Showing posts with label Period Corsets in the News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Period Corsets in the News. Show all posts

June 16, 2017

Period Corsets and our Tony Award Winning Designers

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How do you win a Tony? Include garments from Period Corsets, of course! Our corsets and petticoats were used in four 2017 Tony Award nominated plays and musicals: "Hello, Dolly!", "The Little Foxes," "A Doll's House - Part 2," and "Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812". Of the four nominated costume designers, two of our clients won for Best Costumes in a Musical and a Play.
The fabulous Bette Midler won "Best Actress in a Musical" for "Hello Dolly!"
Well Helloooo Santo!
Congratulations to designer Santo Loquasto for his win of Best Costume Design of a Musical in "Hello Dolly!".


 Period Corsets constructed a dozen of our Late 19th c. Petticoats for the chorus of this fun Broadway revival. We customized our petticoats to their design specifications, adding elastic at the waistband and rearranging the fullness to accommodate kicks and twirls during dance numbers.

Late 19th c. Petticoat shown with and without a bustle worn underneath



Tiptoe through the tulips to the Tonys! Designer Jane Greenwood took home the award for Best Costume Design for a Play for her work on "The Little Foxes".

Laura Linney and Cynthia Nixon in "The Little Foxes". Nixon won for Best Actress in a Play
Period Corsets sent two of our Tulip Petticoats, made in white twill, for lead actresses Laura Linney and Cynthia Nixon to wear underneath their wonderful ensembles.

Tulip Petticoat 
His work on "A Doll's House, Part 2" garnered David Zinn a nomination for Best Costume Design of a Play. Period Corsets constructed our c.1890 Theodora corsets with added busks to provide under-costume shaping.
Design sketches by David Zinn for Nora, played by Laurie Metcalf who won for Best Leading Actress in Play

c. 1890 Theodora corset

 Also nominated for Best Costume Design of a Musical was designer Paloma Young for her work on "Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812". For this raucous musical, they used two of our corset styles, the c.1880 Alice and c.1860 Julia with an added busk.

Tony Nominated "Natasha, Pierre, & the Great Comet of 1812"

c. 1880 Alice corset, shown here in black satin, paired with a short Peasant Petticoat

Congratulations to all of the 2017 Tony Award nominees and winners! For Period Corsets, it is always a thrill when our pieces are Broadway-bound! And it's even more exciting when our collaborators take home a nomination or a win!

February 17, 2016

Period Corsets®: "Famous Corsets from a Shop in Seattle" a TV interview with Evening King 5

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The Period Corsets® studio was summed up perfectly in 2 minutes and 37 seconds. Everything from  "This Corset!, it's so comfortable!",  (the quote we hear most frequently from our clients), to our ethic of   "Corsets for Every Body", and the launch of  our newest retail line:  Palatine Bridal, Exquisite Plus-Size Gowns, was discussed.   Period Corsets® was honored to be featured on TV again on Evening  King 5.  We opened up our studio for a full tour of our work space to provide an inside look at how Period Corsets® works and what we've been working on.
take a look--
Period Corsets interview for King 5 Evening Magazine from Hilary Specht on Vimeo.



And if you prefer to read it, here is the transcript from our interview:

SEATTLE, WA -- This salon in Seattle's Greenwood neighborhood makes custom corsets:  Both silhouettes from the past...and shapes that are pop-culture present:

"So this one was actually worn by Fergie," explained Period Corsets' owner Hilary Specht Coffey. Madonna, and the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show models also wear their work.

 "It's pretty fun to see the things coming down the aisle that we made," said Specht Coffey.
Bespoke corset construction has its challenges:
"This year (for 2010) in the show a designer said 'I wanna make a corset out of straw, and maybe another corset out of barbed wire.," she explained, showing the mockup of the straw corset. The barbed wire corset didn't make it beyond idea stage. 


Corsets they're currently making for WGN'S 'Salem' present another challenge: Deadlines are  tight in the custom corset world.

 Sara Lanzillotta, the office manager, explains:  "People call up from all manner of backgrounds, either it's an individual that has a wedding coming up, or a designer working on a Broadway show, or a film company,  they usually need it last week. And so, we do it."

These pieces aren't just for costumes and models -- anyone can order.
Model Deana volunteered to undergo a transformation to a corseted wedding gown from their plus-size  bridal line called Palatine Bridal.


















Everyone here thinks that's what the corset has always been about.
"We got into this business because we like to create beautiful things," Specht Coffey said.




"Some people, when they think of corsets think 'Oh that's oppressive, it's keeping the woman down," said Lanzillotta. "But it's not. It's about the completely opposite thing. You feel powerful when you have that corset on. You feel strong."





See our previous post about our first interview with king 5 from 2003 here:
http://periodcorsets.blogspot.com/2010/09/period-corsets-is-interviewed-on.html

September 2, 2010

"Dressing Up the Actor" Stage Directions Interviews Becky Kaufman co-owner of Period Corsets®

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For a sneak peek of Period Corsets® custom Petticoats in the final curtain call of La Sonnambula click here.

June 30, 2010

Period Corsets® contributes to Reflections of Culture Exhibition

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Period Corsets® is delighted to support the arts and education.

We recently made a donation to the Fernback Museum of Natural History in Atalnta Georgia. Pictured below is our pink brocade coutil Julia c. 1860 corset in the exhibit. Please read more about the Reflections of Culture Exhibition below.

Quoted from the Fernbank Museum:


Reflections of Culture draws from Fernbank’s permanent collections, including the Dorothy Methvin McClatchey Collection, to showcase the fascinating similarities among cultures throughout the world and the different ways of expressing cultural information through the things people create and wear.  

Reflections of Culture focuses on the most personally expressive of those objects—personal adornment. People around the world decorate their bodies with clothing, jewelry and various forms of body modification, including piercing, scarring, painting, shaping and tattooing. Personal adornment allows people to express their cultural identity and provides a particularly effective means of communicating social, political and economic information about themselves and the society in which they live.

Discover what culture is and how it is expressed through a variety of contemporary and historic objects. Artifacts are placed alongside captivating photographs, which provide a context for how the objects are worn, by whom and why. Educational interactives throughout the gallery allow visitors to further explore how personal adornment is used to express culture.
Learn more about the Dorothy Methvin McClatchey Collection.
Reflections of Culture Exhibition

February 21, 2010

Period Corsets® featured in ModCloth's Blog-- catagory Obsolete Fashion

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Obsolete fashion indeed!-- just ask any Shakespearean performer.

Check it out,  the comments and polls are entertaining plus Period Corsets are featured.
Mod Cloth Blog- obsolete fashion


August 8, 2003

Corsets are a Cinch: Seattle desginers' tight fitting business expands

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CORSETS ARE A CINCH

SEATTLE DESIGNERS' TIGHT-FITTING BUSINESS EXPANDS.

Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Seattle, WA); 8/7/2003; Phinney, Susan
Byline: SUSAN PHINNEY P-I reporter

Corsets have been shaping up segments of the fashion industry for years - and not always under cover, as entertainers such as Madonna can attest.

Now designers are creating dresses with built-in stays, or shaping bodices with corsetlike seams to achieve a close fit and emphasize the waist.

And the growing interest has given a local company a boost.

Period Corsets, a Seattle company founded by Susan Davis and Rebecca Kaufman, got a mention in the August issue of Elle, along with a report on all the corset-inspired looks designers have shown for fall 2003.

Keith Wagner, Northwest fashion manager for Nordstrom, said he's been seeing corset looks for the past couple of seasons. Gucci used them. So did Roberto Cavalli. They've also been seen in Yves Saint-Laurent collections.

"This year it's part of our femininity trend. It's a return to emphasis on the waist. It's not necessarily as literal as a corset, but the corset details - lace-up blouses, hook-and-eye closures, ribbon details, lace. Along with that trend you're seeing high-waisted pants that give that effect - obi sashes, cummerbunds, wider belts, dresses with boning on top. I definitely think you'll see a lot of that in evening wear," Wagner said.

Period Corsets' basic cotton creations in black, white or peach are $175 to $275. They do special corsets for a bridal shop in Santa Fe, N.M., and their corsets have embraced cast members from "All My Children."

Although corsets - the laced-up garments reinforced with bone, metal or plastic stays depending on the era - faded from everyday fashion early in the 20th century, they remain in demand for theater and opera.

With plays by Ibsen and Chekhov in perpetual production and operas ever in need of period costumes and their necessary corsets, theater costume designs were an important part of Davis and Kaufman's business.

But maintaining a costume business in Seattle is tough when customers are in New York, Los Angeles, Dallas and other major cities. So when they finished the costumes for Teatro Zinzanni, they decided to focus on corsets.

"We knew we couldn't expand the costume business in this location. We'd maxed out," Davis said. "But there was a market for corsets, petticoats and bloomers."

Both women are experienced costumers. Davis got involved in theater while a student at Vassar. She worked in the costume shop, went on to backstage work in summer stock and opera festivals. She worked in Santa Fe, Houston and New York before moving to Seattle in 1989 to work for Seattle Opera.

Kaufman has a similar background. She got into costuming through the Chicago Art Institute, worked for the Hartford Stage Company and took an intensive one-year course in costume construction at Yale where she worked in wardrobing for their shows.

"Yale School of Drama is the basis of a great networking system that helps people throughout their careers," Davis explained.

Davis and Kaufman met while working at Seattle Opera and began planning their business. They took classes through the Small Business Administration, saved money and gathered equipment. They both learned how to type, and mastered computer programs before opening for business in 1996.

They keep corsets in stock so they can be sent overnight to any part of the country, a business that has boomed since the launch last year of their Web site (www.periodcorsets.com).

Corset styles from the 1860s (Ibsen) and 1890s (Chekhov) are in demand. They also have a V-shaped 1770 "ice cream cone" corset, and an hourglass shape circa 1905. All are easy to alter and adjust so they can fit different bodies.

Davis returned to Seattle Opera last year as manager of the costume shop. She's also chief patternmaker and financial expert for their business. Kaufman, mother of two, handles sales, marketing and procurement.

"I love the thrill of the hunt, finding the best fabrics," Kaufman said. She's also very good at making and keeping business connections.

Hilary Specht, a drama graduate from Colorado College, handles the day-to-day business, setting up production lines, handling calls and e-mails, and monitoring stage and film projects that might need corsets.

"As we grow, we'll be more and more convenient to people," Kaufman said. Theater people move around and take their suppliers and contacts with them, she said.

About 10 percent of Period Corsets' business is from "typical" women, perhaps looking to nip in their waistlines a couple of inches, or enhance their decolletage.

Christine Shea, the writer who explored corset-inspired fashions for Elle, ordered a black cotton model from Period Corsets.

"Once I had struggled with the laces and strapped it on, it felt empowering to stand up straight, to shave a couple of inches off my waist. It sent the exact Don't mess with me, you nut job' message I was looking for."

COPYRIGHT 2003 Seattle Post-Intelligencer. All rights reserved. Reproduced with the permission of the Dialog Corporation by Gale Group.

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