Dec 28, 2010

The Best Wedding Dress Style for your Shape

What Shape are You?


When you start taking a close look at body shapes - yours and other people's - an interesting thing emerges: most women are pear shaped, most models have the much less common triangle shape.

Bear this in mind when you look at dresses on a model, what looks terrific on them may do nothing for you at all!

Look at the categories of body shape below and decide which one is closest to you.

Take a look at Yourself

To see what your shape is, stand face-on in front of a full length mirror and have a good look at yourself.

  • Draw an imaginary line from the widest point of your shoulders to the widest part of your hips. Is it a straight line? Or are your hips wider than your shoulder or vice versa.
  • Now take a look at the definition of your waist - how far from your imaginary line is the narrowest point of your waist?

Once you have this information, use the images below to see which one is most like you.

What Body Shape are You?

It is obvious that within these 4 main categories is massive variation, you can be a thin or an overweight pear shape, a small-framed or large framed rectangle, a very tall or a very petit hourglass and so on, and these thing must also be considered when thinking about the style of wedding gown that will best suit you.

Pear Shaped

This is the most common body shape - hips are wider than shoulders, waist is usually quite well defined.

What suit's
Strapless, V-neck or scooped necklines, possibly in off shoulder styles. A-line is the best shape, but avoid too full a skirt. Empress line can also work well. Diagonal draping on the bodice is very flattering.

What to Avoid
Halter-necks or high cut necks make hips look bigger. Bias or straight cut dresses also emphasis hips, as do full, gathered or pleated skirts. Avoid any bulk around the hips. Mermaid styles just won't work.

Rectangle Shaped

Here the hips and shoulders are about the same width, and there is not much definition at the waist.

What suit's
Go for a waistline with a V shape at the front to create the illusion of a smaller waist. Structured and corseted bodices with fairly full skirts also achieve this effect. Empire line styles particularly well as do bias cuts if you are tall. Keep necklines wide and use detailing either above or below the waist, not both.

What to Avoid
Halter necks or high necks make the shoulders look narrow and as result do not flatter the waist. Avoid ruching or draping in the waist area. Straight cut dresses are in danger of making you look boxy.

Triangle Shaped

Really an inverted triangle, with the shoulders wider than the hips. Most models are this shape.

What suit's
Bias cut or straight cut dresses can look very sophisticated, and this shape can easily take very full ball gown styles. Halter-necks or higher cut necks balance shoulders and hips and flatter a smaller chest. Bustles or bows in the hip area can add shapeliness.

What to Avoid
Very low cut neckline can make you look "all top" unless carefully balanced. Avoid full or very fancy sleeves and wider necklines.

Hourglass Shaped

Hips and shoulders are the same width and there is a well defined waist. Think Marilyn Monroe!

What suit's
Strapless, V-neck or scooped neckline. Off shoulder styles work well but in any case keep the neckline quite low. A-line is a good shape; a shapely mermaid style works well for slimmer hourglasses. Use ruching or draping to disguise less perfect bits!

What to Avoid
Bias cut or straight dresses don't suit the typical curves of the hourglass unless you are very tall and slim. Gathered or pleated skirts can make your hips look big, so be careful. Empire styles will hide your best features.



credit : http://www.flyawayweddings.com/style-guide/dress-shape.php

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