Extremely Rare 1928–1935 Maternity Suspender Belt on mannequin.
Extremely Rare 1928–1935 Maternity Suspender Belt on a dress form, AI image.
Extremely Rare 1928–1935 Maternity Suspender Belt on mannequin, rear view.
Extremely Rare 1928–1935 Maternity Suspender Belt on mannequin.
Extremely Rare 1928–1935 Maternity Suspender Belt on mannequin, close up view.
Extremely Rare 1928–1935 Maternity Suspender Belt on mannequin, side view.
Extremely Rare 1928–1935 Maternity Suspender Belt on mannequin, shows steel stays piercing fabric.
Extremely Rare 1928–1935 Maternity Suspender Belt, interior and exterior views of it laying flat.
Extremely Rare 1928–1935 Maternity Suspender Belt on mannequin, view of clip.
Extremely Rare 1928–1935 Maternity Suspender Belt on mannequin, rear view of clip hardwear.

Extremely Rare 1928–1935 Maternity Suspender Belt, X-Small

Regular price$225.00
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A museum-worthy survivor of early twentieth-century maternity fashion. This authentic late-1920s to mid-1930s obstetric suspender belt (also known as a maternity garter belt or expanding abdominal belt with hose supporters) is made of crisp white cotton coutil with a wide panel of mercerized surgical elastic shirred across the entire upper front. That deep elastic section allowed the garment to stretch comfortably over a growing belly while still offering gentle lower-abdominal support and secure stocking attachment, making it the ideal foundation for expectant mothers who had abandoned the restrictive full corsets of the previous generation.

Measured flat and doubled where appropriate
Modern size equivalent X-Small
Waist 25"
Hips 31"
Side seam length 5 1/2"
Strap width to size your clips: 3/4"

The belt closes in front with a sturdy hook-and-eye busk, a deliberate design choice that reflects the dramatic post-World War I shift in women’s lives. With the disappearance of ladies’ maids in most middle-class households and a new emphasis on independence, foundation garments began moving away from complicated back or side-lacing that required assistance. Front-fastening styles like this one allowed an expectant mother to dress and undress entirely by herself, adjusting the fit as her body changed week by week. No helper needed.

It retains light internal steel boning for gentle shaping and its four original Kleinert’s “Velvet Grip” metal garter clips on ¾-inch elastic straps. The characteristically short length, just 5½ inches at the side seam, matches period catalogs and surviving examples made specifically for pregnancy during these years.

Condition is honest and untouched after nearly a century. The coutil remains sturdy and the structure is completely intact, making this piece eminently displayable or restorable. It shows the expected signs of age: scattered staining, one small tear and a missing button tab on the rear left garter strap, a few steel stays poking through the inner lining (easily re-secured), surface rust on the metal hardware, and the original surgical elastic has lost its stretch (typical of 90-plus-year-old rubberized thread). Offered as-is and priced with these flaws in mind.

An exceptionally scarce garment, far rarer than ordinary girdles or the longer maternity corsets of the era. This is a genuine, documented piece of the moment when modern maternity foundation wear was born, perfect for serious collectors of vintage lingerie, obstetric history, 1920s–1930s fashion, or museum displays. Opportunities to acquire an example in this original condition seldom appear.

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