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“In those days [the 1970s] garments were one-piece, made of
thick
nylon, and cut like very loose teddies; they had a scoop neck and
little cap sleeves and they came to the knee. The amount of
coverage wasn't accidental: One of the purposes of "garments" is to
make sure that Mormons eschew daring clothing. The other is more
directly theological: The underwear's holy nature is expressed by small
markings sewn into the cloth over each breast, the navel, and one
knee. (The markings signify comforting homilies like "deal
squarely with your fellow men," and areintended to serve as reminders
of temple covenants. The symbols themselves derive from the fact that
Joseph Smith was a newly initiated and enthusiastic Freemason when he
originated the Mormon temple rites in 1842, and so the Masonic compass
and square appear on the left and right breasts of the Mormon
garments.) The garments had one other characteristic that, if not
actually biblical, did have something to do with creation: Women's
garments were slit in the crotch,very generously, so that they flapped
open and left a girl's greatest fascinations exposed.”
- Deborah Laake,
Secret Ceremonies: A Mormon
Woman’s Intimate Diary of Marriage and Beyond
"It was while they were living in Nauvoo that the Prophet came to my
mother, who was a seamstress by trade, and told her that he had seen
the Angel Moroni with the garments on, and asked her to assist in
cutting out the garments. They spread unbleached muslin out on the
table and he told her how to cut it out. She had to cut the third pair,
however, before he said it was satisfactory. She told the prophet that
there would be sufficient cloth from the knee to the ankle to make a
pair of sleeves, but he told her he wanted as few seams as possible and
that there would be sufficient whole cloth to cut the sleeve without
piecing. The first garments were made of unbleached muslin and bound
with turkey red and were without collars. Later on the prophet decided
he would rather have them bound with white. Sister Emma Smith, the
Prophet's wife, proposed that they have a collar on as she thought they
would look more finished, but at first the prophet did not have the
collars on them. After Emma Smith had made the little collars which
were not visible from the outside of the dress, Sister Eliza R. Snow
made a collar of fine white material which was worn on the outside of
the dress. The garment was to reach to the ankle and the sleeves to the
wrist. The marks were always the same."
- Diary of James T.S. Allred; Letter to Col.
Williams; [Microfilm d.1021/f.92, end of roll #2 (July 10, 1844)] LDS
Church Archives, Salt Lake City