The bra is 100 years old
ANI
Published Nov 10 2010
The original Mary Phelps-Jacob design for the bra
Mary Phelps-Jacob
The filmy dress she planned on wearing had a plunging neckline, and the corset, constructed of whalebone and heavy fabric, was far too cumbersome. Phelps-Jacob asked her maid to tie two white handkerchiefs together with some pink ribbon. The improvised garment didn't offer much support, but it worked with the loose-hanging dresses of the period, and she wound up making versions for her high-society friends.
Phelps-Jacob got a patent in 1914, and then had sold it to the Warner Brothers Corset Co. for only $1,500. By the time of Phelps-Jacobs' death, in 1970 at age 78, bras had become a billion-dollar industry. "I can't say the brassiere will ever take as great a place in history as the steamboat, but I did invent it," the New York Post quoted her as having written.