Today's modern women wear full length tights or stockings with never a thought of the interesting path hosiery has taken through the ages. When the first cave men and women wrapped their legs in animal skins to protect against the elements, they would not have envisaged the course that leg
Our Treasures: Whangārei Museum displays underwear through the ages
By the 1100s vertical and then horizontal looms allowed lengths of fabric to be woven so that garments could be cut to fit the body shape for the first time. By the 1300s stockings of various colours, patterns etc were being worn by women and girls throughout Europe.
However leg coverings for women were frowned upon by the churches of the day and gradually hose became the province of men only. In the 1500s the invention of a machine for knitting stockings revolutionised the manufacture.
These stockings came just to the knee and were held in place by a ribbon or a simple form of cross gathering, using cotton, linen, silk and wool. When Queen Elizabeth I was presented with a pair of knitted silk stockings she did not want to wear anything else.
By the 1800s men moved away from stockings when trousers became fashionable and hosiery once again became the province of women.
In 1892 rayon was discovered and became a popular material in hosiery making. As skirts were shortened, the fashion aspect of hose took a leap forward.
Ankle socks came into vogue as well. When Du Pont in America brought out nylon in 1938 its strength and elasticity made it an instant winner. It was cheaper than silk, did not wrinkle around the ankle and added a beautiful sheen to the legs of the wearer.
During World War ll the Du Pont Company stopped making stockings and turned its attention to making parachutes, airplane cords and ropes. After the war when the production of stockings resumed, Macy's store in New York sold 50,000 pairs in six hours. There was quite a stampede to get these precious items and the press dubbed them the "Nylon Riots".
When lycra was introduced to the mix in the 1960s, it allowed stockings to stretch and rebound while keeping their shape, they dried more quickly and could be dyed any colour.
In 1965 full length tights appeared on the scene thanks to Pierre Cardin and they became an essential fashion statement. Goodbye suspenders for ever!
Whangārei Museum presently has a special display in the Mim Ringer Gallery of underwear through the ages entitled "Inside Out" and features a number of pairs of stockings from the 40s and 50s in both nylon and silk. One such pair is in the photograph with this article, donated by S. Petersen in 1992.
As a child I recall American servicemen being billeted at our home in Auckland during World War ll. They often bought our family gifts in return for hospitality; toys for me and nylons for my mother who was overjoyed to receive them as wartime restrictions meant women used tanning lotion on their legs to simulate stockings and drew the seams with an eyebrow pencil. With this fascinating history in mind it is easy to understand the "nylon riots" in New York.
• Alison Sofield is a volunteer with Whangārei Museum at Kiwi North.