The Spanish Farthingale Page


The cone shaped hoop skirt so ubiquitous in 16th century English Fashion was known as the farthingale, or to be more particular, the Spanish Farthingale. There are pictures of farthingales, or skirts held out with rigid rings of boning, dating from the 1490s. It was imported from Spain in the early 1500s, and soon became all the rage among the upper classes.

Together with the corset and the bumroll, the farthingale was one of the major shapers of the Elizabethan silhouette. No-one wearing fancy Elizabethan garb should be without one.

Other Elizabethan Underpinnings:


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