History in the details: Farthingales & Hoops

History in the details: Farthingales & Hoops

A brief history by costume and picture expert Jayne Shrimpton

Jayne Shrimpton, Professional dress historian and picture specialist

Jayne Shrimpton

Professional dress historian and picture specialist


While stiffened bodices, stays and corsets compressed the female torso and created an artificially small waistline (see DYA October), further under-structures accentuated the hips, shaping the skirt area. In the 1460s a conical farthingale developed at the Spanish Castilian Court, wider versions appearing in France (1530s) and Britain in the 1540s. The name ‘farthingale’ derived from the tough, flexible willow-twig hoops – verdugo, or osiers, although cane and bents (reedy grasses) were also used. These were covered with coarse cloth such as kersey or buckram and sewn inside a skirt in widening concentric hoops, producing a rigid frame. In 1550, satirist Robert Crowley described the Englishwoman: ‘Her mydle braced in, as small as a wande… A bumbe lyke a barrel, wyth whoopes at the skyrte.’

Farthingale hoops expanded further during the 1580s, necessitating more waist support, so linen or cotton cushion pads filled with cotton wool, called ‘bum rolls’ or hip bolsters, were tied around the hips, initially over the cone-shaped frame, but ultimately replacing it. Another transitional mode was a half-farthingale, full only at the back and sides. Eventually, during the 1590s, the new drum or French farthingale evolved – a drum- or wheel-shaped frame fashioned from whalebones or other sturdy struts that radiated outwards horizontally from the waist. This flat ‘wheel’ encircling the waist was covered in pleated material extending outwards from the bodice, the skirt fabric then descending from its outer edge – a distinctive late-Elizabethan and Jacobean mode. During the early 1600s and 1610s the long bodice busk pressed down on the frame in front, creating the tip-tilted farthingale, before the farthingale finally became outmoded c1625.

Intriguing article?

Subscribe to our newsletter, filled with more captivating articles, expert tips, and special offers.

Soft trailing skirts were fashionable, until c1680 when they became draped up behind and sideways, creating a bouffant effect. As material grew heavier and petticoats increased, a support reappeared in 1710, comprising graduated hoops of whalebone, cane or wood covered in linen or cotton and formed into a skirt. Hooped gowns dominated Georgian fashion, first appearing round and full, then oval width-wise in the 1720s, progressively widening and becoming divided into two ‘paniers’ during the 1740s, for manoeuvrability. Hoops typically measured about 6 feet across producing an extraordinary silhouette – flat in profile, yet vast in width. Hoops were impractical and mishaps numerous: in time intricate internal tapes and metal hinges enabled them to be raised vertically. From c1770 they were dropped from everyday wear, although an obligatory wide hooped mantua gown remained formal Court wear until 1820.

The conical Spanish farthingale became fashionable in England during the 1540s, as seen in this portrait of Princess Elizabeth, 1546
The conical Spanish farthingale became fashionable in England during the 1540s, as seen in this portrait of Princess Elizabeth, 1546
This print of Queen Anne of Denmark (wife of King James I/VI) c1610 after M Gheeraedts shows the vast wheel-shaped drum or French farthingale of the 1590s-1620s
This print of Queen Anne of Denmark (wife of King James I/VI) c1610 after M Gheeraedts shows the vast wheel-shaped drum or French farthingale of the 1590s-1620s
Georgian hoops attained their greatest width by the mid-18th century, as satirised in an engraving after L Boitard, ‘Taste à la Mode’, 1745
Georgian hoops attained their greatest width by the mid-18th century, as satirised in an engraving after L Boitard, ‘Taste à la Mode’, 1745

Discover Your Ancestors Periodical is published by Discover Your Ancestors Publishing, UK. All rights in the material belong to Discover Your Ancestors Publishing and may not be reproduced, whether in whole or in part, without their prior written consent. The publisher makes every effort to ensure the magazine's contents are correct. All articles are copyright© of Discover Your Ancestors Publishing and unauthorised reproduction is forbidden. Please refer to full Terms and Conditions at www.discoveryourancestors.co.uk. The editors and publishers of this publication give no warranties,
guarantees or assurances and make no representations regarding any goods or services advertised.