this post was submitted on 10 Jan 2026
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[–] LillyPip@lemmy.ca 84 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (17 children)

The Victorian era (and before) was chock full of ladies’ pockets. It’s just that they weren’t sewn into the garment – you’d have a slit in your skirt, and use a waist pocket like this that was separate and worn beneath your outer clothes as an undergarment. You’d line up the slit in your pocket with the slit in your outer garment.

A bonus was you could misalign the slits to easily thwart pickpocketers whilst travelling.

Women losing pockets to fashion is a fairly recent thing, actually – since the early 1900s when slim, body-conforming things like pencil dresses and trousers entered the scene, and natural, non-bustled hips being on display became cool. The secret pocket turned into a handbag, because women were still expected to carry all and sundry in order to keep their face and hair fresh all day; men weren’t required to carry more than a few paper goods, whereas if a woman couldn’t reapply her face and lips all day, a scandal might ensue. Lipstick, powder, and other accoutrements take up more space than a pencil dress allows without ruining the silhouette, so handbags were just assumed. And if you assume handbags, what use are pockets that might ruin the figure?

Nowadays, couture fashion assumes handbags for the same reason architecture assumes lifts. Why ruin your design with 12 staircases?

I want pockets, too, but anyhow, thanks for coming to my TED talk.

e: updated link to a V&A article since my other link suddenly died. This is a much better link, anyhow.

[–] pageflight@lemmy.world 8 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I'd never heard of tie-on pockets. Cool!

[–] merc@sh.itjust.works 2 points 2 weeks ago

The word pocket comes from pouch. Originally all "pockets" were bags worn either over or under clothing. Attaching them directly to the garment was a 15th century(?) twist.

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