Monday, January 18, 2010

Victorian Towel Rail Did They Have Tampons/sanitary Towels Along Time Ago?

Did they have tampons/sanitary towels along time ago? - victorian towel rail

Probably not, but as it in the Victorian era and before?

9 comments:

gran.ros... said...

I am old now, but I remember my mother, soft clothing, using stuffed with cotton.
He looked like a cushion of conditions to a cloth belt that was fastened around his waist.
Is used to the used cotton and linen washing in the next day should be discarded.

♥mandyli... said...

Rags, sponges, and pieces of old clothes
washed again and again and then the next time you again and the cycle just continues on, I discovered that Moss also used ..... In ancient times, women are considered unclean, and had to leave and expired at a certain place, until the time. In the Middle Ages, there were a lot of superstition over the period as if it were evil or a curse, and the Victorian era, but not here. No one could talk and acted as if it is not. I do not know how they survived without pads, I know not really understand, but to use cotton fabrics, which are then cooked and cleaned (I do not know how they survived without a layer of good, can you imagine washing diapers sales for four consecutive years? )
1 year ago

athom said...

I think that commercial pads were invented in the Victorian era. It would be affordable for some women, however. The rest of the rags, as others have said, or sponges, or something. In some parts of the world, women continue to use these methods or use nothing. I hope that women over the centuries, all sorts of quick fixes ... We are a creative group!

In fact, washable, reusable pads are something back, because now more and more people are aware of their impact on the environment. There really is nothing unhealthy if they are clean. As the towel nappies for babies. There is also something like a cup, a cup made of rubber (with a queue for the extraction) was used to collect blood and emptied as needed. I guess so lol ...

athom said...

I think that commercial pads were invented in the Victorian era. It would be affordable for some women, however. The rest of the rags, as others have said, or sponges, or something. In some parts of the world, women continue to use these methods or use nothing. I hope that women over the centuries, all sorts of quick fixes ... We are a creative group!

In fact, washable, reusable pads are something back, because now more and more people are aware of their impact on the environment. There really is nothing unhealthy if they are clean. As the towel nappies for babies. There is also something like a cup, a cup made of rubber (with a queue for the extraction) was used to collect blood and emptied as needed. I guess so lol ...

athom said...

I think that commercial pads were invented in the Victorian era. It would be affordable for some women, however. The rest of the rags, as others have said, or sponges, or something. In some parts of the world, women continue to use these methods or use nothing. I hope that women over the centuries, all sorts of quick fixes ... We are a creative group!

In fact, washable, reusable pads are something back, because now more and more people are aware of their impact on the environment. There really is nothing unhealthy if they are clean. As the towel nappies for babies. There is also something like a cup, a cup made of rubber (with a queue for the extraction) was used to collect blood and emptied as needed. I guess so lol ...

ஐAliceஐ said...

I do not know about the Victorian era, but I know that the Roman women wrapped using linen and covered with wax or grease, as a first form of a stamp:) Hope this! help? lol

hahahaha I got cookies!!!! said...

No rags, as has been said, but he has no need to hide the smell (maybe I could say was wrong, but I do not think), because the odor was attractive or "hot" as my science teacher made =]

hahahaha I got cookies!!!! said...

No rags, as has been said, but he has no need to hide the smell (maybe I could say was wrong, but I do not think), because the odor was attractive or "hot" as my science teacher made =]

Dr. DOLY said...

Long ago, women used sponges and pieces of fabric are then washed and reused - read below

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