I just started to wear some fem-clothe at all. So I have some question fore more experienced girls.
I face an issue when dressing, I am pretty tall and don’t have hips (nor belly). I realized that when buying fem-clothe, I need to go one size shorter than when buying boy close, or the skirt will simply fall due to my lack of hips.
Being tall means if I wear a size-M, I feel like my clothe are very short. (It’s may-be a self confindence issue). The skirt I am wearing right now stop like mid tight (rather than above the knee), I feel my skin touching my chair, and feel like that I need to move on a very specific way to not show up my underwear (Actually I like that, feel like it force mes to move on a feminine way).
I am also not confident enough yet to spend time in the women’s aisle let alone try clothe at the store, so I just have a quick look, grab something and try-it at home
Do you have any tips for tall girls ? Which kind of clothe shall I wear/avoid especially as I don’t have hips nor breast
Longtallsally sells women’s clothing meant for us tall girls. I ordered stuff from them, usually off the discount.
You tube has guides for doing minor adjustments to things like jeans and simple shirts, you can do some quick and dirty alterations to help with things falling.
Torrid is like big and tall for women so maybe it will help. I usually just wear dresses.
Find yourself a friend to go thrift store a shopping with. This requires you to have the courage to hang out and really shop because you have to sort and parse through the extraordinarily random selection, but they tend to have an above average proportion of clothes in rarer sizes. I’m not super tall at 5’9", but thrift stores are the only places I go that regularly have clothing too long and tall for me. I can always find skirts to step on at Goodwill! I’m very slim and wear a small in many brands, but I tend to find at least one skirt I would get if only it were shorter per Goodwill trip. And most thrift stores have done away with trying things in store in favor of a one week return policy. Just make sure you’ll be able to get back within that time, and you can try everything on in the privacy of your own home. The post shopping fashion show is part of the thrift store experience in my house.
You can also get cutes belts! It only helps with things that almost fit anyway, but it can seriously make a difference in the number of applicable garments you find.
I never had the issue with my hips somehow but before I started hrt my hips, waist, and bust measurements were all super close together and that made buying clothes difficult and I ended up having to go with looser fitting clothes because form fitting ones always ended up being too tight unless I bought them bigger but then they weren’t form fitting anymore.
With pants I wore my old ones for quite a while since I knew my hip measurements would change with hrt however I did get things that were stretchy such as leggings since I figured that they’d probably still fit me after my proportions changed.
Also when you are wearing a skirt I recommend that you wear biker shorts underneath because then you won’t have to try to hide your underwear.
This is not for everyone and it is most certainly not cheap¹, but if you have the time, sewing stuff yourself isn’t actually that hard, a great conversation-starter and can give you stuff that fits you exactly the way you want. You are no longer bound by what some executive morons in the fashion-industry decide is now “in” and has to be worn by everyone (because they won’t sell anything else; I dare you, find me a shop that sells a skirt like this) and you know for a fact that the person who made your clothes was underpaid 😉︎.
¹ I’m serious: Even if you (usually unjustifiably so) assume that you already have all the equipment for free, fabric is very expensive!