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Torso Tech

Winter 2003 | Volume 18 |  Issue 3

THE ARTICLE ON THE BRA , by Curt Wohleber (“Object Lessons,” Spring 2003), brought to mind a little engineering book originally published in the 1963. Written and edited by Robert Baker, it was titled A Stress Analysis of a Strapless Evening Gown and contained engineering stress analyses written in lay terms, with each chapter a different illustration of stressanalysis investigation. The title essay was by Charles E. Seim. Years ago I used it in teaching an introductory engineering class. The connection just struck me as amusing.

Editors’ note: Seim’s essay —which contains passages like “since these evening gowns are worn to dances, an occasional horizontal force, shown in Figure 2 as i1 , is accidentally delivered to the beam at the point c, causing impact loading, which compresses all the fibers of the beam”—has taken on a new life as the inspiration for a work for a 70-piece orchestra, Stress Analysis of a Strapless Evening Gown , by Deborah Henson-Conant, a jazz harpist and composer. It includes a tango movement that Ms. Henson-Conant says “illustrates the forces which hold the world up” and a movement titled “Gossamer” that is “about the ephemeral quality of the fabric of life.” It was given its premiere by the Springfield, Massachusetts, Symphony in 2001.

We hope you enjoyed this essay.

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