Laced Up: 18 Iconic Corsets from Film & Television
From Scarlett O'Hara to Xena, these are the underpinnings that stepped beyond the screen and into fashion history
By: The Lace Ledger Staff
Few garments have worked harder in film than the humble corset.
For more than a century, costume designers have used it to communicate everything from power and ambition to romance, rebellion and utter ruin. A single tightening lace can signal the expectations placed upon a young woman. A structured bodice can transform a queen into a monarch of the ages, a vampire into a legend or a showgirl into an icon. Long before a character speaks, the corset often tells us exactly who they are.
Some became inseparable from the stories themselves. Scarlett O'Hara's lacing scene in Gone with the Wind remains one of the most famous moments in Hollywood history while Satine's ruby corset came to define an entire era of fashion when donned by Nicole Kidman in Moulin Rouge.
From gothic heroines and doomed aristocrats to pirates, vampires and queens, these are a few of our favourites.
From Sketch to Sculpture: André Perugia’s Footwear Revolution
There are designers who follow fashion, and then there are those who build its foundation. André Perugia was certainly one of the latter. Known as one of the first truly modern shoe designers, Perugia treated footwear not as accessory, but as architecture. His creations stretched the imagination of what a shoe could be — sculptural, surreal, imaginative; often defying gravity and logic, but never elegance.
Now, in its latest exhibition André Perugia: A Design Legend Unveiled, the Bata Shoe Museum pays homage to the man who turned functional necessity into wearable art. Running through April 2026, the show explores Perugia’s groundbreaking influence from the 1920s to the 1950s, tracing how his designs reshaped both the fashion industry and the consumer’s eye.