Open Cup & Cupless Lingerie for Women

Sexy open cup lingerie features intentionally exposed cups as part of a complete lingerie look. Available as bodysuits, teddies, and coordinated sets, these styles combine lace, mesh, and sheer fabrics with structured detailing to balance bold design with visual shape.

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How the Exposed Cup Design Works

Open cup lingerie is distinguished not by what it lacks, but by how the cup opening is integrated into the garment's overall structure. Styles with underwire or boned frames use that hardware to define the cup edge and maintain shape, while softer designs rely on lace trim, elastic, or mesh panels to outline the opening. The result varies significantly by construction: an underwired open cup corset sits and supports differently than a sheer mesh bodysuit with minimal framing.

The silhouette range is broad. Teddies, bodysuits, and full lingerie sets all appear in open cup form, each translating the cup treatment differently based on how much structure the garment carries. A coordinated set may use matching lace trim across top and bottom to tie the design together, while a bodysuit integrates the open cup into a single cohesive piece.

Cupless, Open Bust, and What the Terms Actually Mean

The terms "cupless," "open bust," and "open cup" overlap considerably and are often used interchangeably. Strictly, cupless means no cup material at all, while open bust typically implies some framing or structural definition around the opening. Open cup covers both. In practice, the distinction matters less than the specific silhouette and how much structure the garment provides.

This lingerie category covers full garments rather than standalone bras. For shoppers who want the same open cup aesthetic in a separate top, open cup bras work independently and can be styled as part of a layered look.

Open Cup Styles Within the Broader Lingerie Category

Open cup and cupless designs sit alongside peek-a-boo and cutout styles within the wider lingerie category, but they differ in how exposure is achieved. Peek-a-boo lingerie styles use cutouts within a cup-covered garment, making the coverage the baseline and the reveal the detail. Open cup designs invert that logic: the exposed cup is the garment's starting point, and any trim or framing builds from there.

Underboob lingerie styles take a third approach, framing the lower bust while covering the cup entirely, which creates a distinct silhouette with different proportions. If you're comparing silhouette families, those two categories are the closest reference points.