Re: Reply#28
Thanks for posting this Louie. I knew that I’d seen fitted sheets before 1959 and I remember that the first ones I saw didn’t have elastic. I too saw the same article online that Laundress quoted from about them being first invented in 1959, but thought that this was incorrect.
Regardless, the advent of fitted sheets was revolutionary for bed making and sleeping. I remember very well how much more difficult it was to make the bed everyday, because I had to re tuck the bottom sheet everyday. And if you’re a restless sleeper that flat bottom sheet used to come undone into a wad on the mattress, sometimes a real tangle of sheets.
It was however a whole lot easier to fold and store all flat sheets and to gather a stack for changing several beds at once because they were all the same, either twin or double and easily discernible on the linen closet shelves. And at least in our home they were all white, no sets to match. Our pillowcases were all white ones too, and Mom had cross stitch embroidered designs on borders of all the pillow cases and the edges were crocheted. And all the sheets were ironed and the pillowcases were starched too.
To make a bed today with flat bottom sheets you’d need to buy the next size larger ie. use a double size on a twin bed because the flat sheets today are way too small to have enough material to tuck in tightly under the mattress even using hospital corners. Either that or you’d need to have a supply of the larger vintage flat sheets, otherwise your bed would be a hot mess as soon as you got into it at night with only 6” or less of the bottom sheet tucked under the mattress.
Eddie
Thanks for posting this Louie. I knew that I’d seen fitted sheets before 1959 and I remember that the first ones I saw didn’t have elastic. I too saw the same article online that Laundress quoted from about them being first invented in 1959, but thought that this was incorrect.
Regardless, the advent of fitted sheets was revolutionary for bed making and sleeping. I remember very well how much more difficult it was to make the bed everyday, because I had to re tuck the bottom sheet everyday. And if you’re a restless sleeper that flat bottom sheet used to come undone into a wad on the mattress, sometimes a real tangle of sheets.
It was however a whole lot easier to fold and store all flat sheets and to gather a stack for changing several beds at once because they were all the same, either twin or double and easily discernible on the linen closet shelves. And at least in our home they were all white, no sets to match. Our pillowcases were all white ones too, and Mom had cross stitch embroidered designs on borders of all the pillow cases and the edges were crocheted. And all the sheets were ironed and the pillowcases were starched too.
To make a bed today with flat bottom sheets you’d need to buy the next size larger ie. use a double size on a twin bed because the flat sheets today are way too small to have enough material to tuck in tightly under the mattress even using hospital corners. Either that or you’d need to have a supply of the larger vintage flat sheets, otherwise your bed would be a hot mess as soon as you got into it at night with only 6” or less of the bottom sheet tucked under the mattress.
Eddie