The
History of Hosiery
What goes around, comes around - and
that’s never been more true than in the world of high
fashion. Stockings may be the hottest garment for the new
millennium, but did you know that they actually date back over
400 years?
The story begins in 1589. That was
when the English churchman Rev. William Lee invented the world’s
first knitting machine and started to make hosiery out of
cotton, wool and silk. The machine was a national treasure. In
fact, the queen of the day threatened the death penalty for
anyone who attempted to export it.
The technology remained reasonably
static right until the 1930’s, when a new circular knitting
machine meant garments could be made in one piece, and no
longer needed to be sewn together. Elsewhere in that decade,
scientists at the DuPont company in Delaware, USA started
experiments in molecular chemistry that would quite literally
change the world.
Julian Hill was one of the scientists
in a group led by the brilliant but manic-depressive Wallace
Carothers. Hill was looking for a silk substitute and one day
he discovered that by pulling a heated rod from a mixture of
coal tar, water and alcohol he could create a filament that
was strong, sheer, and silk-like in appearance. Further
research led to the first synthetic fibre, which soon came to
be known as Polymer 6.6. Two years later, in 1937, DuPont
patented the discovery, but the year was sadly just as
memorable for Wallaces Carothers’ untimely death. Fatally
depressed, he committed suicide shortly after his wife
informed him that she was pregnant. As a tribute to his work,
DuPont decided that he -- rather than Hill -- should be hailed
as the inventor of Polymer 6.6, and so a legend was born.
Synthetic fibers were first shown by
the company to the public at the World’s Fair in New York in
1939. Taking the NY from the city’s initials, the fibre
became know as "nylon".
Nylon was a revelation. The first
nylon stockings appeared in New York stores on May 15, 1940.
Over 72,000 pairs were sold in the first day alone, and the
Japanese silk market collapsed almost overnight. Department
stores throughout America saw a similar stampede. In the first
year, 64 million pairs of stockings were sold and
manufacturers could not keep up with the demand.
When the US joined the Second World
War in 1942, most nylon production was switched into tent and
parachute manufacturing for the military forces. American GIs
could still get hold of stockings, though, and they became the
gift of seduction as the GIs tried to woo their way into the
hearts of British women.
After the war, demand rocketed. The
first post-war hosiery sale took place in 1945 in Market
Street, San Francisco and attracted 10,000 shoppers.
Throughout the ‘40’s and ‘50’s stockings were known as
"fully-fashioned" rather than the single size found
today. Fully-fashioned stockings were tailored to the shape of
the leg, and had a distinctive seam at the back. When women
could not afford stockings, or had difficulty getting hold of
them, they would often draw a vertical line up the back of
their legs to simulate the effect.
In the 1960’s, tights became the
dominant product in the hosiery market for the next 30
years. Stockings are now returning to the
prominence they enjoyed in the golden era of days gone by.
We at
Hosieryfundamentals.com intend
to carry this tradition forward.
