that busts and cleavages were such an interesting topic. I will look at them with renewed insight and interest in the future. Cleavages were very much a fashion accessory over here throughout this Summer I noticed.
Thanks for your great post and very thorough research, Vic.
Tony
Once again, Vic, you have provided thorough coverage of a topic I would not have dreamed there was so much to say!
Thank you, Tony and Jean. I have been wanting to write on this topic for a while. It just took some time to gather the images.
“Lydia’s lace slipped.”
That line is fraught with meaning!
I have wondered for some time about women’s undergarments and bustlines. I also wondered why some women wore those fichus and other neckline additions.
The busk? Now that was new to me as to where it was placed. I agree with Tare Fly’s comments. I was really surprised to discover a sweetheart would be allowed to decorate his girl’s busk. That just seems risque, but maybe I’ve got some incorrect ideas.
Is The Mirror of Graces available for purchase these days?
Yes, the book is available. Just Google it. I received mine in four days!
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I have done considerable research on an earlier period in corsetry: the Tudor times (I create my own gowns and undergarments when I perform as a period member of Henry VIII’s court) and a lovely tale not often known about the busk: they were often tied in place with a ribbon through a hole near the top. That ribbon (riband) was often gifted to a young lady’s favorite knight as a favor when he rode in tournament. It is also the origin of the vestigial bow often still found in the centre of women’s modern day bras.
Thank you for this wonderful tidbit of information, Anne!
Anne- Im doing an MA at the moment at the V&A and looking at stay busks – what a brilliant fact about the bow! Do you remember where you got the information from?
All I can say is, absolutely fascinating.
Great article! Most people probably think of the Regency era and visualize ladies with almost pornographic amounts of cleavage showing–your article proves otherwise. Even the most “daring” of those images are modest compared to some of the costumes in historical movies!
Ah, the good old days, when modesty was still considered a virtue, rather than something to be scorned.
If only the people who make Regency-era movies had done as much research as you did.
Again, thank you for this insight into a beloved era!
God bless,
~”Wild Rose”~
@Lauren,
I moved about 4 years ago, and half my books are still n storage… I don’t have Janet Arnold’s pattern of fashions to check in, nor my other books of period tailoring. It sounds to me more as though I’d gotten that story from The Elizabethan costuming page, or from The “Compendium of Common Knowledge” though it could also have been passed to me orally from the costumer who creates the gowns we wear at MDRF. I have double checked that I didn’t get it from Norris, who is famously undependable when it comes to authenticity. It may have come from the “History of Corsetry” I’m sorry I cannot authenticate the tale at this time. I’ll keep an eye out in my reading and report back when I find the source.
Thinking more about this, I may have found the info in the patterns I purchased, either though Period Patterns, Kass McGann’s” Reconstructing History”, Or Margo Andersson’s Historic Patterns…all of which include significant amounts of research and commentary in their pattern packages.
I am curious as to what a lady with close-set breasts would have done back then. If there is no room for a wide busk, would she have used a very thin one, or just gone without?
Ashley, if you refer to my comments about Tudor times, you are probably thinking that the busk lay against the breast bone. That is in correct. A. Tudor corset did not follow the natural shape of a woman. It was. Designed to enhance the fashion; the ideal shape was a conical skirt ( shaped by the farthingale or hoops) below, and an inverted cone above. The corset was flat all around, narrower at the waist, and pushed the breasts high and together. The style was, in fact, referred to as ” clamshells on the beach”