- Joined
- Feb 25, 2015
Fires accounted for 3000 deaths a year (with small population sizes too)Huh. A flaming dress sounds more metal though
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Fires accounted for 3000 deaths a year (with small population sizes too)Huh. A flaming dress sounds more metal though
You should feel terrible if a liposuction would result in something less horrfying then....
Like, oh god. How do her organs work?
That second picture really hurts to look at holy shit.The organs shift mostly, they're not really anchored to anything, and while they don't break the bones if done properly they can cause them to deform.
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The organs shift mostly, they're not really anchored to anything, and while they don't break the bones if done properly they can cause them to deform.
I don't know where the hell I heard it but I was under the impression that women today who are over a certain cup size and have issues with support in bras could consider a corset for better back support and shit (and that there's people who will make them to hold up to that kinda daily use). Out of curiosity, is that actually the case?Whereas a properly worn corset should provide support, much like a bra, you're always going to have idiots who go overboard for fashion.
I'm just going to veto that line of inquiry right now.And then there's corset piercings
These people look like they would snap in half if a strong wind blew their way.
Cringe at the fat chick in the 3rd video. A corset will never compensate for your body size.In the past couple of months, I've seen several videos of girls who undergo this kind of waist training to make themselves have skinnier waists. Some of them, like this young woman go in such wild directions with it that she's ended up with lots of scarring and her own digestive system changing in a bad way. She's from France and she was featured on the Barcroft TV YouTube channel. There are several videos on that YouTube channel about other woman who have done this that I'll include here too.
Corseting has a history dating back as far as the 16th century where the corset was meant to flatten a woman's bustline. The corsets that were made back then were made out of whalebone, horn and buckram and were rigid in their construction. It had a different purpose back then and many aristocrats would wear these to have a conical shape with their bodies, like in this painting of Queen Elizabeth the First.
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Over the centuries, the ideal shape for women wearing these corsets changed and bodices became more in favor over the corset. There's obviously a lot more to the history but the point is that this has been around forever and there's been a resurgence in interest in wearing corsets again, even though brassieres and other attire became more popular from what I understand. Correct me if I'm wrong. For more history, check out these cool links.
https://www.famsf.org/blog/corsets-context-history
http://www.elizabethancostume.net/corsets/history.html
Also, a Quora link explaining why people have taken such great interests in corsets again.
https://www.quora.com/Why-are-corsets-making-a-comeback-in-2014
To be fair, much of her body size come from breast implants. She at least seems to understand that it's a ratio.Cringe at the fat chick in the 3rd video. A corset will never compensate for your body size.
These people look like they would snap in half if a strong wind blew their way.
The woman pictured above, 71-year-old Cathie Jung, does actually have a wasp-like waist of the sort that Victorian women were rumored to have achieved through dangerous surgical procedures. Indeed, since 1999 she has held the Guinness World Records title for "Smallest Waist on a Living Person," possessing a waistline measured at 15 inches (a figure that is commonly described as "about the same size as a regular jar of mayonnaise"). And she did in fact attain her tiny waistline through a form of body modification, but it did not involve rib removal or any other form or surgery.