Fashion tips for fuller women
- tip #1 don't wear prints
tip #2 black is slimming
tip #3 vertical stripes are slimming
Find out which styles to put in your shopping trolley and which ones to leave on the rail. - Discover which prints and patterns will work for your curves.
- Learn how to balance your body shape by understanding your body symmetry.
- Find out out how to streamline your body and create a more sylph-like silhouette.
- Understand how to use color and match it to your skin and hair tone.
- Find out the easy way to effortless accessorizing.
- See how clothes have subtle visual features that will enhance your strengths and play down your weaknesses.
- Discover how to use my styling skills to disguise lumps and bumps.
- Know how to create a style signature that’s yours alone and be your own wardrobe mistress!
- Plus with easy to use fuller figure and plus size clothing tips, you’ll gain a more effective working wardrobe and image.
Fashion tips for tall women
Shirts If you're top-heavy, the last thing you want to wear is something that makes you look even more so. Therefore, ditch anything with large shoulders, horizontal stripes or anything else that makes you look broader. Instead, opt for a cute V-neck shirt or sweater or a tight-fitted cardigan. Your goal is to look as sleek as possible up top, to create that visual balance. For the same reason, choose tops that are subtle in color -- grays, blacks or pastels are a good bet.
Pants When your upper half is wider than your bottom half, you need to make everything from your waist down look a little bigger. The wider your legs, the more balanced your body looks. So go for wide-legged or slightly flared pants. The goal is for them to look just about as broad as your shoulders, making you look more proportioned. Plus, wide pants simply look smokin' on long legs. Same thing goes for skirts -- look for some that have a slight flare to them. Skip anything fitted, such as a pencil skirt, which will only accentuate your bigger upper body instead of making it look more balanced.
Coats Jackets that feature fitted waists are a top-heavy gal's best friend in the cold weather. Trenches with belts accentuate a teeny-tiny waist, and visually, that gives more width to your lower half. When you're wearing a skirt, don a coat that stops where your hem does -- doing so will help to carry that extra width all the way down. Coats that stop too short only accentuate your top-heavy body.
Pants When your upper half is wider than your bottom half, you need to make everything from your waist down look a little bigger. The wider your legs, the more balanced your body looks. So go for wide-legged or slightly flared pants. The goal is for them to look just about as broad as your shoulders, making you look more proportioned. Plus, wide pants simply look smokin' on long legs. Same thing goes for skirts -- look for some that have a slight flare to them. Skip anything fitted, such as a pencil skirt, which will only accentuate your bigger upper body instead of making it look more balanced.
Coats Jackets that feature fitted waists are a top-heavy gal's best friend in the cold weather. Trenches with belts accentuate a teeny-tiny waist, and visually, that gives more width to your lower half. When you're wearing a skirt, don a coat that stops where your hem does -- doing so will help to carry that extra width all the way down. Coats that stop too short only accentuate your top-heavy body.